@LuchianGrigore 1)/2) are actually the same thing. They could be the 'focal point' for noobs; 3/4) are also the same thing ("declarations missing declaration") and are in a way similar to 1/2. I agree they warrant separate mention, since the root cause is significantly different.
@MooingDuck Somehow this seems to have turned into "You must be wrong unless you can prove that every program ever written for Windows is perfect and designed to work the way I'd prefer."
@JerryCoffin I think his point was that gnome doesn't have the problem where you can't minimize stupid programs. MSVC is a stupid program, and can't be minimized in Windows when it's unresponsive.
@LuchianGrigore On that topic, why does 6) mention 'virtual'? I mean, it's the same for non-virtuals (except you can't define them pure - but that isn't a viable solution usually)
@sehe How can anything I said possibly be interpreted as saying there's nothing wrong with Windows, or anything even close to it? What I said (and all I said) was that on Linux, the X server runs as a process with its own priority, while on Windows the GDI (for example) functions run with the priority of the process that calls them.
@LuchianGrigore Well, meh. It's in fact just another case of 'declaration missing definition' right? You might mention that virtual methods are considered always 'used', since the vtable should contain a pointer to them
@sehe I hate to think how badly you must have munged things to get that. And (since Windows Vista) you certain can minimize a window when the app isn't responding. I'm astounded at the idea of the app not responding though -- where are you getting such buggy crap? If it's happening a lot, it sounds like badly munged drivers, or perhaps a hardware problem.
@LuchianGrigore Hmm. Yeah, but listing everything you can think of as a separate 'cause' makes it a bit unwieldy. It is not, in fact, a different reason. I think the FAQ, being a FAQ, might want to highlight that the cause is always, basically, the same; empower the user with something he can understand and reason about, instead of dealing out a 'random' laundry list of things that are 'magically' related.
@LuchianGrigore (I'm getting a bit tired here, so I could just leave you to it. It is, after all, your post :))
@LuchianGrigore Now that I've finally actually read all of it, I gave the question +1 already. I hope you can find a way to make the answer more newbie friendly. I'll have a look tomorrow (if I don't forget)
@sehe Well, no, not really. But if you somehow believe I was saying Windows is perfect, or anything even close, then your understanding of English is clearly so badly flawed that it's pointless for me to even attempt to discuss it any further.
@JerryCoffin Huh. Is it my mistake that read that to mean: "you screwed up, it's not window's fault"?
@JerryCoffin I'm not actually saying it is windows' fault. All I'm saying is that Linux's X-as-a-process is working very very nicely for me. Much less frustration, in fact, than with many years of windows experience.
30 years of 'dont' wait in GUI event handlers', 'don't perform blocking operations in GUI event handlers', 'don't perform lengthy CPU-intensive non-GUI operation in GUI event handlers'. What happens? 'To terminate your thread, you must set some flag and perform a blocking wait with 'Join' :((((((
hm i wonder if ms ever fixed the WM_TIMER attack vector thing
i think the funnest attack ever conceived was when the IE source code was published and some russian figured way to take control by crafting a special picture. virus in a picture. how quaint
@sehe The root cause, then, would be that they were morons about using unchecked buffer indices, rather than any specific cause of generating bad indexes
@sehe The basic problem is that too many Windows apps are built by clueless morons with the multithreaded acumen of a pistachio nut. I'm fixing one now:( Either the overall design or the actual code would cause you to commit suicide.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I think this presentation says it was 'patched after the Shatter attack' (page 52). The presentation contains some trustworthy info, but also some ... simplifications here and there
@Chimera No thanks, buddy. We know what you are capable of
@Chimera why don't you just star all the things already on the starboard? Quench you thirst for starring, while not mutilating our right hemisphere input
@LuchianGrigore Much much better already. (Still wondering whether it would make more sense including the source snippet with error messages in the question. But the 'wall of answer' is solved now)
@LuchianGrigore Sleep well
@LuchianGrigore PS. Did you mean virtual ~A() = 0; in the snippet?