maybe those are the people that refuse to use IDEs and they're mad that they can't see the original type
2 hours later…
user7659542
9:38 AM
@ABuckau No C
user7659542
@PeterT at my current company they force you to prefix your variable's identifier with its type, so IIRC if you hqve a structure you ll have something like: myStruct_t strFoo = {0};
user7659542
besides that imo the argument that you don't know the type is only valid when declaring the variable
yeah hungarian notation is still used in a bunch of styleguides
user7659542
later on in the software you are left with the identifier only. So, unless you prefixed the variable with "str" or smth like that you will not know the type regardless of whether you typedeffed
In multiple inheritance, both parents might supply the same function. For example, struct C : A, B and struct A {bool is_valid()} and struct B {bool is_valid()}. What if when you do c.is_valid() it calls both functions (in order of declaration). Maybe returns the last one's value... Is there some dystopian std::future where this would be a good idea :-)
2 hours later…
user7659542
5:38 PM
@Mgetz never heard about that! source?
user7659542
it is part of many coding standards and I remember even being taught that at uni
Probably a combination of several things: 1. They underestimated the Epyc demand. Since that has higher profit margins, they're moving all their Ryzen supply there instead. 2. They fucked up the boost clocks (set them too high) on the Ryzens and they can't get enough good bins to actually meet what they advertise. 3. TSMC's 7nm capacity is completely overstretched since everybody wants it.
TSMC's gonna make a killing. And everybody knows it. :)
@Mysticial 1) good for AMD 2) bad for AMD but fixable longer term as the process matures, even six months from now TSMC will have higher yields 3) I really hope they don't have a mysterious 'fire' like another fab did recently...
what's faster write read from a file by signaling, or using a socket to transfer data?
Or is this a meaningless distinction and I'm just being pedantic.
by signaling I mean, you write to a file and then another program reads from that file once it receives the singal via WebSocket or some other messaging protocol that the write has finished.
but it's never apples for apples because databases aren't bulk storage, they're not meant for that kind of operation
all you're saying is that "If I use Tool X for a situation it was never meant for, it's not as good as Tool Y that is meant for that"
I mean, congratulations, you're right, but...
if you start saying "I need to read data from a file and then query it afterwards", then you may well lose to the database who spent a billion dollars and 20 years doing that as efficiently as possible
so what you're saying is "Can my machine transfer memory between two processes faster than it can transfer memory between two processes but also roundtripping it through the disk"?
it's a hypothetical that makes no sense, as you're comparing things that are totally different and no apples-to-apples comparison is possible, not to mention a thousand real-world conditions that could change the result
Q 4. Have you experienced harassment as defined by law? A 5 grade radio box. Result: 5- out of 7 has experienced prosecutable offenses during my class. Maybe I should just drop the mic with "peace out", get your comp-sci education from a mofo that doesn't know what an application server is, and gets surprised by intellisense.
well, they like riding bikes with training wheels. That's not considered cool by some.
To be honest, once you learn C++ javascript, python, bash, rust and ruby is just a variation on a theme
and java
I would like to see a truly new language. Something that follows a new paradigm like parallel programming. Where the semantics are completely different.
@CaptainGiraffe Javascript was a terrible language through and through from the beginning ;p
@Rick Unfortunately, the simple fact is that 3GLs like C# can express pretty much whatever we need already or with simple continuing evolution; there's just not much market for more. Quantum languages is probably the only ones coming up any time soon.
@Rick Assuming you're reading soon after writing, the disk hardware probably won't be involved. A typical OS will cache the data, so one process will write to the cache, and the other will read it back in from the cache.
The file still will still usually go through some of the file system driver, where the other uses the sockets drivers. There may be a difference in speed, but it's not nearly as obvious as just "writing to the disk will obviously slow things down."
@Rick Yes, it's entirely possible. As with anything about performance, only testing will give a solid answer--and even then, it's open to change from one OS to another, including what look like fairly minor patches to an OS in some cases. Just for example, a while back MS did some re-architecting to improve speed of socket connections inside a single machine.