if you are doing a jquery AJAX call and your callbacks are one line, do you still keep them as separate methods, or do you just collapse them to being the anonymous function calls?
A) keep the callbacks as separate methods
B) keep the single line of code in the anonymous method and pull it out if it gets bigger
@BenjaminGruenbaum why would you use promises rather than callbacks for a synchronous web method call? Apart from "they're the new thing, you should use them"
@phenomnomnominal depends on what you're doing. Our admin app here roughly lets you set up a scripted job with input params, then goes off and runs it (which could involve 2-500 requests)
@Charly Because you can't do real programming with cereal.
The Pentium FDIV bug is a bug in the Intel P5 Pentium floating point unit (FPU). Because of the bug, the processor can return incorrect decimal results, an issue troublesome for the precise calculations needed in fields like math and science. Discovered by Professor Thomas R. Nicely at Lynchburg College, Intel blamed the error on missing entries in the lookup table used by the floating-point division circuitry.
Though rarely encountered by average users (Byte magazine estimated that 1 in 9 billion floating point divides with random parameters would produce inaccurate results), both the flaw and...
@towc no, they just don't know what they're doing or where they want to go with it. It's chaotic, solving problems in new ways that turn out not to work, which they'd have known if they read any books from the past 25 years.
@ssube even then: you're here on the SO chat, with a community of people who mostly have no idea what they're doing, and you're not getting angry all of the time
@towc most of the people here do know what they're doing, especially the ones who are here often, and have been around for a while and don't eschew traditional wisdom in favor of VC funding.
I feel like js makes it easy for people to get into programming: the more the variety, the more the likelyhood to find a better system than the current one in less time
@towc I've written a lot of things, most of them aren't as interesting as JS. But it is bothersome when people think JS is new and somehow different, so they don't have to listen to anyone and waste time trying things we all know don't work.
JS is not particularly different, or even particularly good, but it is particularly useful.
Having a bunch of kids running around, spending more time designing their library's logo than documenting it and spending more on the font than they do on CI is not cool or nice.
@ssube Doubtful. If you're producing strings, the performance cost of producing the strings is probably pretty negligible against the cost of the IO to actually use those strings.
@copy As in, someone put a buy rating on a stock - we at TipRanks already know that but I want to know why they put the rating. This project is like 80% Python btw. (Actually in the above image steps there is Scala, Java, C# and Python)
@copy one cool thing that has to do with malware analysis that a friend of mine is working on with ML is a decompiler from different forms of assembly - lots of CPU architectures have a compiler but only the big ones have decent decompilers.
Hand writing a decompiler is very expensive especially since a lot of these CPU architectures are very poorly documented - Having a compiler means almost infinite training data to play with.
@NickDugger because the tooling and libraries we're using at each phase are worth it.
C and assembly aren't even that big. There are plenty of models that can model them in practical depth.
Learning a C program isn't harder than learning a turing machine, although learning a single program is a lot easier than understanding the whole decompilation process.
There are a lot of reenforcment learning models that learn that sort of thing.