@wilx I choose procrastination, by telling those guys they need to send me the data in a single excel spreadsheet. I suspect they are too lazy to actually get back to me, and will after a year publish something as-is. This absolves me of the sin.
Fowl are birds belonging to one of two biological orders, namely the gamefowl or landfowl (Galliformes) and the waterfowl (Anseriformes). Studies of anatomical and molecular similarities suggest these two groups are close evolutionary relatives; together, they form the fowl clade which is scientifically known as Galloanserae (initially termed Galloanseri). This clade is also supported by morphological and DNA sequence data as well as retrotransposon presence/absence data.
== Terminology ==
As opposed to "fowl", "poultry" is a term for any kind of domesticated bird or bird captive-raised for meat...
those birds are everywhere here now, one tried to steal a bag of my cooking utensil last Saturday
My understanding is that in C++17, the following snippet is intended to Do The Right Thing:
struct Instrument; // instrumented (non-trivial) move and copy operations
struct Base {
Instrument i;
};
struct Derived : public Base {};
struct Unrelated {
Instrument i;
Unrelated(const D...
@JerryCoffin I just fixed a bug by replaced a smart pointer with a plain old pointer. My explanation is that the memory of the arrays inside the struct was being moved around by the smart pointer (since the arrays were large).
@nobism Mostly because a smart pointer won't normally move anything. It'll automatically dispose of something (when it goes out of scope, has no references, or based on some other criteria), but other than that it's just a pointer.
Warning: absolutely, positively, do not read the rules, especially if you're new around here!
@EtiennedeMartel I'll have a closer look at it later, but regardless, I fixed a bug by not using a regular pointer instead of a smart pointer. I also tested by allocating the struct on the stack instead and it worked.
@sehe destructuring does not involve variables, they’re alternate names to whichever parts of the underlying/enclosing, unnamed thing (<- okay that 'thing' is defined as if it were a variable, but it’s hidden from the user anyway)
@sehe that is indeed how it works, the auto cv ref stuff at the start does not apply to the bindings (which are not variables) but to the special thing
yes except that C++11 reinterpret_cast is under-specified (i.e. it was always meant to be able to do that, but nobody was sure how to word it—so they didn't)
it does feel weird to see an actual C++ language feature for once cc @RobertTroipartrois
can you imagine if the syntax were expanded and we could have e.g. auto enclosing@[...] = arr; to make array copies; now how would you explain that to newcomers!
@sehe my mistake, variables are introduced for the user-defined case involving e.g. get<i>(thing)
A service peacock was denied entry onto a United flight
“Year-over-year, we have seen a 75 percent increase in customers bringing emotional support animals onboard and as a result have experienced a significant increase in onboard incidents involving these animals,”
I didn't know there was such a test and if I did I wouldn't know why I should take it, but I understand that getting a bad score because the test makers are dumb is frustrating.
The last "answer" is actually even more worrying. They rated a noob "proficient" because they asked for irrelevant trivia. That removes all potential satisfaction from getting a "proficient" rating.
That spray of downvotes and the close vote reason baffle me. This is a clear question, to which the answer is actually no. But I guess simply mentioning goto has that effect. — Quentin7 mins ago
BitGrail lost $170 million worth of Nano XRB tokens because... the checks for whether you had a sufficient balance to withdraw were only implemented as client-side JavaScript https://www.reddit.com/r/CryptoCurrency/comments/7wonkf/the_stolen_xrb_has_already_been_redistributedsold/du215tr/
@thecoshman Rather the opposite. They can (but don't necessarily) have fairly similar externally visible characteristics, but function entirely differently.
The water isn't the main problem. Temperature is apparently around -65 degree
and the soil even with water wouldn't be good for growing anything yet. So we kind have to send water from here and a bit of soil and something to have the plants grow in.
As for water, there is water on mars in form of ice so we could make robots that mine water or somehow extract water from the soil.