Would 1 fast computer beat 2 slower ones? I mean, would you like to work on 1 fast computer or 2 slower ones - you can use one while the other slowish machine compiles and builds your code?
I have 2 slow machines, New South Wales state revenue robbed me, now I don't have enough $ to buy new machines.
I wanted to initialize a constexpr member variable using a constexpr member function but it didn't compile. It was OK when I moved the function out of the class. Why does it happen? Is there any way to use class member constexpr functions to initialize member constexpr variables?
I'm using Apple...
Maybe because constexpr static member functions can access constexpr static members and then you have a problem with the order. Either make it that member functions cannot access members or that members cannot be initialized by member functions. The second seems less bad.
Of course the C++ way is to allow both and if you access uninitialized variables it's UB, but it appears that at least in constexpr contexts the committee wants to move away from that way.
A lot people lie for various reasons. I try my best to keep to the truth, at least the one I know of. I am aware of my ignorance but vast majority of others are more ignorant than I am.
I am quite aware of how others think. Once a friend asked me "why can't you think like everyone else?", to which I answered "if I need others to think everything for me, what do I need my own brain for?"
To me it's often a mystery how others think. I have had some small success with figuring out the thought process behind some behaviors, but it took a lot of effort and chances are I still got it wrong.
Or you didn't need to figure out how others think often.
I need to rent out various properties, have founded a group and now it has 700-800 members, need to promote apps. A lot of the times I need to try to sass out how other think in order to obtain optimum result.
Hmm. I have a Discord server now. 3000 people and drama every day. Supposedly I'm very neutral when it comes to issues. But still, making and enforcing rules without everyone getting annoyed is difficult. And you only get to see a small fraction of the issues and often it's difficult to trace the root cause of a complaint.
It's a bit like customers making suggestions. They are great at finding issues and terrible at suggesting fixes.
For what it's worth I have no clue how you think. You throw out random thoughts that look like you would have abandoned them had you spent 10 seconds thinking about them.
I can't tell if you think those thoughts are actually smart or it's a way to arrive at new conclusions or trolling or getting people's views or something else.
Pro tip: when you start playing with new things, things that you don't really understand, and something doesn't work, your first reaction will be to assume that the problem lies in the new thing, because that's the one you don't understand, the big unknown. But, honestly, most of the time the problem is in the things you thought you understood but forgot about.