@EtiennedeMartel That's one of those refactoring that rarely results in good code, IMO. But in general it is all EPIC WIN. Especially for keyboardist. And with ViEmu - of course
@EtiennedeMartel Ohhhh. You don't know anything about me. I don't like LINQ. I Love it to death!
I just stated that that particular refactoring often leads to crappy LINQ statements where loops are better suited. Or yield blocks. Like, maybe, 50% of the time.
In fact, I never use the query syntax. Except for the very rare occasion where I need a straight inner join of two enumerators. I'd say in all others cases Extension syntax is less surprising and much easier to refactor.
@MohamedAhmedNabil By the way, using boost::lexical_cast<T> (str) is roughly equivalent to using std::istringstream iss(str); T val; if (!iss >> val) { throw Exception; } return val;
@MohamedAhmedNabil This is exactly the same question as yesterday. We gave you that link. It would be much appreciated if you had used the search function on Stack Overflow to get that.
@MohamedAhmedNabil How likely do you think it is we're going to keep answering you in chat --- chat ! --- when you just re-ask the precise same question the next day.... Hmmm
@sehe Yesterday I didnt ask that, I only asked if there was a getint function or not, Today, I was just asking not for what to use, but for peoples personal prefrence
Right. And then we got some discussion. About this very same question. You know, ***you are free to use _whatever_ you like***. IIRC you are still learning the stuff, and frankly I don't think fretting these details is productive. It certainly isn't for me.
@MohamedAhmedNabil You should stop being stupid. Sorry if that sounds offensive, but it's the most honest expression of how I'm feeling about you right now.
@MohamedAhmedNabil You come here, not knowing the customs, do something wrong and annoy the regulars, get told what you did wrong, and then, instead of apologizing and adapting your behavior, you try to tell those regulars why you didn't do anything wrong? I am sorry, but from where I sit (and I wasn't even around yesterday!) that sounds a lot like you need to follow @StackedCrooked's advice.
Sorry if that sounds offensive? I thought the whole point of offending people was to make them feel offended. Also, if you feel offended, you probably deserve to feel offended.
It’s a well-known fact in software engineering that the cost of fixing a bug increases exponentially the later in development that bug is discovered. This is supported by data published in Code Complete and adapted in numerous other publications.
However, it turns out that this data never existe...
@MohamedAhmedNabil Take it easy. Look at the first two answers you got today (I bet you got similar answers yesterday), and start from there. Feel free to come back and ask if you get stuck. (But do not ask the same question again!)
Today, I got up at 5:45am, went shopping as if for a party, made a chili so big that the two biggest pots I have can't hold it, had to pit a basket full of plums, then baked two plum cakes from them, fed and entertained a 5yo, fought a spammer, changed (and laundered) the sheets and blankets of a whole (big) family, served dinner to a whole (big) family, and mended a teenage relationship. it's now 11:30pm, and I am quite exhausted.
I joined SO when there were are 150K questions. Now there are some 330K questions.
It appears that the number of visits to questions, and the real longevity of an interesting question, appear (IMHO, no empirical data) rapidly dropping off. This seems a like a natural consequence: with flood...
@Griwes That was actually my immediate thought. I must admit haven't fully read the answer. But if it is the same old 'inver loop order to optimize for prefetch/locality' ... yeah, that's old /cc @Mysticial
there's only 10,000,000 programmers on earth? That's only ~1:1000 people. I would expect it to be higher - especially when considering hobbyists — warrenOct 8 '09 at 10:31
@daknøk I doubt it. Not one in 1000 Chinese is a programmer. Nor in Nigeria. And that's a sizable chunk of the world's population to catch up with for reaching a 1:1000 average.
@sehe hmm? I have plenty of bandwidth. (But I do visit the chat at work, so I fall into the other category, I guess). Not that I have any clue what you guys were talking about
@sehe My answer isn't really that great. All I really did was point it to the 3 other questions. And provide an optimized example. But apparently the combination of them was enough to make it interesting?
Erm. Fewer questions get asked, because more questions have already been answered? I mean, we get enough basics that get asked over and over again. We treat them with the 'close-as-duplicate' flag. For a reason. The drop-off is by design. — sehe1 min ago
> Remember how we laughed and asked what kind of horrible music kids would find to shock and annoy parents who grew up on Sex Pistols? #bieber — Orjan Westin
@epic_syntax Sorry, but whether or not they are simple questions is irrelevant. Please break up your question or choose one. The purpose of this site is to create a collection of great question/answer pairs for people to revisit. Not just for your one-time use — sehe8 secs ago
@sbi Yeah, I've heard that from a few people. When the topic first came up, I felt kinda bad about rushing to judgement on the guy - but then I went through 500 or so of his posts, and ended up flagging about 60 as straight-up spam. There's skirting the edges of what's appropriate, and then there's danging back and forth so often folks just get dizzy watching you.
He's definitely had enough experience to know what he's doing, and how to play the sympathy card.
> Yeah, pretty harsh of your wife too, bashing you for reading your own book. Surely she should have asked why you were entranced with something you wrote yourself and told you not to be so damn silly? Fail.
@sehe I have to disagree -- a natural salesperson would manage to slip it in smoothly enough and naturally enough that nobody would complain about it at all. For example, contrast Ira's posts (both here and on Usenet) with P.J. Plaugar's. P.J. Plaugar does mention Dinkumware enough that anybody who's paying attention at all know what he sells -- but he also contributes real content, and only mentions his products where they honestly fit in.
The guys at EDG are pretty much the same -- enough mention of EDG that anybody who pays attention knows what they sell, but only where it makes sense. They also contribute enough other real content to impress almost anybody with their competence and knowledge both of programming and the darkest nooks and crannies of the C++ standard.
@Ell meet them, talk to them and find something you have in common, like something you're both interested in, that makes a conversation really easy to start.
> Here’s another examples: some nutrients are known as vital poisons. A simple example is iron: we need it to survive, but it’s harmful in large amounts. A more surprising example is arsenic. We actually need a little of it. Three reasons expert predictions are often wrong
@Ell What the Lion said. Worst thing that can happen is that you get bored. Practice makes perfect. I'm not much of a chatter (isn't it ironic), and I find that I have a hard time making conversation when I let it slip out of 'habit'/'practice'
@JerryCoffin In that respect, he's a failed specimen here. Damaged goods. Hmmm. Who can we sell him to...
Hey, that's cool. You have a guarantee you'll meet people. Aaaand no one will be surprised if you talk to them - when you don't know anyone. I mean, that's a given, eh?
@sehe Most programmers spend relatively little effort on the sort of trivia (e.g., sports) that most people use as common ground to at least get conversations started, so they can do some initial exploring of each others' interests.
It's actually becomes harder to make contact if you let the opportunity slip. In a few weeks, people will have concluded 'Oh person such and such is not much fun/not a talker/a loner/likes to be left alone'
@sehe I'd note that he not only seems to fail to recognize what's needed, but even after close to 20 years of people complaining about him, just doesn't seem to learn at all (as sbi pointed out, he's been doing the same crap on Usenet for a long time now -- and I know he's gotten complaints, because I sent a couple).
@Ell 20 years ago, I'd have said you were justified in at least trying to downplay that aspect of your personality. Nowadays, I'd try to keep it from sounding like that's all you do or care about, but I'd do the same about almost any single interest. "Nerd" has less to do with the specific subject you care about, than the fact that you're so devoted to one subject you're relatively one-dimensional (and therefore, uninteresting except to those who share that single interest).
I have always been happy to be weird. Then again, I've always been good at being a loner too. But I have forgotten all about social angst since... 1995 when I switched schools in the last year of highschool.
I found out that people will actually expect you to (a) be a human (b) be weird (c) still talk to you
I actually think it would be a major cause for concern
> Jeff Atwood contradicts himself regularly. I think its his way of driving home the point that you can't really take him at face value. That would be lazy. It forces you to actually think for yourself. here