Yeah, but it seems cleaner and more well-defined as to what I'm digging into to read the OpenType file. I probably don't even need to read the rest of the file, just the core stuff they've laid out here for the glyphs.
Feature creep, creeping featurism or featuritis is the ongoing expansion or addition of new features in a product, such as in computer software.
Extra features go beyond the basic function of the product and so can result in over-complication rather than simple design. Viewed over a longer time period, extra or unnecessary features seem to creep into the system, beyond the initial goals.
Causes
The most common cause of feature creep is the desire to provide the consumer with a more useful or desirable product, in order to increase sales or distribution. However, once the product reache...
"You ain't gonna need it" or “You aren't gonna need it” (acronym: YAGNI) is a principle of extreme programming (XP) that states a programmer should not add functionality until it is deemed necessary. Ron Jeffries writes, "Always implement things when you actually need them, never when you just foresee that you need them."
YAGNI is a principle behind the XP practice of "doing the simplest thing that could possibly work". It is meant to be used in combination with several other practices, such as continuous refactoring, continuous automated unit testing and continuous integration. Used wi...
Can someone just write me a unique_ptr that calls drop() on the object when it wants to be destructed. I am so confused right now. I know LucDanton gave me something, but it didn't work! And know I wrote a little functor but I am entirely confused now :/
With random access iterators, and assuming a certain size at compile-time, you can use a pack of indices to do so:
template <std::size_t... Indices>
struct indices {
using next = indices<Indices..., sizeof...(Indices)>;
};
template <std::size_t N>
struct build_indices {
...
template<class T, class U, unsigned N, unsigned... Is>
std::array<T, sizeof...(Is)> copy_array(std::array<U, N> const& a, seq<Is...>){ return {{ a[Is]... }}; }
@R.MartinhoFernandes I keep learning things about this chat and everytime I'm impressed. Also makes me want to replicate it (with some tweaks) as a standalone chat app.
The best SNES shooter was the one with the two army guys and the Aliens :) It was robots instead of army guys in the German version. Ah, Super Probotector.
Your cancer analogy doesn't hold up well. "Nuke it from orbit" corresponds to "shoot the cancer victim and start with his most recent clone", not the preferred solution generally. — CodesInChaos5 hours ago
A std::array<T> is essentially a C-style array wrapped in a struct. The initialization of structs requires braces, and the initialization of arrays requires braces as well. So I need two pairs of braces:
std::array<int, 5> a = {{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}};
But most of the example code I have ...
@piotr look for list-initialization, 8.5.4, if I am not mistaken (oh gosh, why did I memorize that? Now excuse me while I go out to see a doctor) — R. Martinho Fernandes2 mins ago
@FredOverflow Actually, no. It had 64K of RAM -- but only part of that was available at boot). It also had some (minimal) memory mapping ability so you could re-map things to get all 64K of RAM -- but you had to run machine code to use it, since the BASIC interpreter disappeared when you did.
@MooingDuck Percentages and thousands. Still somewhat suspect though (especially, includes a lot of dots with no labels, no information about source, collection methods, etc.) OTOH, not at all sure it's far from true either.
But then again, I find reading technical specs about the WII on Wikipedia more fun than playing Super Mario, so buying a WII probably wouldn't be the best idea ever.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf That's misleading, because it seems to imply that Africa is poor because it's highly religious, and not because it's been repeateadly fucked in the ass by everyone on Earth.