@sehe Well, I guess they stop making news out of it when it becomes normal. Also, there's rarely ever any violence in those protests. We're a peaceful people.
@DeadMG True (you could probably find a colony of bacteria which has a better electoral system than the US), although you share some of the same flaws (as the US, not the bacteria)
@TonyTheLion That's actually totally wrong. Polar bears live in the northern hemisphere, penguins in the southern. So it's fairly natural that they never see each other.
Although I'm not really sure I grasp the UK's fascination with aristocracy. Why is it that big powerful old families with fancy titles play such a big role in your political system?
@jalf For the same reason that C++ has array-to-pointer conversion- because we gradually evolved from feudalism and haven't exactly gotten rid of all the kinks yet
@R.MartinhoFernandes But more so than in other countries? In most western countries they don't really have any particular formal political influence. In the UK there are things like the house of lords and it seems like people with titles just play a huge role as members of government and other important functions. I don't really recall seeing anythnig like that in other countries
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was joking, of course. But if you want attention, there's more than a little truth. Even if only can make an old guy die of heart-attack... As long as you can claim he 'fell in protests' - bingo: media attention
@MartinJames perhaps "fascination" is the wrong word, because that implies some kind of positive "admiration" aspect. More like they're built into the whole system at a fundamental level for some reason
the people in the House of Lords are almost entirely those awarded to be there by the government of the time, plus a very small minority of hereditary peers and bishops and whatnot
and the Lords we have serving in our government are Lords because the previous government(s) decided they could be a Lord and then decided to have them
Lord Sugar is a Lord not because he inherited it, but because some idiot thinks he's an excellent person
@sbi you mean "there's". and it's true. stands to reason, those interested in X are those interested in X. don't need to be member of tautology club to grok that
@DeadCicada no. But Dutch is juuuuust close enough to Danish that you can mostly read one if you understand the other. As long as you're willing to spend some extra time staring at bits of it and going "what the fuck?"
@TonyTheLion I remember I read somewhere that only copy ctors are automatically generated, not move ctors, but I got confused by the robot’s article on the rule of zero (he doesn’t define them explicitly).
@daknøk there was some hoopla about it. some folks wanted automatic move constructors, and generally automatic optimization of everything. others wanted to still have control, like, correctness
@DeadCicada Danish is a Northern Germanic language, Dutch and German are Western Germanic. (I can make some sense of Dutch, too, but not enough to attempt to read a scientific study.) Yours is a Latin one, and while still Indo-European, a bit more removed from Germanic.
Well, Danish is notoriously the difficult one among them. It's generally easier for a Dane to understand Swedish or Norwegian than the other way around
@DeadCicada swedish, norwegian and danish are like dialects of the same language. the main difference is that danes talk with a potato in their throat. icelandic derives from old norwegian, a bit different
@jalf I am really surprised about that. Of course, to me, Danish and Dutch are both German-like gibberish, and thus look alike a lot. But for you to consider them closer than Danish and German seems surprising.
@sbi Yeah, they definitely all three look alike. But yeah, I think we have more words in common with Dutch, and probably more similar sentence structure and grammar as well
@DeadCicada I remember Stroustrup explaining somewhere how to pronounce his name in Danish. He concluded with something like: "Or say it in Swedish with a (hot) potato in your mouth."
@sbi Ummm, I think there were some historical reason. We had to read some dutch in high school, and there was some explanation of why they were related. But that was quite a few years ago.... :)
@sbi I kind if suspect that German has just diverged more due to its size. A few hundred years ago, there weren't much difference between Danish, Dutch and (Northern) German, but as German became more unified, and picked up influences from more distant areas, it probably just diverged from that
@jalf From what I remember, Dutch (and Low German) skipped some either vowel or consonant shift (I can never tell those apart) that other (Western?) Germanic language underwent at some time during the medieval ages. Maybe that kept it closer to Northern Germanic.
@R.MartinhoFernandes is it possible to have a wheels::value_ptr<T> as a member of class T? I am getting an error saying that an incomplete type is used in a trait expression.
Damn, it's fast approaching 2pm. I have the day off today, and used the morning to chill out, but my gift to my daughter's 16th birthday is to cook for her guests today. I now only have 5 hrs left to cook a three course meal for 20 people, so I'd better make fridge inventory right now, and then go shopping for ingredients.
If you put a destructor, you are likely to not want default copies. So they're not generated (well, in practice they still are, but said generation is deprecated).