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01:09
In the meantime, theorists have been busy dreaming up new physics that might solve the problem
You guys up to anything fun? I finished up 2 review responses, might be able to crack over 30 co-author papers by the end of my PhD.
well I have to say the more I do rust, the more I'm impressed how the compiler can prevent me from writing bad code
the more you're impressed by rust the more I want to say mean things for the sake of my job security
01:37
I don't have much pressure from work, but 1 days vacancy of the property I am trying to rent out translates into $80-$90. 1 Day of land cost for the solar farm equals about $30-$50 now the cash is paid in full & land is settled into our name. I am working hard to increase the cashflow.
02:02
that's cool
do you mean you have to pay 80-90$ a day to rent?
or you're renting for 80$-90$
That's about 5546.86 Russian Rubles a day.
02:19
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Rent is $520-$600 per week.
that's expensive, that's twice the mortgage I pay
02:36
That's long term rental price, and one of the cheapest in the suburb of the same kind because it's older, on a main road and share yard with a second dwelling.
But there are a lot of new apartments in the area. When the property was for rent 8 years ago, there were 10-20 houses and 3 apartments/units for rent in the area. Today, there are like 20 houses and 130 apartments for rent.
 
3 hours later…
06:07
I have a two part question. First, I want to define a base class that defines some default values, and dictates what properties and methods that it's offspring classes should have. I think this is called the factory pattern, right?
Next, I want to create a function that allows me to define/switch which offspring class to use, through some method. I'm not really sure what this would be called in C++, or the best way to do it. However, I'm currently reading up on type-switch (not sure this is what I want or not), and I think I want to define the class somehow as a function argument.
Any useful advice or articles/links to point me in the right direction would be greatly appreciated. Or at least just tell me what it is I need to Google.
Okay I'm off a bit on the "type-switch" thing
 
2 hours later…
07:47
@Shea 1) Switching between which class to use is something that should be handled by polymorphism
2) The factory pattern is a way to create a classes but call a shared set of functions on them. For example: static Widget::Factory(widget_to_make_enum widget_enum) { switch(widget_enum): {/code}; my_new_widget.common_post_constructor(); return my_new_widget;}
That rings a bell, polymorphism is what I'm looking for
Polymophism is the way you avoid "if (a is some class)" kind of switches
#include <iostream>
#include "cats.h"

void do_meowing(Felid *cat) {
 cat->meow();
}

int main() {
 Cat cat;
 Tiger tiger;
 Ocelot ocelot;

 do_meowing(&cat);
 do_meowing(&tiger);
 do_meowing(&ocelot);
}
Taken from here, I think this is exactly what I'm looking for. Thank you!
I feel like I should have known that, but some reason I was missing the obvious
 
3 hours later…
10:28
Hello Godfathers of C++
My Algorithms and Data Structures Final is in about 2 weeks
My school's curriculum is so weak and I really want to dive a little more into this topic
May I have a nice suggestion of a short book/good resource for learning Algorithms and Data structures in C++?
With much thanks ❤️❤️
user8104581
10:43
Well, interesting
user8104581
11:35
 
2 hours later…
13:19
If I ever start a major project, I will choose a popular language that changes the least. So with the right architecture and clever crafting of the code, it might be written once and work for the next 50 years.
The only hard part is ... such a language probably does not exist.
13:42
Well ANSI C already made it 30 years, so I guess that would be among your best bets.
Well, the last robot I assembled had some examples written in C++ (arduino programming). But it was modula with no classes and nothing to do with object oriented programming. I don't understand why it was not written in C instead.
14:16
@TelKitty Because the authors weren't sadomasochists?
@TelKitty If you value stability above all else, you probably want Fortran (or possibly COBOL). Pretty sure most of the FORTRAN code I wrote back when I was quite young would still compile and work with a modern compiler. The only thing I can remember that would undoubtedly fail would be some that depended on the fact that Control Data's floating point types were extremely precise--single precision was 60 bits, and double precision was 100 bits.
I'd say the same about common lisp. But they said popular language, which kinda remove Fortran/COBOL/*Lisp of the equation
@Rosme I guess it depends on how you define "popular". You (and everybody you know) may dislike COBOL, but most people who try to keep track of such things tend to agree that there are more lines of COBOL code in regular use than of any other programming language on earth.
Oh for sure. I don't mind the language since I've never had to use it, and considering it's origin, there's no reason to really hate it. But I guess it's more about maintenance at this point than really doing new things with it? I may be wrong and I'll gladly accept that I'm wrong though.
I figured popular meant like actively being developed, considering last COBOL release was 5 years ago.
14:33
@Rosme I'm honestly not sure how much new development is being done with it. But to put things in perspective, Micro Focus International (who mostly develop/sell COBOL compilers and associated paraphernalia) is a $7 billion dollar company. Not exactly huge (certainly a lot smaller than Oracle, Google or Microsoft) but still not exactly something to sneeze at.
Definitely. Like I said. I have nothing against the language, and in fact I was going to suggest something like FORTRAN or Common Lisp at first, until I asked myself, do they qualified as popular.
 
4 hours later…
18:12
I wish there was a way to make constexpr functions return types instead of instances of things, without making people write decltype everywhere
You can still use the old C++98 tricks like mapping an enums to types.
18:52
sorta works, but it doesn't make working with string literals as template parameters any less ugly
19:29
@Flexo what are you actually trying to do?
 
2 hours later…
21:57
basically trying to write a DSL
22:10
@Flexo So very tempting to write something implying that I've mistaken DSL for the internet connection technology... :-)
22:30
I'm still unsure and uneasy how to write a urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=DSL
22:54
@WaelAssaf SICP
@JerryCoffin 10 years ago, we were taught in college to become the next generation of programmer that would comprehend enough of the COBOL poesy to scrap it down and convert the whole government infrastructure in Java and possibly now in C# as a replacement for Java.
COBOL popularity obviously increased the hate and desire to remove it from our memories.
I remember helping a fellow student scratching is head and solving his problems by adding a "." in a well chosen place.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Got to punctuate your sentences code properly.
(Not quite sure if I crossed out the right one there--but I guess that's the intent).
23:21
my COBOL teacher used to say that writing in COBOL is alike Shakespeare
I'd say you crossed the wrong one
23:38
I'd disagree. Shakespeare said: "brevity is the soul of wit". COBOL would say:
ADD BREVITY TO WRITING.QUALITIES.
MULTIPLY WRITING.QUALITIES BY TERSENESS.VALUE GIVING TERSENESS-RATING.
ADD TERSENESS-RATING TO PERSONAL-EVALUATION GIVING SOUL.
EVALUATE SOUL GIVING WIT.
5
Of course, I've left out a few minor details like "PROCEDURE DIVISION' necessary for that to be real COBOL.
Shakespeare was concise compared to COBOL.
can't argue with that
Well, writing code is not exactly about abstraction.
It's pretty much the opposite, it has to be precise. It's hard to be precise and concise at the same time.
23:54
@TelKitty Precision and abstraction are orthogonal. Mathematics (for one obvious example) is often both highly abstract and extremely precise.

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