@Mikhail Hmm...I've seen it work when it's const, but I'll admit I've never tried to push hard to find all the dark corners (and, of course, you could be seeing a bug in an implementation).
@TelKitty std::filesystem overloads operator/ for paths, so it appends paths together, and it's up to the implementation to use the correct syntax for the underlying system (e.g., I'd expect '/' on Linux, either '\' or '/' on windows, and ':' on VMS).
Since there is no `operator\`, it clearly can't/won't/doesn't overload it, regardless of the underlying system.
@10Replies Some regulars here are probably sick of hearing me say it, but it depends on the student. When/if physicists and mathematicians learn to program, they're often very comfortable with fairly abstract languages like APL, Haskell and Agda (and in many cases, never deal with lower level languages at all). On the other hand, many electrical engineers are pretty happy starting with assembly language, possibly moving on to C and/or Fortran, but dislike anything higher level than that.
Also everybody I know who uses haskell in production is a a total looser with a degree in something intimidating and a job that involves the absolutely most boring kind of code parsing data. Also 100% of them are on antidepressants.
@Mikhail mathematicians don't do production. They write some squirrely code that ran well enough to (at least in their opinion) confirm their preconceived notions about something, publish a paper, and repeat ad nauseam.
That's the best case, most of them don't publish anything. Its "okay" in their community because everybody is "nice". Their thesis can easily be a rephrasing of a previous paper or work. Which really means they paginated something in Latex.
You don't know how lame mathematicians are. Most of them don't do math, they are just paid to do math.
@Mikhail That's certainly true in some areas. There are a few where I can spot BS part of the time though.
@Mikhail They even conspire about it. Von Neummann once advised Shannon to use the word "entropy", because it would make it (nearly) impossible for anybody to argue about exactly what he/it meant (and having published his own theory on entropy ~20 years before, Von Neumann knew of what he spoke).
We’re writing to let you know that the Meetup @ WeWork pilot is coming to an end. We will continue to honor any existing reservations for Meetup events held at WeWork spaces, however beginning today you will no longer be able to make any new reservations.
Oo, WeWork can no longer provide venues for our A.I. in Robotics meetups (or any meetups for that matter). I guess we are just lucky to be able to secure a year of venue booking with Microsoft in their CBD startup hub a month ago.
Also my dad was able to sell his shares in historical high 3 months ago in order to be able to pay for the land intended for the solar farm.
Eventually I would run out of good luck, kitty would go splash. I wonder how far I would be falling then.
Good thing is that kitty has pretty thick skin & I am insensitive to falling. If down to the trough, I will be just crawling my way back up ... I think ...
The problem with servos is that, even if the robot does nothing, it still uses a lot of power. Yesterday I forgot to turn the robot off while having dinner, by the time I was back to my desk, the battery was flat.
Rip internet points. Thankfully I find the tragedy of those decisions funny by now instead of being sad. But you can't say it didn't work, lots of upvotes this time. Or maybe they don't count downvotes anymore in an attempt to be nice.
I didn't see that answered in the new faq list. Though I only skimmed it. And this is specifically about being personally corrected and being expected to remember it several days later.
Forgetting pronouns of everyone is fine, forgetting pronouns of trans people only is discrimination. And they went back to allowing not using pronouns, so it's not even a problem in practice.
Too bad they diversify pronouns instead of unifying them.
it's kind of a "let hidden bugs lie" mindset. Trying to change as little as possible so that none of the cruft comes back to bite you. Obviously that's a recipe for calcification, but it's the same as with all "updates". The ROI isn't always clear, so doing nothing for most people seems the safest bet
successful companies always break stuff and then fix it, it's when companies become top-heavy with respect to management that they become "risk" averse.
I agree, not everything needs updates all the time and I really value Microsofts approach of trying to break as little backwards-compat as possible/reasonable.
@Mgetz ...and Redhat/CentOS. Until about a month ago, CentOS 7 was current, and it shipped with gcc 4.8.5 (which doesn't even support C++11 completely, not to mention anything newer).
@DexterLiu Maybe, but Microsoft's compiler has also been known for relatively poor conformance for quite a while. It's gotten better in the last few years, but depending on what parts you look at, you could make a decent case that it has the poorest conformance of the big 3 compilers.
@Mgetz Yeah. The sad thing is that there was a time that Intel's compiler was cutting edge, and then they apparently decided not to update the front end (even though they use the EDG front end, so excellent language conformance should only be a matter of updating a license and re-compiling).
@DexterLiu Define "needed". If we base things only on the bare minimum absolutely necessary, we'd still be toggling switches on a front panel. Most of the changes to C++ have been substantial, meaningful improvements though.
Is it true that when doing a load on an atomic variable the std::memory_order argument (relaxed, acquire, release, ...) only affects the surrounding loads/stores, not the load of the variable itself? Or is this only true for read-modify-write operations (fetch_add(), etc...)?
@Mgetz You mean "yes", as in the memory order argument only affects the surrounding loads and stores? Or "yes" as in it's only true for read-modify-write operations?
I always thought the memory order only affects surrounding loads/stores. However, I recently read about std::shared_ptr::unique becoming deprecated because it's not reliable in multithreaded code because it's a relaxed load.
@Mysticial not sure it's practical for the 64core with SMT enabled but it's technically doable It looks like? maybe? They didn't list the per core NUMA requirements
@Mysticial based on what's buildzoid has said and others have observed it's uniformly ununiform
@Mgetz Zen 2 is uniform because everything has to hit the I/O die. Which means there's room for optimization for things that are right next to each other to no go all the way to the I/O die. Once they exploit that (Zen 3), it won't be uniform anymore.
The line between NUMA and non-NUMA is kinda fuzzy. By definition, any non-uniformity is NUMA. But of course it needs to be big enough for it to be worth exposing it to the OS.
@DexterLiu You mean the mobile app? I believe it's pretty much abandoned--it has a fair number of bugs, quite a few limitations, and and abandoned for years (literally--last updated in 2017).
The mobile web site seems to work better than the app (and if nothing else, it's updated more frequently).
@Mgetz It'll be interesting to see how well the real thing holds up to the rumors (but there's certainly been no room to complain for the last couple of years or so).
@DexterLiu It wouldn't be so bad if the app had worked well before it was abandoned, but they did a release 1.0 (which was buggy, of course), then did (going from memory here) only a couple minuscule fixes before abandoning it. They've also published an API, but at least when I looked, it was missing a number of crucial capabilities, so you can write your own app, but unless you do some reverse engineering and such, it'll also be severely handicapped.
My personal opinion is that the mobile app for SO is a waste of time and a misuse of resources. Because most people use SO when they're at work already on a desktop. Likewise, it's hard to provide quality answers on a phone. IOW, you shouldn't be using SO on a phone anyway.
The case is obviously different for SE in general as there are sites where it is reasonable to expect people to use on a mobile device.
But regardless, the mobile app(s) sucking is probably the least of SE's worries right now.
@JerryCoffin Yeah. If we go by the voting, they've managed to ideologically split their user base into a 1:5 ratio with the majority against the company and an all-out scorched earth total war between the two sides.
@Mysticial Yeah--at this point, enough hard feelings have surfaced that healing the rift is going to be drawn out and difficult, even if they really start doing good things (whereas most of what they've done so far as exacerbated the problems).
@JerryCoffin They can dig themselves out of it if they start by admitting mistakes. But they can't because either because of ego, or because of legal implications involving Monica.
As I understand, one of the major grievances of the community recently over the situation with Monica is that the Stack Exchange team has not apologized for or admitted to any wrongdoing over making public statements that negatively affect Monica's reputation, here on Meta, per-site metas, and al...
@Mysticial Hard to compare the two. With Monica, the damages are probably fairly small, but I'd say something like 80% chance that they lose if it goes t court. With licensing, the damages are potentially a lot larger, but I'd guess their chance of losing in court is much lower. In particular, proving damages from it (in monetary terms) is likely to be considerably more difficult.
true, maybe an injunction is more likely in the latter case?
I'm imagining one of those really bad visual novel endings where the relationship becomes so bitter that the users get together to threaten a class action.
@Mysticial Hmm...maybe. A permanent injunction normally means everybody agrees about the facts of what happened, so the only question(s) involved are legal ones. The judge decides the legal question(s) and, if merited, issues an injunction.
A temporary injunction is similar, except it means there may be a disagreement on the facts, but there's a possibility of severe damages before a hearing can conclude. In this case, the judge basically assumes the facts are as alleged by the party asking for the injunction, considers the legal matters, and likelihood of immediate damage to decide whether to issue the injunction. If memory serves, they are allowed to ignore "facts" so far-fetched that no reasonable jury would agree with them.
I believe either way, however, you still need to be able to enter a case in court, so you need "standing", and that might be difficult in this case.
user8104581
user8104581
I'm thinking this is where the experiment idea started
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I think they're hiding from the wrong people. They should hide the vote count from the OP and not the voters. Because it's usually the OP that whines about it and sees it as "unwelcoming".
Why downvote a question anyway? if there are proper tools to flag/remove bad questions.
user8104581
10:26 PM
@Mysticial That's a double-edged sword, wouldn't be long before they started logging off their account to see the actual vote count. Their self-security might get a hit :-)
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix It tells other uses to not waste their time. It also knocks it off the front page and feeds the roomba.
user8104581
Also discourages improper behavior, some sort of punishment is arguably essential to the way societies work. Can't make boundaries on what is right or wrong without it
@andreyrk The idea here is that vampires can't be fixed. So just get rid of them quietly as possible. Because anything other than feeding the vampire will be unwelcoming and lead to negativity.
@Mysticial of course but without downvotes, it would motivate people to vote up questions and flag the bad ones. They'd get knocked off anyway, as it would work a bit differently
user8104581
@Mysticial I think many people just need a little push to get on track
So you keep the downvotes from the OP, but it's still there for all the "reviewers" to judge. If anybody wants to try to help the OP either by answering or a positive nudge as a comment, they can.
user8104581
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I concur, still having a scoring system while not having downvoting might work IMO, kind of like how comments work
yes, then handling bad question would be done through flagging so if the question is so bad it would give proper attention to the OP and clear the frontpage until action is done
user8104581
10:34 PM
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Also seems to me could make unpopular opinions considerable at least a little, instead of just skimming due to downvote bias
yes I find it a bit ironic that SO became a "no opinion" question board while having people biased on downvote/upvote based on opinion
It's like you can't ask a question that can have an answer based on opinion, but you can have an opinion on the question itself. I'd downvote all question tagged with php because php suck
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I was gonna say that the whole pronoun thing is already opinionated, but clearly saying that would get be branded a facist far-right bigot by the left and an SJW by the right since both sides consider their positions to be facts and not opinions.
@Mysticial I think it's more that both sides believe their positions are supported by facts. And honestly, to some extent that's probably true. The question is which facts you consider more important.
@JerryCoffin Ah, the arrogance atom, at position 1337 in our beloved table =) Fortunately quite unstable. Outside computer science they only saw it once at CERN. That guy has a bad headache now.
Also why is the lounges title "The Lounge is not a parrot!" when it quite clearly is?
@CaptainGiraffe "crazy guy"? That sounds very unwelcoming. Demanding that others experience the same reality you do shows you are a patriarchal colonialist.
For that matter, demanding that others experience reality at all is undoubtedly evil and narrow-minded.
I wonder if you would still consider someone as 'crazy', if the person proves self to be much more intellectually superior and people around are the mentally retarded ones by comparison.
@TelKitty Are you trying to treat sanity and intelligence as the same (or even related)?
@CaptainGiraffe Ah, I'd been meaning to ask about whether you had room for me to stop by for a few weeks of drunken debauchery, but I guess I don't have to ask...