But it is hard to find one with enough experience and skills to work at this level
Actually, that's a good idea
Set up a mail order intern/employee service - company sends you the skillsets they need, you take on students and train them specifically for certain niche roles
I need to access a native api in node. But the native api's are only offered in swift and objective - c. But node only accepts modules in C++. So i have to make a Objective - C C++ bridge and then make a module. Best part is I don't know the API, Objective - C, or C++.
Then the trick is to submit a request for changing the stack, and rubber stamping it yourself
Also, from a node perspective, you may find it easier to build a separate service that runs locally and exposes a regular API you can call via HTTP/IPC/etc.
Many large scale applications take this approach
They have a electron or other shared platform UI bundle, and a separate background app in Rust/C/C++/go that runs as a "server" locally and works with OS specific APIs and handles most of the business logic
It tends to scale better and faster than writing a ton of shims
Yea, that's my point - build a separate utility that is in whatever language you can use the API from, then serve a HTTP or IPC based RPC API from that utility which can then be consumed by your node/electron app just as if you were connecting to a web API
That way, you don't need to bridge it to work with node directly
@eli , Yes, I had also implemented with interface at WebEnd and get that method here on android. It works fine. For this above, I don't have access to WebEnd and can't make changes
> The first eight seasons of Scrubs were filmed on location at the North Hollywood Medical Center, a decommissioned hospital located at 12629 Riverside Drive in North Hollywood, but the location of Sacred Heart Hospital within the fictional world of Scrubs is left ambiguous.
it was dope and not expensive to implement. patients with nfc tags linked to their nationwide clinic historial and live tracking of intervention statuses thanks to an already existing but unused wifi detection system for hospital beds
I joke about it, but it's kinda sad to be the determined shoulders without a choice
the year I lived there spanish politics seemed chaotic and very divided. I remember being at my ex father in law telling him I vote right wing here in the Netherlands
He said "right wing?!" "are you pro Franco or such?" eeerr
pastebin.com/19XhYLzs this is the solution i found in the discussion section uses priority queue and is similar to what you told. this avoids sorting every sub array.
You could also do other microoptimizations, such as checking if the new element is > the halfway element in the window's next element and just skipping the insertion since it wouldn't change the outcome
But that would take a lot more bookkeeping for the removal step
so there was no need for sorting. while removing a element in a array is a costly if its at the beginning as you have to move all n-1 elements to the left