@MartinhoFernandes You still need a healthy imagination though -- you might just end up trying to patent an impossible device someone else already made a drawing of!
No idea. But if you want to invest in what is basically wind, but with more energy loss because you add the friction of a pipeline, the guys of Cold Energy are looking for investors :)
@MartinhoFernandes I read your link more carefully, not just paying attention to the patent bit, and realized how ridiculous the 'operating principle' is. I guess it makes sense if you think like a crackpot.
The first one is a regular gas burner, the second is a "hybrid" gas burner. Which is to say, a regular gas burner decorated with some wind turbines.
They didn't even care to make them different to hide their ruse.
And apparently, a gas burner "could be the cheapest way to generate renewable energy"
Note how the first one produces 510 MW from gas, and the second produces 530 MW from gas + wind + solar. And that my friends, is somehow 70% more efficient.
My work mouse sometimes double clicks when it shouldn't, started to bother me so I went to the IT station and asked the guy for a new mouse. "Why? Where was this mouse located?"
I tell him that it sometimes double clicks, he plugs it into a station next to him "Nope, doesn't do that"
It got an entire section for itself in the TR on C++ performance, which should tell you something about how much work is required to make it perform :D
and as I recall, most of that section was speculative, about things that "could be done", but the authors didn't know of an implementation which did it
I am using a PropertyGrid to show properties from my objects. However, I'm also allowing the user to create their own properties, and set values for these custom properties. Each object that can have these custom properties has a Dictionary collection, where the string is a unique key to identify...
Oh, we didn't deal with logic much. We dealt with stuff like (multiple or not) inheritance, how to handle different kinds of lack of knowledge, and then we finished with reactive agents stuff.
Sometimes, if someone links your answer / question or a post gets closed as a duplicate, then you get more upvotes, but normally after at most 48h the questions are dead, and as are the answers.
This is funny, someone posted a reddit question titled "How is it". He accidentally pressed enter too early. Now it's getting mass upvotes and all kinds of replies: reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/i41e7/how_is_it
I read somewhere that it doesn't stimulate production of adrenaline directly but that it blocks adrenaline receptors in the brain, and it gets fooled into thinking the adrenaline levels are low. "Hey! We're losing adrenaline fast! Glands, starting pumping!"
But I can tell you from experience: too much coffee is not healthy.
@MartinhoFernandes Blocking adrenaline (or dopamine) receptors would cause an increase in the amount of adrenaline in the synapses. This would cause the neurons to send signals at higher rate (literally overclocking the brain). This is how most powerful stimulants work. However, I believe caffeine works differently.
@MartinhoFernandes however, I didn't study medicine, so don't take my word for it.
@StackedCrooked Wow. I wonder if it has been proved to cause all three (positive, negative, zero), or if it just doesn't have any effect, and something else causes the positive and negative.
Anyone know of any Q&A modules that can be used to post live questions during a webcast and have the questions pushed to the presenter of the webcast by a moderator
@JohannesSchaublitb Sometimes I use the reply button. Other times I just direct the message at the person generally. In the latter case I might just write "@litb", hence the disparity.
So, let's say I had a bunch of classes in a 3rd party dll that all had identical methods, but they didn't derive from a base class. I can't change it because I don't have source code. Can I use a template class that derives from a base class so I can implement dynamic polymorphism on the original set of classes?
Someone left candy on the floor and now the cat is distracted. This is why we don't let animals come on our raids. Wha?!?! Not you feral druid. I'm talking about the vanity pet!
room name changed to Lounge<C++>: Mind the candy, please. It sticks to shoes
6, with proof by Ideone (look at the errors).
Edit: Actually, the example looked like this at first:
#include <iostream>
template<class T, int N>
int length_of(T (&arr)[N]){
return N;
}
int main(){
char a [] = "EFG\r\n" ;
std::cout << length_of(a) << std::e...
So, let's say I had a bunch of classes in a 3rd party dll that all had identical methods, but they didn't derive from a base class. I can't change it because I don't have source code. Can I use a template class that derives from a base class so I can implement dynamic polymorphism on the original set of classes?
Hmm, g++ only issues a warning that zero-size arrays are nonstandard, and that only with --pedantic, and even then std::array avoids the warning! But you get the point.