I have decided to become a homeless in the next 6 hours. For whole 6 hours I will be without a home. I plan to venture into some nature reserve, maybe try to pet some baby brush turkeys or chase after a timid fox or two. If you don't hear from me ever again, I might have got lost or died from dehydration/hypothermia. After all I am not prepared at all, I only have a phone with me.
If every mobile was fitted with tracking mechanism, it would be almost impossible to get lost considering even the homeless owns mobile phone nowadays.
Current status of my tiny robot claw, have not touched it for almost 6 months.
Solved power supply problem for the 4 servos on the robot claw. But have no idea what's claw doing when running a program written by myself few months ago.
Also the claw seems to be having power leaking problem :/
@Mikhail Ah good point. It's actually less arbitrary that even what you think I intended. It's S x W where W is the SIMD width. Only the S is arbitrary.
@Borgleader I don't know actually. I need to study GPUs.
I'm actually writing a larger article on what are essentially feature requests for ISA extensions. One of them is related to "adjacent lane permutes" which are suboptimal with current instructions - even AVX512.
Is all the Rust hype justified? Saying it is a lot saver AND as fast if not faster than C++. Sounds like there is some downside. After all C++ could also implement those Security measurements without losing performance.
@Strict All the hype? No, of course not. It has some good ideas and even a decent implementation, but as with anything that's getting hype, some of what's said is an exaggeration of the reality, and (of course) a few people say things that have essentially no basis in reality at all. That (of course) doesn't mean Rust is terrible--but no matter how good it is, somebody's going to exaggerate its good points (and others, of course, will exaggerate its bad points--and yes, it has some of those)
Just for one obvious example of the latter, Rust may be the only language in history to actually be slower to compile than C++. Yes, the compiler does some pretty cool stuff, but it's still extremely slow.
Idk if this is the right place but im having some trouble. I have been playing around with different languages but have not come up with anything to actually build. I was wondering if there was a book or tutorial or website that makes challenges so i learn actually how to program. Not just learn the syntax
I say to learn how to program, just program. The code doesn't need to have a purpose. Just write code to figure out what structures do what, what you can do with them, what you can't, and what combining different ones do overall. Programming is an art. Don't read a book or a tutorial on how to paint; just paint.
Books and tuts are for syntax. What will compile and what won't. Anybody could learn that. But to learn how to program well, just go at it.