@bwoebi makes sense. It still sort of feels like major language features were basically mapped to engine opcodes 1 to 1. even file inclusion has a single opcode :P
@AwalGarg it's true and but for a large part that's performance. Imagine PHP's famous weak casting doing actual checks for everything … we'd end up with tons of individual ===, type fetches, loops etc.
each interpreted opcode has function call overhead, opcode position increment as very basic necessity. Then fetches from the VM stack to get the temporary variables … with direct C code you do the overhead once per feature (basically) and use registers for most variables
> I intentionally avoided reddit my whole life before this year, and in the past 24 hours my contributions include this thread and a post about tree jizz.
Bit shifts and other bitwise operators (and modulo) were important in C because of pointer arithmetic, but elsewhere they're stashed away in libraries.
@littlepootis not holy. I like sweetjs but it won't work IRL until it integrates well with the transpiler (which is (un)fortunately de-facto babel now). and frankly ast modification libs just provide more liberty.
Have a question (of course); login page hits the database and credentials check out, redirect them to user page. On this page should I load in the data, or should I load that data when I checked their credentials and pass it to the user page while redirecting?
I think I have to load their data once they arrive on the user page because I don't understand how you pass data AND redirect at the same time. I thought about putting it into the URL, but there is quite a bit.
ln is enough to do everything with logs, log10 is just a convenience, log2 might rarely be used, and logn is also just a convenience every once in a while
Anyone else feels the F<n> keys row on the top of your keyboard is a mistake? I don't understand what purpose they serve. If it is just keyboard shortcuts, then holy smokes whoever thought of it must have been severely stupid.
@bwoebi btw, some days ago I discovered something that blew me away. Windows has a macro called CONTAINING_RECORD (which is apparently standardised as container_of) which looks like: offsetof(member_ptr, struct_or_union, member_name) == addr_of_struct