@sehe Let me rephrase then: if you're doing something simply because the rules require it, you have a fairly decent argument that it's not your fault. If the requirements are stupid enough to qualify as a problem, the problem is with the source of the rules, not yourself.
@sehe Thinking for yourself is vastly overrated. Just let me do the thinking, send me your money, and everything will be wonderful. Oh, and don't forget the virgin sacrifices either...but send them to me intact, and I'll deal with sacrificing their virginity!
@sehe Most people can't decide between old/dependable and new/exciting, so they try to combine the two, usually by using the most recent version of an old program.
Sometimes it's nice to start over. In C++ I can employ this following simple manoeuvre:
{
T x(31, Blue, false);
x.~T(); // enough with the old x
::new (&x) T(22, Brown, true); // in with the new!
// ...
}
At the end of the scope, the destructor wi...
I'm pretty sure you'd either need a fifo to feed the source to the compiler. Or you could write a kernel module that creates a device node /dev/helloworld.cpp. The point being that actually inserting a newline everywhere where whitespace is allowed, will result in infinite, but highly compressible, source code.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm kind of new to this twitter business, and I tend to treat it a bit like chat. So, perhaps, if you think it sticks out, I should consider toning it down/removing it?
Hey. That's new for me. Can you 'detach' replies from the twitter conversation? I'd expect my tweet to show up there. Mmm. No problem, I can still follow up
@R.MartinhoFernandes It was supposed to be, a bit. Kinda hard to find the balance. I've decided to let it stand, but provide context, hang on
There. Any minute now
@R.MartinhoFernandes are you up to speed with twitter enough to know whether this can be done? Or maybe I just totally fail to comprehend the twitter conversation 'model'
Anyways, accelerated C++ was a bit of a let down. It's a good book. I'll hand it to my colleague tomorrow. But it didn't reprogram my mind with new essential C++ wisdom
@R.MartinhoFernandes And that accounts for something!
@sehe Personally, I don't like the GoF style of description. And I don't like that it seems to include any kind of idiom under the sun. It's hard to know which are the real important ones and the minor niche ones at a glance. But it seems fine on the correctness aspect.