I am sick and tired when people who are not in the normal spectrum of human activities are told that they have psychological issues. No. Unless they are unhappy or their behaviours are detrimental to other, they do not suffer from psychological issues. Humans are not sheep. Even sheep can live alone for many years.
You are free to choose, but if you do not choose to be like everyone else, you have psychological issues.
@StackedCrooked @ScarletAmaranth First full-episode show I've tried for this season is Kimetsu no Yaiba. Looks like a keeper. I actually screened two other shows before this, but both turned out to be half-episode shows. Though Isekai Quartet might be worth it if you've seen some of the shows that it's a parody of.
> Naked environmental protesters flood House of Commons as MPs debate Brexit.12 topless protesters from Extinction Rebellion pressed their buttocks against security glass in Parliament's chamber, while many glued their hands to the screen
I wonder how the police manages to unglue those hands.
> Not to worry, for even though Super Glue is incredibly strong, it has one weakness: acetone. Acetone is often found in household nail polish remover, and a small amount on the end of a Q-tip or cotton swab applied directly to the glue should dissolve the bond without damaging the skin.
Topless protesters ... pressed their buttocks against ... snap right there, what they really pressed against the security glass were undies, not ... you know ...
@Rick There's no real reason allocating with new should be slower. ::operator new is specified so anybody who wants to can implement it as return malloc(size);. From there, a new expression will use the ctor to initialize an object in the allocated space (or more than one, if you use new [size]). Assuming a reasonably designed ctor, that'll be initialization you want/need in any case.
>is it better to use free store memory or the heap. " This is the same thing. You only need to differentiate the stack(with your function calls) and the memory your OS is managing. new is asking your operating system, can I please have this?
@Rick C# was alone in making that distinction. It stopped being true for C# in 2013-2014 I think.
@JerryCoffin If I'm lazy and create a virtual function in a struct. It will be a public member. This is obviously horrific and against so many patterns.
It will be a public member...unless you make it private. Most people prefer to arrange the public stuff first, then the private stuff. class foo { public: void bar(); private: virtual void baz(); };
In fact, I'd say roughly 95% of the use of class I see does it's best to turn class into struct. Most derivation is public--the default for struct. More often than not, the opening brace of the class definition is followed immediately by public:--exactly what struct would have given them by default.
@LucDanton Friend of mine was having problems with his program using too much memory. I helped him fix it with #define class union and #define struct union. Quite effective--uses a lot less memory now (though it does still seem to have a few other bugs...)
@CaptainGiraffe Given that it's only 2 MB, is there a reason you wouldn't just read them into a vector, use std::sort, and be done with it? Do you need to re-sort frequently, or something like that?
@Rick PIP51L GKK69M CRJ03K ... are all the same length. Assuming 1 character == 1 byte this means each can be represented by 6 bytes .. so a std::uint64_t (or the fast/least variant) works to keep it.