Hi, I have a C++ question but I don't know if it's best for SO or for code review SE
I'm basically asking why some very simple features I expected to find in the ranges library aren't in the standard, and if that was a deliberate choice from the committee or if my understanding was wrong somewhere.
Worrying that this might be subjective and not factual.
Would this kind of question be best on SO or elsewhere?
@jrsala better ask on Reddit r/cpp and enjoy the flamewar
also ranges features are incredibly complicated to specify in a manner that makes them maximally useful and hard to misuse
every single range or view takes a lot of time to review, so they just shipped whatever seemed ready for C++20
with more to come
and enough blog posts and proposals have already been written about how the ranges features that shipped in C++20 are subtly broken, hard to use, underpowered, etc.
@Morwenn Yeah this makes sense, honestly it strikes me that types that support ranges should be able to do a using view = <view type constructable from range>
Recently did a lot of string tokenization, and to KISS I've been increasingly jumping to c-style string manipulation for tokenization tasks, just find the delimiters and fscanf the ranges. No memory copied :-)
Technically, formally, speaking, its important for you to understand, that its still through your skin, even if the bicycle is removed from an orifice - as the bike was initially circumscribed by your skin, and upon removal is no longer inside the skin (hence through the skin).
@StackedCrooked I think in this case, the operative point is the move from "willing to donate organs if I should die" to "you start harvesting the organs, we'll start looking through the lists to see who receives them."
@StackedCrooked Even with lots of people signed up to be donors, there are rarely enough organs. Most people die of old age, in which case their organs are rarely good candidates for transplanting. Desirable transplants mostly come from people who were young and healthy right up until they died, which largely means people who died in accidents.
But no mention was made of a more fundamental reason why Belgian surgeons have a more plentiful supply of organs available than do British surgeons: Belgian drivers kill more than twice as many people, per unit population, as do British ones.
user7659542
9:10 PM
@Mikhail Curious about the numbers in ex-USSR countries
user7659542
Buying driving licenses there is common practice
user7659542
source: I have done it
user7659542
I ended up taking more lessons in my home country and retaking the exams. But it is common practice
@traducerad Depends some on which former Soviet country you measure. Fatalities per 100.000 people is listed as 9.6 for Romania, and 18.9 for Russia (but only 5.4 for Belgium, and 2.9 for the UK). Also depends on exactly what you measure (e.g., deaths per unit of population, or deaths per distance traveled--if the same number of people drive a lot more, you obviously also expect to see more accidents).
[but only a few countries report deaths per distance traveled]
user7659542
9:27 PM
@Mikhail cost. Where I live driving licence courses start at 2000e, which is extremely expensive
user7659542
so that way I could get all the official licenses and would then just follow a couple of courses here and there untill I feel comfortable