Watership Down is an upcoming British-Irish-American animated television miniseries directed by Noam Murro. It is based on the 1972 novel of the same name by Richard Adams and adapted by Tom Bidwell. The four-part serial is scheduled to be broadcast on BBC One in the United Kingdom and stream internationally on Netflix in 2017.
== Cast ==
=== Main ===
James McAvoy as Hazel
Nicholas Hoult as Fiver
John Boyega as Bigwig
Ben Kingsley as General Woundwort
Gemma Arterton as Clover
Miles Jupp as Blackberry
Freddie Fox as Captain Holly
Craig Parkinson as Sainfoin
Daniel Rigby as Dandelion
Daniel Kaluuya...
@CaptainGiraffe Your claim doesn't seem to make sense. An ad hominem argument takes the form: "This person is evil, therefore his/her arguments should not be believed." Of course, there can be variations in wording, and in some cases parts can be implied rather than stated directly, but I don't see anything even vaguely similar in this case.
@Telkitty 20 klocs, compiled to a different architecture than the host, built on 200 other devices over an ssh bridge, with about 20 different external libraries, then yes.
@Telkitty I suppose you consider that 'Hello world', I'm just not that sophisticated.
@CaptainGiraffe I think she meant testing the IDE with such a large project.
@LucDanton I can forgive almost anything (when properly supplied with virgins, of course).
:39849628 Could well be. Personally, I tend to look primarily at the graphics. If they can't even get that right, what are the chances they'll do better at anything that's really difficult?
@CaptainGiraffe I recently worried a little about somebody telling me I should try Python because it was "breathtaking." Turns out they were talking about some programming language though.
@CaptainGiraffe I can't believe you'd do a thing like this to me. I mean, here we're being friendly and even a little humorous, and then you send a link to Seinfeld, as if I were some sort of mass murderer or something...
I'm trying to profile the QEMU PowerPC system emulator executable to find performance bottlenecks in code, using the cachegrind tool in valgrind, but it's too slow.
I'll ask on Software Engineering in a complete form instead. :)
@DiegoPereira What I mean is what *nix based input method are you using. You could be using just what X11 offers, the XIM. Or there is UIM. And then also ibus.
I can't undownvote an answer because "You last voted on this answer 19 mins ago. Your vote is now locked in unless this answer is edited". If I edit the answer can I undownvote or does that not count?
In C++, I can declare a variable as either an unsigned short or an unsigned char (with 2 bytes) as shown below. However, is there any differences?
unsigned short p;
unsigned char q[2];
@Morwenn ...at which point you do a vacuous edit, and change it to fit your current opinion. I think the main reason the lock is there is to prevent accidents--for example, somebody seeing an old question they've already up-voted, think it's good, and click the up-arrow without noticing that since they already up-voted, they're now removing their previous up-vote.
I was also interviewed recently by Anastasia Kazakova for the CLion blog, and that interview is now live: Toward a more powerful and simpler C++ with Herb Sutter Topics include: Concepts and modules (and coroutines) as the true hot topics right now How my work on metaclasses was motivated and developed Obligatory aside on operator<=> […]
@AaronHall yeah you can do that when you call CreateProcess you can set a limited SID and then set up the security descriptors
Chrome does this to the extreme by actually creating the processes suspended then having the parent load the necessary DLLs because the child doesn't have permission
@AaronHall sorry been busy, the basics of it are documented in CreateProcess
you're looking for the lpProcessAttributes parameter, the next step up would be doing CreateProcessAsUser so you can use a less privileged SID. Or you can go look at chrome's sandbox
Is Chrome's sandbox an example of those functions?
Given a PID can you look up the parents to determine whether a given process comes from an originating process? Does Windows lose that info when a parent in the chain closes?
But realistically it's the same issues, you need to either find an SID with permissions you're ok with or use the untrusted SID and build the house yourself.
@AaronHall usually the parent process handles passing in this information. if you're using an existing module I would say you probably want the low permissions SID. Untrusted is just that... it literally can't do anything, EVERY system call will immediately fail unless the handle it's using was generated outside that process.
@AaronHall It...mostly loses it, yes. You can (for example) use the ToolHelp functions to enumerate processes, and the parent of each. But also yes, if the parent closes, you're fairly apt to lose it, and that ID may be reused for another process. I haven't tested to be sure, but at least offhand it seems like if you open the parent process (assuming you can) that would prevent its ID from being reused (but there's an obvious race condition on its being valid when you open it).
I want to give my user an interactive Python process with a non-overrideable environment variable of some kind, for that and all child processes. A C-extension will check it and use it for logic. I assume my user has no C compiler, but has physical access. I know someone could defeat this, but I'm just trying to make it really hard for someone to unintentionally mess up out of curiousity.
So, Qt has this pattern where you pass a known type to a function that accepts a QVariant. I'm wondering if the metacompiler (moc) could compile in the type, avoiding the boxing/unboxing from type to variant (and back again).
I guess 50% of the problem is that the library uses QVariants on the input end, and you ain't going to meta-compile the actual library, although it would be cool. Sounds like measuring the performance differential might be a fun research project.
Seriously though, we need to see what would happen if GUI frameworks were completely in-lined.
So, every-time Qt hits up the QMetaType database it holds a lock (I think). This can happen thousands of times for trivial gui operations. All it does it provide runtime type information that is know at compile time.
The halting problem is unsolvable in the general sense. And "solvable" for finite state machines. But has anyone proven that there exists no sub-exponential algorithm for the halting problem for finite state machines?
I need to catch segmentation fault in third party library cleanup operations. This happens sometimes just before my program exits, and I cannot fix the real reason of this. In Windows programming I could do this with __try - __catch. Is there cross-platform or platform-specific way to do the same...
@Mikhail On Windows, yes. You use SEH/VEH, or (if you're completely insane/demented) Microsoft's compiler has a command line switch to tell the it to convert all structured/vectored exceptions to C++ exceptions, so you can catch them all with normal try/catch clauses. In case the parenthetical aside wasn't adequate though: no, you almost certainly don't ever want to do that.