@Mysticial Its really messing with me, the card is supposed to be 8x, when you stick it in a 16x slot it shows up as 8x. When you stick it in an 8x slot its fucked (weird hw errors). When I stick other 8x cards, like high-speed camera-link components, into the 8x slot everything works fine. Really, it only works if you remove the GPU. Switched to a different 8x controller and everything is fine, but I lost half a day opening systems and buying new stuff was not well received at work.
The real show stopper was the terrible RAID performance on the 840 drives, compared to same manufacture's integrated RAID controller (although on a different mobo)
@Mysticial 3d printing
@Mysticial ]What I really want to see are integrated RAID controllers with SFF-8643 on the mobo. Right now the integrated RAID controllers are all pleb grade SAS.
As Brendan Eich (I believe) pointed out, after the war nobody really uses javascript now days
That was a good talk
Idk, been doing javascript for a bit, and I really like using the let keyword, might switch to rust
Real problem with JS targeting the browser is that I need to fucking make all the GUI controls (and some controls like text input are impossible, or really suck in canvas). Further, if you have multiple windows you need to group your objects into different "stages", and then state transitions need to show and hide those objects. Makes GUI prototyping really fucking hard.
the eco-system is screaming for a widget kit
Nobody gives a shit that the language is broken and confusing (like arrow functions)
so I have been using Cygwin to compile a project however an error showed up due to cc1.exe missing dependency cygisl-15.dll. I tried reinstalling but that did not work. I found no search results for "cygisl-15" so I eventually decided to delete dependency on cygisl-15.dll using software called CFF. After saving I tried to make the script again and it had no errors this time. I am currently worried that I may have deleted something important. Any thoughts on the matter?
I have a problem wit compilation with gcc on 32-bit cygwin.
The message is:
C:/cygwin/lib/gcc/i686-pc-cygwin/4.9.3/cc1plus.exe: error while loading shared libraries: cygisl-10.dll: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
And that is true. I have cygisl-13.dll instead of cygi...
@sbi Testing begin and end is comparatively difficult; they're overloaded, so you have to throw in some casting and such. If we set that aside, such as by using cbegin, it becomes pretty easy: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/714fe751dcebfc1b
enable_if becomes interesting primarily for things like overloaded member functions, where you have an overload that you don't wan to participate in overload resolution unless the conditions are met.
A software algorithm to arrange order of vectors clockwise. How do I arrange the vectors so that from the lower left <117> becomes the first vector <100>? So that each end point connects to the next end point and vector loop is totally clockwise...
Vectors scrambled illustration
Consider code below (Visual Studio 2015/2017)
std::wostringstream stm;
stm << L"12345";
std::wcout << stm.rdbuf()->pubseekoff(std::ios_base::cur, 0, std::ios_base::out) << L"\n"
stm << L"67890";
std::wcout << stm.str();
I see
1
167890
But I expect to see
5
1234567890
Is this microsoft bu...
@VermillionAzure So it's not as simple as enable_if<C::value_type>::type?? (Also, the goal is not to not have the code compile, but to let the compiler pick another overload of the function.)
@sbi You could extract the conditions inside static_asserts into enable_if
For maximum genericity one can check if you can call using std::begin; begin(c), but that's surprisingly difficult given that you can't have using declarations inside of enable_if condition or decltype
namespace tricks{
using std::begin; // fallback for ADL
template<class C>
auto adl_begin(C& c) -> decltype(begin(c)); // undefined, not needed
template<class C>
auto adl_begin(C const& c) -> decltype(begin(c)); // undefined, not needed
}
...and a corresponding one for std::end
then one can write auto f(C& c) -> decltype(adl_begin(c), adl_end(c), void()) {} (assuming your function returns void)
If you need to handle psychopats who write operator, implementations, that's decltype(adl_begin(c), void(), adl_end(c), void())
Actually, all the code above may be wrong; can't check it atm
@milleniumbug Is there anything wrong with combining the check for begin and end in the tricks code?
template<class C> auto adl_begin_end( C& c) -> decltype(begin(c),end(c));
template<class C> auto adl_begin_end(const C& c) -> decltype(begin(c),end(c));
@Ven I don't really know, but cppreference says "Note that because no definition exists for declval, it can only be used in unevaluated contexts" which I think precludes pointer arithmetic.
Also, that code that works was rejected by clang.
ah I think I'm misunderstanding that unevaluated context quote
Also, I am struggling with a way to codify the check so it also fits class templates. Would something like std::void_t<decltype(adl_begin_end(T))> work?
Damn, you miss half a decade and it feels like being a C++ newbie all over again.
@FrankfortKentucky I had a problem in my car once. Fortunately, traffic was light at the time, so I just pulled over and told him to walk the rest of the way home.
I have a problem with my car, battery is dead so it does not open when I click open and the mechanical locks are jammed because I have not used them in ten years.
I'm gonna try connecting 12V to the trailer connector and see if that gives enough juice to open the doors so I can open the hood and charge the battery.
Noticed it today, gave the locks a good lube so maybe they turn tomorrow.
Whenever I compliment Haskell or Rust, there's this group of people that come out of nowhere on the internet to get SUPER excited & happy & ready to answer questions. It's the happiest, most supportive thing
I have no plans to do either professionally but man makes me wish I did
So I did the sorting competition with my students in the algorithms course today. There were 6 teams competing against me on 3 sequences provided about 2 weeks ago.
@Morwenn Modules are a new way of grouping code and data. Contrary to Jar files, modules explicitly declare which modules they depend on, and what packages they export.[12]
Anyone familiar with Linux virtual interfaces, virtual bridges etc? I wonder if it's possible to setup a virtual network with that. (Like a subnet with a few interfaces, a DHCP server, etc. But all virtual.)
if not there are still things like "Cisco Packet Tracer" which Cisco uses in their lab courses to demonstrate how their routers work (and that one probably won't do for your use case)
they seem like a good idea in principle but in reality, in order for them to be done well, the system has to actually do dependencies well, which seems basically unheard of