How to convert std::filesystem::file_time_type to std::chrono::time_point? Preferably without going through time_t - there is such a solution on SO, but I assume there is a shorter way. C++ 17.
I learnt only recently that the h in "an hour" was silent
Now the thing is since you mostly don't pronounce h at all in French, when you switch to English you overthink it and end up accidentally adding or removing h everywhere :/
@Morwenn Well, I failed a simple interview because I kept talking instead of thinking. After the interview I wrote the answer within 5 minutes. Part of the reason I normally don't code and talk, or chew gum and walk :-)
fuck, I need to practice this interview performance stuff because I'm failing like 50% of the interviews on stuff I've been doing for years.
Yep, I had to junk like that with Qt because the lifetimes were too confusing :-)
Oh another interview I might have failed involved a diamond hierarchy problem. I proposed a few way to solve it including explicitly selecting the base class. They wanted me to use virtual inheritance...
Not sure how that helps. I mean if you have a diamond inheritance structure you either have a naming conflict or you should be using composition because you're holding multiple copies of the same kind of thing.
Yep, so that among the things I said. Ugg, I'm getting PTSD from this stuff :-)
Whats important to note is that virtual inheritance can often produce complete garbage because it smashes the objects together. For example, class left_wheel : speedclass wheels : virtual left_wheel, virtual right_wheel. Now both wheels have the same speeds?
Yeah, it was a pretty easy question. Basically you have an interface that reads 16 bits no matter what, now write a wrapper around it.
fuck
pre-screening 1 went well : "We have a tough interview process, so you'll do a bunch of timed tests with me". There is a good chance I'll fail one of the tests. pre-screening 2 was "We have these positions but we're looking at people for the next few months before we make the decision"