when in regular C++ then you can prove the absence of reference cycles through the type system, if you want to, and good designs are trivially clear of ref cycles
but in JavaScript nothing stops you from creating a self-referencing object
There is a massive body being orbited by four less massive bodies on the same circular orbit, each one 90º away from each other. I'm in a much smaller (i.e. my gravitational field is negligible) body orbiting one of the planets. I want to switch to orbit one of the other three planets. I'm constantly crashing into the sun.
@JerryCoffin I don't think it's implementation details define the language.
else, you could argue that the only possible implementation of Python, ever, is CPython, because it's the reference implementation and if you have one single byte out of line in your source files then it doesn't match the reference
@R.MartinhoFernandes blast straight away from the sun. You'll move away, then fall back toward the sun (as long as you don't exceed the escape velocity from the sun). Make it a strong enough blast, and by the time you fall back that far, the next planet will be right under you.
@DeadMG I'm simply pointing out what reference implementation means. If you don't like what it means, well, so be it.
@DeadMG No, it's not. Taken to its logical conclusion, it means that this particular implementation is the standard for that language. No, most other implementations probably don't conform perfectly -- but that's nothing new. When you have a written standard (e.g., C, C++, Common Lisp) none of the implementations quite conforms. What of it?
@JerryCoffin If the non-observable details count towards the specification of the language, then you're not talking about a little bit of deviation, but rather massive deviations. In fact, it effectively outright bans other implementations - something that runs rather contrary to the purpose of a reference implementation, which is to provide a guide for other implementations without having to build a proper spec.
@DeadMG If they're truly non-observable, then of course people ignore them. But, what (in something like C or C++) we'd normally think of as implementation details (e.g., order of evaluation of function arguments) isn't for it -- any difference from the reference implementation is a bug (unless there's also a written spec that specifies which parts of the reference implementation aren't normative, or whatever term they decide to use).
@DeadMG That depends on how you define observable. If, for example, you include things like timing characteristics, then it might be -- but in Python's case, I'd guess you're right; it's unlikely that anybody considers it observable.
@DeadMG Unless they're working on real-time systems, in which case they have no choice. I was thinking more about characteristics than just basic performance though. For example, for some kinds of collectors, it's fairly easy to limit the maximum pause for GC at any one time.
I'm reading a book where the author says that if( a < 901 ) faster than if( a <= 900 ). not exactly as this simple example, but slightly performance changes on loop complex code. I suppose this has to do something with ASM in case it's even true
I also supposed it's pure speculation, but for educational purposed I would like to know about it. - It's a portuguese book, the translated title is "A step into C depths" by Marcos Lorenzon. It's an old book (dated 2001). — Viniyo Shouta9 mins ago
Get that book find out where it says that so we can all bash it.
Your custom-comparator-function version is simply more elegant iff you already have the strings anyway. All the 'type-safe/manual allocation-free' hipness that you get with std::string is not very interesting if you're not going to use it. C++ makes you pay only for what you use. This is a tribute to the flexibility of std::map, if you ask me — sehe6 secs ago
+1 interesting question. as i recall pointer cast is not permitted in "const expression". but i could be wrong, and if i'm right it only answers the immediate of why the compiler doesn't allow it, not why the standard is that way. — Cheers and hth. - Alf55 secs ago
@sehe After I left for college, he started cleaning up the house. He donated most of the small ones which I had many duplicates of, air-compressed most of the bigger ones, and deflated all the inflatable ones...
There wasn't really much space in the house. It literally was all plushies.
@sehe ah I see... "I didn't kill them all, I was just experimenting to see how people respond to small slugs of metal entering their brain at high velocity"
my logical side believes them to rigged so that they will only let you win when they want you to, but after seeing him at work I can't help but doubt that
@sehe Speaking of which. My biggest plushie is this 5ft. long dog. It covers the entire grand piano - works great to dampen it since that piano is pretty loud.
I do actually have rather pressing work to get sorted... but planning to fall back on 'they delivered over a week late, it will done as I can be arsed possible'
@StackedCrooked It's funny though if you think about it. I've never seen a single solar eclipse, lunar eclipse, meteor shower, ever... But I got to see the Venus transit - which is the rarest of them all.
I would've been able to see the annular eclipse at the end of May since it swiped a couple hundred miles north of where I live. But I was on vacation in Europe at the time. (and I was still on the same trip when the Venus transit took place)
@StackedCrooked That's gotta suck... At least eclipses are common. I'm probably not gonna see one until the 2017 eclipse that swipes through central US.
@StackedCrooked Actually, which eclipse was that one?
@thecoshman In the current era, it's twice every ~120 years.
1000 years ago, and 1000 years in the future, it will be back to 1 every ~120 years.
The next one will be 2117.
The last one was 2004. I didn't see that one.
They usually occur in pairs that are 8 years apart. That's because every 8 years, Earth and Venus come back to approximately the same places in their orbits.
@Mysticial Nope I was making a walk in my neighborhood. It was getting a little dark and I figured it was a cloud and didn't bother to look up. Apparently it was the eclipse.
@thecoshman ah oh well... at least you can see Mercury transits. They happen every few years. But you need very good equipment through since it's a lot smaller.
@thecoshman But you at least have something to work on, right? I could do my homework for my uni (that I was supposed to do in a schoolyear), but it's even more boring that staring at the wall.
@thecoshman ? I don't follow. You stop using crappy source control, switching to virtual environment, so they can use a server farm to help reduce build time.... Whoa. Do you know what you're trying to say? Also, it cannot be done on site? Are you saying that virtual environments aren't on-site? That's orthogonal
I guess you - somehow - mean that you started working in the cloud, so they can have more servers for less (short term) money? I still don't know how that 'eliminates' the use of crappy source control
I think they logic is, by moving towards a 'cloud' set up, it is easy to use a server farm to reduce build times. Either way are still using a crappy source control that has made this hole transfer a lot harder
@thecoshman mIRC has .mrc files for your scripts under the "remote" tab, which likely standy for "mIRC rc file", though I still don't quite get what "rc" is for
I keep getting timeout messages when trying to post to this chat. Strangely enough, the errors don't occur if I open a second chat window before the message times out.
@Neil I would just settle for something that did not get in my way, and tracked the changes rather then just storing individual files as distinct items
If your real code is different, this question is useless. Post a small, selfcontained benchmark (including timing methods) and you have Jon Skeet material. My guess is, it won't be possible to show that is slower in that way. — sehe5 secs ago
@thecoshman Nooooo. Because, that never happened before!
@thecoshman I discriminate based on utterances. Pretty easy job
Yeah. Microbenchmarking is both hard and frequently useless. I was gonna say this, but I was out of energy for the rest of the responses for the moment :) (FWIW, C# has struct valuetypes which make the outer type be copied like in C++ value semantics. Not the string itself, though) — sehe1 min ago