Which is, if you ask me, pretty important. I didn't check for example if the fan on my supply is facing downwards or upwards, and my case don't have a cutout for rear up-facing fan. Fortunately enough it fit.
@Ell Well, hashing could be faster if you compared, say, every 3rd or (better) 4th pixel. I don't know however how fast are CPU reads on strided memory.
@Rapptz If the question was asked by an experienced C++ programmer, I wouldn't bother to clarify that dynamic allocation can be an std container in this case.
Anyway, FFS english... Why can't I put "an" in front of "std"? s is pronounced as /es/ -.-
@CatPlusPlus You put down your Steam post from starboard and I finally created an account recently, so my [steamid] is bananu7, feel free to add me if you want.
@Yochai "I'm in favor of dropping Singleton. Its use is almost always a design smell." — says Erich Gamma, one of the famous GoF who made it so popular. If you want a more elaborate discussion, SO user jalf has it on his blog. — sbi29 secs ago
I like <filesystem> in VC++ because is has wfilesystem_error. but all the other crappy libraries just use (std|boost)::error_code which uses std::string.
> every time var was used I had to check the return type of the right side. Sometimes more than once, because I forgot the type of the variable after a while!
> using map<>::iterator everywhere explicitly means you'll be wasting your valuable time on a mechanical code fix ripple, unless an intern is walking by and you can foist off the boring work on them Ha ha ha. Very funny.
I thought I was quick on the uptake, but it turns out that growing up without good examples and no internet is a bit of a brake on the system. I'm thoroughly envious of the possibilities that the NikiC's, Minitech, ZoidBergs etc. have these days :)
@BartekBanachewicz Good point. That is a large part of me being here. I mean, besides procrastination, obviously :)
These days, you'd just be browsing the docs on your favourite reading device, in the train even, and learning about related technology sideways on the fly. In my days, there was no way, but to grab a Prolog book from the public library. And hope to find something interesting there
@BartekBanachewicz My first PC was a 286. I was soooooooo proud. Well, it wasn't technically mine. But I could use it
The PC I learned stuff on was a IBM, 2 floppy drives
@BartekBanachewicz I was so proud of my Hercules adapter. It had the best resolution. And bold pixels, too. When I did one of my first "paid" gigs (during highschool) I "earned" a VGA adapter + monitor. Woot
@DeadMG The requirement to be swappable. It used to be they have to be copyable. Swappable makes you able to sort objects that can't be copied, but can be moved.
@sbi Erm. I bought that prolog book in the ramsj (dump book market), actually. I had to get to Amsterdam or The Hague to find such a store. That happened 1x, max 2x a year.
@sbi The books I got from the public library were "Amiga BASIC" and "Motorola xxx assembly". You can see how I was sat in the garden with my binder and a pencil, jotting down BASIC code to assemble motorola instructions, while I had neither a PC, or indeed Motorola-powered device....
@BartekBanachewicz I'd have to grovel through shoe boxes. I'm pretty sure I know which one it's in. It is ridiculous. I'm wearing one of those 'translucent' plastic sun-caps. Different times... or so I say
Your question breaks up in the middle of the sentence. Strangely, there is a suggested edit by a totally different user who completes the question with a lot of extra information. What is this supposed to mean? — jogojapan2 mins ago
@sbi Oh maybe it was Z80. Oh, and I reckon I still have a completely handwritten copy of the complete EPSON Printer Command Language, as well as ANSI escapes. In pencil.