@Cheersandhth.-Alf some have the wings up, some down, and some probably in line with the camera. seems like they're just being birds, flapping around...
there were also those cops who detonated a flashbang in a 12 yo girls bedroom while she was sleeping there. They thought it was a meth lab or something.
the police in montreal though. last year they shot a homeless man to death for strewing garbage in the street. and for good measure they also shot a passing commuter to death. that's real police. not the wishy-washy children's police in new york.
well there was this incident in the us year before last, or thereabouts, where a man with a heart problem, in a wheelchair, was harassed in his own home by police who wanted him to seek help for his condition. they electrocuted him several times, while still in his wheelchair. his wife protesting loudly
I ... am embarrassed to ask such a question but:
Is there anything I should worry about or take into consideration when zipping up a c++ project, hosting it on a website (like filedropper.com), and providing the link to a forum?
I don't know much about what sort of information the users opening...
@Cheersandhth.-Alf They probably are -- birds flying are a bit like swimmers. There's a power-stroke followed by a "glide". During the glide, they keep their wings folded back a bit to reduce wind resistance. It doesn't last very long, so about the only way to see it is in a photo though.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf They probably are. The downward "flap" gives them some speed, then the get the most from that energy by letting the momentum gained carry them a ways before flapping again.
^ This (from yesterday) reminds me of (yesteryear) Oslo police arresting a deaf and mute disabled person and grilling him for hours -- the man refused to answer!
Compiler tell me "incompatibles type in assignments of char* to char[32]"
this is my code:
char* generalOperations[2]={"Off","On"};
void test(){
char value[32];
switch(swapVariable){
case 0:
value=generalOperations[0]; //<==Error HERE!
break;
}
}
I would also recommend making char* generalOperations a const char*. Treating char* as a string literal can cause warnings on most compilers. — Downie36 mins ago
dat username
“Downie,” like most Dutch words, is a Dutch swearword.