@Borgleader They are. They're on different "budgets". But my gaming budget is for negligible for all practical purposes.
Or rather, the amount I spend on gaming is negligible.
Granted, $500 after tax for the Switch + Sword/Shield 2-pack isn't exactly negligible. But it's rare enough that it's still zero for all practical purposes in the long run.
Do new pokemon games bring something cooler ? For some reason, pokemon is still probably one of my favorite rpg but I find the story to be rather quick to get through
So, I got this binary blob with a function that is like "SynchronousReadFromSocket(a)` on hardware errors it times out. So, whats a good way to implement a timeout? Maybe use another thread with a condition variable? Is there some win32 magic?
I wonder what kind of resources are leaked when you get the native handle to a std::thread and terminate that. Probably any dynamic memory allocated by the thread which got pulled?
very few languages have their official standard bound to such a formal standard commitee process and other languages also don't have to deal with such a large amount of platforms
Severe bikeshed: A script runner runs and then emits a signal that it will do a longer operation including how long it will take. It's later used to show a progress bar. What's the name of the signal? I originally had timeout_set but it's not a timeout. processing seems very non-descriptive. doing_something_with_known_time_requirement seems a bit unwieldy.
timed_operation_started maybe. Though "timed" really doesn't fit.
Time was, there was a member of the research / dev group wrote some code. In said code, was mostly the expected sort of thing. The conspicuous exception were some variables with people names. I.E. instead of something like PatrollingAgent01 it was Alice. When asked about it, he said something like "I couldn't come up with a good name that conveyed meaning, so I tried to pick an obviously bad one to avoid leading others to bad assumptions about its behavior."
I can't decide how terrible that approach is. Maybe Cicada is right and Robert is a perfectly fine name.
But in all seriousness, you could just call it "show_progress" It doesn't really matter if the operation is long as long as the signal just mention that you have to show a progress
Technically the signal has nothing to do with showing progress, it just tells anyone who connected that the operation is happening. And the only one who connected so far is a progress bar, but that could change.
The only process that can be estimated is the sleep_ms process and that doesn't require progress updates as I can globally ask for the current time. Also the user gets to see how many seconds are left, so they can make their own judgement call if they want to light the water cooker kettle.
@nwp heartbeat signals are for messages of the kind "I'm still working on it", so in light of everything else you said: heartbeat_with_estimate or similar?
for some exclusives it is kind of worth it. I essentially just bought a Mario and Zelda machine. Still worth it. Would have preferred PC ports personally, but you can't always get what you want I guess
Same. GB, GBA, DS, DSi, 3DS. I have all of them - all for the Pokemon games.
DSi was the first one I got with my own money after getting a job.
@Mgetz The excuse I used to make my parents get me the DS was that Pokemon Stadium lets you play the Pokemon GB games on the TV. It was around the same time I was getting near-sighted and needed glasses.
I got lucky compared to my siblings. They all needed glasses rather early. I was sitting the most in front of screens but still seem to have gotten the best natural eye-sight out of the 3 of us
@Mysticial When I was a kid, my neighbor had (I believe) the original Magnavox Odyssey for a while, but it got boring pretty quickly. But then Atari came out with Pong, and all of us got to feel superior, because we'd already gotten bored with essentially the same thing...
A friend of mine used to claim that the right way to cook a steak was to have them bring it to the table raw, and wave it over the candle on the table for a minute or two, repeat for the other side, then it was ready. Oh, and when you're done, be sure and light the candles to get nice ambiance...
My nerd brain says: medium rare is supposed to be the best so you should like it. My eating brain says: eew, I want well done. (Therefore I settled on medium.)
@Mgetz ...but it also depends somewhat on the meat you're talking about. Much (most?) flavor comes from fat, so lean cuts start with a fairly delicate flavor. Overcook them, and they'll be dry, tough and tasteless. Fatter cuts can be cooked quite a bit longer, and remain flavorful and (reasonably) tender.
They also don't dry out nearly as quickly, because much more of the moisture is oil/fat rather than water.
@Mgetz So I've heard (but honestly, only rarely experienced). A couple years ago, some people were getting lots of views on YT doing sou vide using a dishwasher... Most people trying to do sou vide seem to do all right at the basic cooking part, but (at least for a lot of things) you also also need to sear the outside, and doing that well seems to be non-trivial (but I haven't tried it myself, so I'm a bit uncertain).
@Mgetz Sounds reasonable. I suspect a lot of people don't get the pan hot enough, or use a light (stainless, or whatever) pan that cools quite a bit when they put in the meat, so they end up leaving it cooking too long, losing most of what they're trying to accomplish.
@JerryCoffin you can use stainless with a thick bottom. What you can't use is non-stick, teflon isn't designed for that heat and you need a bit of stick to get a maillard reaction
you need the pan around smoke point for the oil anyway
The bigger issue TBF is that cooking at those temps for most people is dangerous and can cause a grease fire if they don't know what they're doing
@Mgetz ...and from what I've heard, you probably want to choose a higher temperature oil. Here in San Diego, there's a guy (probably more than one, if you look) who sells avocado oil, which seems to be nearly immune to any reasonable level of heat...
@Mysticial Honestly, probably not. But they were a big jump from any previous mainstream processor.
@Mgetz Back when TM2 was new, I got the interesting job of doing some testing on the temperature management in some laptops with Pentium M's. Ended up (among other things) putting a strip of silver tape on one blade of a fan, and then using an optical tachometer to measure fan speed through some transparent plastic that was sealing up the air intake.
@JerryCoffin I had a college roommate that had a laptop he'd never cleaned out. The thing was dog slow and would randomly reboot... so I bought a can of air and blew it out.
@Mgetz Not surprising. Sad to think about it: the majority of computers now probably run slower than the CPU was designed for, because cooling is inadequate, so they're running into thermal throttling anytime they push the system hard.
I'm a relatively experienced java programmer looking at expanding my knowledge into C and C++. I'm writing a little GTK based freecell clone to get some experience. Do you think it would be best to start straight away with C++, or work with C on this project expanding into C++ after I grow more familiar with C?