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02:59
My three hens have been very unfriendly with the two 2.5 months old cockerels, like, they peck the cockerels when the cockerels get too close to them. One cockerel has started to learn to crow in the morning, I plan to lock him up with his 3 stepmom hens, any attempt to make loud sound in the morning will be met with pecks from the hens.
I plan to send him to the farm in a few days, crowing roosters are not allowed in the suburban area.
03:33
real question is how do you hold cyber security firms accountable?
If I recall post 9/11 security companies in the USA were only liable up to the cost of their services?
 
2 hours later…
05:42
Didn't expect that one of the cameras that I have purchased for Jetson nano to be so tiny.
 
2 hours later…
08:08
Bought wrong camera ...
09:02
Movies like Batman or Iron man give people the wrong impression that if we pump enough money into something, we can make significant tech break throughs. Such a claim is nothing more than a fairytale.
 
7 hours later…
16:24
posted on February 24, 2023 by Meeting C++

Looking at the second year of Meeting C++ online job fairs Insights from the second year of running online C++ job fairs by Jens Weller From the article: An overview on the second year of organizing online job fairs for the C++ community. In 2022 Meeting C++ organized 5 online job fairs for C++. Originally 4 were planned, but in May only one company could attend and

 
1 hour later…
17:32
18:30
It strikes me as weird that in C++ the qualifiers on parameters work entirely different from each other. A const qualifier puts no requirements on the parameter passed in, and only affects the local access, in contrast to & and && which do not affect local access (local is always an l-value), but require the argument to be the matching type.
I mean the const kind of does put the requirement on there parameter, it's just that the outer layer of const added can practically be ignored, because implicit conversion without any side-effects is possible
but I don't think you can pass in a char** into something that wants a char *const*
seems like you actually can
then I guess the better example would be std::array<const char,2>& which couldn't take a std::array<char,2>
Oh I slightly misremembered the example, it was
`const char **` that can't use `char **`
19:01
@MooingDuck does the restrict keyword for memory aliasing count?
19:18
@PeterT std::array<const char,2> and std::array<char,2> are both non-const parameters, they're just different types.
put another way: & and && affect how the parameter is constructed on the stack, but not how it's read. const and volatile affect how the parameter is read, but not how it's constructed.
I don't know enough about restrict to say.
I don't even remember if restrict was just C or in C++ too
but yeah restrict is a better example of not affecting the type
restrict appears to only affect reads, not construction, so it's like const and volatile
nah, volatile and const are still part of the type, restrict is not
Hmm cppreference calls it a type qualifier though. And yeah it's part of C++ but only via C99 compatibility

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