being a newbie is hard, I went into a chat and enquired about what components I need and how to assemble a RC controlled car from components so I could fit raspberry pi in, the conversation went like this:
Me: How to run?
Someone: It's easy, you need to keep both feet off ground. It's like walking, but faster and both feet off the ground at times.
Me: But I could barely walk, how to keep both feet off ground?
(silence)
Hardware control requires precise timing, especially for things like motors. If there is latency between moving your left wheel servo and right wheel servo, then the car will "shudder"
@crasic My experience is that the expertise is hard to find, unlike legos. For example, I had to make a 50v +/- source at a low ma to control a liquid crystal. There was a ton of circuit required so that when we turned it on, 0v on the micro-controller would actually cause 0 v on the 0v over the load. This was one op-amp!!!!
The Sokal affair, also called the Sokal hoax, was a scholarly publishing hoax perpetrated by Alan Sokal, a physics professor at New York University and University College London. In 1996, Sokal submitted an article to Social Text, an academic journal of postmodern cultural studies. The submission was an experiment to test the journal's intellectual rigor and, specifically, to investigate whether "a leading North American journal of cultural studies – whose editorial collective includes such luminaries as Fredric Jameson and Andrew Ross – [would] publish an article liberally salted with nonsense...
It proposed that quantum gravity is a social and linguistic construct.
a baby bird that I have rescued from side of the road yesterday, then put inside a large grass area nearby so it wouldn't get run over by a car or caught by a dog
@Mikhail Perhaps. Maybe even probably. But it's pretty much irrelevant--point is, you shouldn't be pasting any substantial chunks of code here in any case.
@CoderCat Some people like to put the return type on a separate line from the name of the function itself. I rarely find it useful, but obviously opinions/tastes differ.
@ratchetfreak yeah, steppers and AC or DC motors all require high power on the control lines. It's only servos that have a low power control line. ofc, if you have an IC that does that actual driving, you could send that low power control signals and it handles the power draw for you
@JerryCoffin AFAIR Windows 3.11 For Workgroups had the /protected option and it had process isolation (which also enabled preemptively multitasking terminal mode processes)
@Mgetz It's...more complicated than that. Native Windows programs ran in protected mode, but they all shared a single large address space, so there was no isolation between them. Each MS-DOS program ran in its own V86 environment, isolated both from other MS-DOS programs and from Windows programs. They could reach outside that (to a very limited degree) via DPMI, but that's about the extent of it.
@Mgetz So it was. 16-bit Windows kernels running in 386 enhanced mode were a lot more 32-bit than many people realized though. You actually had a 32-bit kernel, with the 16-bit Windows "kernel" basically running as a single process, with all your cooperative Windows "processes" inside of that. The big difference is that the 32-bit kernel didn't have a (publicly documented) API to support 32-bit clients.
@JerryCoffin right 95 had the weird hybrid kernel that was 32bit with a 16bit userland, where 32bit processes had to call through win32k to get support
If I recall there were about three different flavors of this insanity depending on if you had a 2/3/486
of course all of it was moot when windows 98 came out
@Mgetz Not really--Win98 was pretty much just a mildly updated version of the same thing. In theory Windows Me was as well, but opinions on it differ. I tend to think it was Microsoft's ever so gentle way of "nudging" people toward Win2K and succeeded perfectly at that. Others think it was intended to succeed in its own right, and was a massive failure for flopping so badly.
@JerryCoffin ME was definitely 32bit. While 98 introduced the 32bit WDM nobody used it preferring VxDs (which were 16bit). ME was a much bigger step towards NT with much deeper WDM requirements, which caused compatibility issues for people that upgraded.
as for the transition to NT, I think that writing was on the wall.
@Mgetz I doubt it could all be described in a reasonable number of blog entries. The original Windows Internals (the one by Matt Pietrek) was well over 500 pages long, and it still glossed over quite a few details.
On the other hand, that was still only around half the size of Inside Windows 2000, and if anything was even more detailed (in at least some ways).
@Mgetz Sure--but if you draw a high-level block diagram of how the system was put together, it's still pretty much the same thing as Windows 95 (or even Windows 3 in 386 enhanced mode). Down under it all, you still have a copy of MS-DOS running in a V86 task (though as more VxD and WDM drivers were added, it was used less and less often).
@Mgetz Me, yes. Not XP. XP was based on the NT kernel, and didn't run a copy of MS-DOS unless you used it specifically to run a DOS program. Win 9x/Me used MS-DOS to provide "last ditch" device driver support (among other things) so although it was used less and less over time, running a copy of MS-DOS was a crucial part of booting the system.
@sehe I’ve always been peeved by abolish's lack of handling \< & \> boundaries. took me 10s to search :h abolish to figure out how to do it properly… years after the fact. I feel like such an idiot
Hi guys - anyone here used Amazon Web Services before? I'm a little confused how it works in terms of requiring additional software which may not be pre-loaded.. I need an R package which uses Boost and not sure if I'd be able to download it on a virtual machine?
@SamT Its just a computer that is running somewhere else, anything you can do locally you can do on AWS
You will probably have an easier (cheaper) time running linux even though they do offer windows images, whatever distro you choose should have boost and R in the repositories. If you need GUI you can use VNC or something similar to access the machine, otherwise its all done through ssh/terminal commands
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I've had to raise this issue on the main site as my points are too low to ask on meta sinc...
that is, you can zip together two forward-only ranges to produce a forward-only range; and you can zip together two bidi ranges to produce a bidi range (it extends to random-access but we just need those two capabilites)
I describe them as two 'different' functions because the bidi one does more work than the forward-only function: it has to compute the end
I really don't want to disappoint you here, but Stackoverflow isn't the place to express your religion. It's a place to ask and answer questions about programming. If you want to express your religion there are other places to do that. Stackoverflow is not one of them. It's the same reason you don't go to a grocery store to ask the clerk questions about your retirement fund. There is a place for everything. — Mysticial27 secs ago
@sehe that depends what we mean by 'a range' and by 'bidirectional traversal'; for our purposes we want to be able to e.g. traverse the result of a zip in reverse order
@LucDanton Ah. Penny drop. In a way, an end is always there and you... should be able to decrement it. Shit. There's no really satisfactory solution to that, I suppose
@sehe actually it was really important to cover that because a) terminology is vague across ecosystems b) it would come up in the subsequent discussion sooner rather than later; in fact hang on to it
@Potatoswatter yes that is the premise :)
in fact I think we’ve got the bases down: knowing that we have two zip and two concat functions, how do we package that sensibly to an end user?
Really, though, pick the one which offers more features at the expense of more requirements, and call it zip/concat. Call the other one lazy_zip or forward_zip or whatever.
@Potatoswatter that makes for an order k×n api surface, for k different enough traversals and n range functions (not all range functions will have k variants)
It's really no difference with the "modern fashion" of including tag type arguments (piecewise_construct_t, launch_policy::..., ordered_unique_range_t etc.).
I have another concern where a savvy user may notice that e.g. concat(a, forward_only_zip(b, c)) is shorter than forward_only_concat(a, forward_only_zip(b, c)) and start writing that
@LucDanton This isn't a perfectly general or generic rule, it's just my judgment for this example. A good-enough type system would allow one API and a smart compiler to choose automatically, but Concepts aren't that system.
@crasic that leads to the "user-guided tag dispatch" - or should I say "faux overload set division". I think that's fine, but only if you anticipate a lot of these variations
Often you need to convert overloads to tags or vice-versa in the implementation details. But tags in the interface need good justification. I shudder at the memory of ISO tag naming debates.
Only if you anticipate a lot of namespace pollution from inane variants, yeah, then the balance tips to spelling it out in tag types IMO. This is something that can be explained to that end-user
@sehe Nieblerism: you can stow the overloads as e.g. zip.forward_only(a, b) leaving, say, zip.call(forward_traversal_tag, a, b) for not-so-end users which do the generic programming thing with tag computing
It's much more important that things work right in the first place. And if people require the last drop of perf, it's fine if that requires them to know their stuff (and the API's they depend on)
@LucDanton Mmm. It triggers my "ew fluent syntax" bone, but let me think about that
@Potatoswatter constexpr-if if you look through your eye-lashes
to me, it breaks an abstraction (disclosing an implementation detail). However, you could also view it as namespacing... Of course true namespacing would go the zip::lazy vs. zip::bounded/call/general way. But it's close enough to ponder.
To be perfectly honest, I dislike the Niebler anti-ADL trick in itself, but defensible for what purpose they have and that the user doesn't readily see it in action.
That "magic mirror" is shattered with zip.variant_xyz
The stupid thing is: I'm twisted what matters more here. Appearances or functionality.
Where do we buy a representative end-user to experiment on
Yeah. It feels like paying taxes. I know what it's good for, doesn't make it fun.
This, basically is the fate of c++: eternal hoop jumping required.
And we pride ourselves at jumping the hoops with the most grace and the least effort. Still just hoops of course. Some of them on fire. I'm getting carried away
actually I do have an opinion on .: it’s a better fit for variables e.g. arguments and think [](auto&& func) { return func.something_or_other(…); } and so on
@sehe in which respect or respects? to use, to write, to explain to a newcomer?
Weird. A christmas decoration Santa-Claus suddenly decided to dismount from the tree.
@LucDanton Niebler's function objects: just to write or explain. About the "namespace dot" (ab)use I'm ... not convinced that it's frictionless for an end-user. But I haven't seen an argument either way yet. So it's basically just a prejudice for now