@TelKitty I suppose it depends on how you define "efficient". On one hand, rocket engines are almost amazingly efficient. Most of the big, general-purpose rockets have an Carnot efficiency around 65-70%. To put that in perspective, a typical automobile engine is around 10-12%. On the other hand, rockets normally carry not only fuel, but also oxidizer. A rocket that goes to outer space has to carry a lot of fuel, and a lot of the fuel is used to carry the rest of the fuel
So, in a fully fueled rocket, something like 80% of the fuel is there to lift fuel, not payload.
Exactly what I meant ... since force are opposite between 2 objects, instead of letting rockets carrying the fuel, why not using the launch pads to provide the initial force into the sky?
@TelKitty This has been discussed many times, but to my knowledge nobody's figured out a way to give the vehicle enough upward momentum to make much difference.
So, for VS Code I'm using clangd as a language server but gcc is as the compiler. So I can't figure out how to kill this error that appears in VS Code's problem field: In included file: no member named 'signbit' in the global namespace; did you mean '__signbit'?. Its a clang error, not from clang-tidy...