oh joy... Maintaining C# code written by someone who a) calls GC.Collect() all over the place, and b) doesn't seem to know about List<T>, or any collection type other than arrays
oh, and who thinks files should be 2000-6000 lines long
@jalf I thought a 400 line C function was about the upper limit of how to demonstrate incompetence (I had to fix errors in that in my first project as consultant, it was "reality" after some years of teaching), until later, in a Project From Hell, I encountered the 900 line C function. The project manager saw nothing wrong with that. Indeed, such was the organization of things there, that it was intentionally very unclear who was in charge of anything.
Wir hatten mal ne Vorlesung, bei der am Anfang des ersten Termins abgestimmt wurde, ob sie eine halbe Stunde nach hinten verlegt werden soll. Die meisten Anwesenden waren dagegen. Aber natürlich war zu diesem Zeitpunkt noch niemand anwesend, dem eine Verschiebung genutzt hätte :)
@FredOverflow after upgrading to latest Firefox, youtube videos often (and now) display as just white rectangles. I've tried to delete temp files, here and there. and clearing history. that works for a few hours, but then it's back again? the strange thing as that the same video WORKS OK IN FACEBOOK, when pasted in facebook. ???
@FredOverflow It has been pinned by someone. Those starred and pinned messages are sorted following an algorithm that weighs their age and the number of stars/pins. If messages are very old, almost no amount of stars will bring it atop of newer starred messages. Pinned messages will always be above starred ones, though.
no, it has to get a value from a database, however the value could either be of type int or type long, so depending on it's type I will fill either value...
Hi, I have a function that reads: static Box& CreateBox(int a); now when I call it from my main function as Box a = Box::CreateBox(3), what exactly happens, does a get assigned a reference to the object returned by CreateBox, or is there an element by element copy?
What do you guys think of using spaces? The original code was (*p+*q)-(*q=*p). I would have put more spaces into that one, too, but I wouldn't go so far as to make this a requirement.
@PiotrLegnica I always thought that the only one set in stone length was char at one byte, then the rest must be at least as big as the preceding one, so even a long could be a byte.
@sbi as far as I'm concerned the spaces are a matter of personal preference, so if you consider the spaces make readability easier, I'd say they must be put in
I just noticed that n3242 is significantly smaller compared to n3225, about 8%. They must have dropped quite some stuff...? Or is there any other explanation?
Quite often, there's a problem. People don't really want to argue about these big things. You come with something like [...] how to do a type system for templates, we don't get a discussion about that.
Now if you discuss about how to write a for loop, you get a really splendid discussion. If you start arguing about wether you should have a space in between the int and the star in a pointer-to-int, you get a REALLY furious discussion. People actually LOVE discussing things that don't matter, because it's so easy to have an opinion about those things.
Is there an established idiom for composing ("chaining") meta-functions? This is my current solution:
template
<
template <typename> class First,
template <typename> class Then,
typename T
>
struct compose : Then<typename First<T>::type> {};
And here i...
the better solution would probably be to simply have a plugin for your preferred IDE that re-rolled both indentations and parenthesized expressions per your preferences
Whitespace is an esoteric programming language developed by Edwin Brady and Chris Morris at the University of Durham (also developers of the Kaya programming language). It was released on 1 April 2003 (April Fool's Day). Its name is a reference to whitespace characters. Unlike most programming languages, which ignore or assign little meaning to most whitespace characters, the Whitespace interpreter ignores any non-whitespace characters. Only spaces, tabs and linefeeds have meaning. An interesting consequence of this property is that a Whitespace program can easily be contained within the...
LOLCODE is an esoteric programming language inspired by the language expressed in examples of the lolcat Internet meme. The language was created in 2007 by Adam Lindsay, researcher at the Computing Department of Lancaster University.
The language is not clearly defined in terms of operator priorities and correct syntax, but several functioning interpreters and compilers already exist. The language has been proven Turing-complete.
Language structure and examples
LOLCODE's keywords are drawn from the heavily compressed (shortened) patois of the lolcat Internet meme. Here follows a Hell...
I generally use <class T> to mean that the template parameter is going to have some kind of class relationship with the thing being defined. i.e. a descendant or ancestor
@PiotrLegnica That's fine. You lose nothing against using either one for all templates. If you are in on the "secret", though, you will have additional information.
"non explicit class type" = a type that is not explicitly (by the documentation implied in the use of the class vs the typename keyword ) have to be a class.
@FredOverflow I always use class, so that things don't get confusing when you have to use typename for it's other meaning in a template parameter list.
@PiotrLegnica class is also shorter to type the typename and I don't agree that this is an obsolete use of class. Do you have a reference or rationale?
It's state of an item. The item goes through the state in order. If we add new states we add them inbetween the numbers to "keep order". I feel that it can be refactored away so that order is not dependant on the numerical value of the field in the enum. But I'm not sure how to do that
LePUS3 ]]
The state pattern is a behavioral software design pattern, also known as the objects for states pattern. This pattern is used in computer programming to represent the state of an object. This is a clean way for an object to partially change its type at runtime.
Pseudocode example
Take, for example, a drawing program. The program has a mouse cursor, which at any point in time can act as one of several tools. Instead of switching between multiple cursor objects, the cursor maintains an internal state representing the tool currently in use. When a tool-dependent method is ca...
I just thought constructing enum's like that to allow easy adding of numbers would have some kind "name" that I can search for in google and read more about it
@PiotrLegnica TBH, I'm not quite sure whether it was needed to allow typename to be used instead of class in template parameter lists. I've never need it.
All operators have been deprecated. You index into arrays with the array.at(i) syntax now, and you say read_and_increment(i) now to make code more readable.
Is there an established idiom for composing ("chaining") meta-functions? This is my current solution:
template
<
template <typename> class First,
template <typename> class Then,
typename T
>
struct compose : Then<typename First<T>::type> {};
And here i...
Parkinson's Law of Triviality, also known as bikeshedding or the bicycle shed example, is C. Northcote Parkinson's 1957 argument that organisations give disproportionate weight to trivial issues. Parkinson demonstrated this by contrasting the triviality of a bike shed to a nuclear reactor. Later, Poul-Henning Kamp applied the law to software development and introduced the colour of the bike shed as the proverbial trivial detail receiving disproportionate attention.
Argument
The concept is presented in C. Northcote Parkinson's spoof of management, Parkinson's Law. Parkinson dramatizes ...