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01:51
posted on January 06, 2014

Posted on January 6, 2014 by Fūzetsu This is a friendly reminder to fix your Hackage documentation. I’ve been feeling that over the last couple of months, I had to click on an older version of the package far more than before. Considering the Hackage 2 move around August, that was the first suspect. A quick chat in #hackage and it seems I was not the only one with th

 
5 hours later…
06:37
0
Q: Adding constrainst to get streaming data from twitter using PHP

user123Here I am getting url from tweets, converting that url to long url. And then getting tweet count value for numbers of tweets containing that url. note: There is one more similar question on SO but it does not provide solution code: if(preg_match($reg_exUrl, $tweet, $url)) { ...

06:55
1 message moved from PHP
 
2 hours later…
08:29
Yo!
 
3 hours later…
11:34
posted on January 06, 2014

This is an old trick I picked up from a colleague over a decade ago and have re-invented or re-remembered a number of times since. When implementing complicated performance critical algorithms and things don't work immediately, the best idea is to drop back to the old formula of: Make it compile. Make if correct. Make if fast. Often than means implementing slow naive versions of par

12:12
I have no idea what im doing on this forums. I just w8 still some bitches to be that im doing it wrong
1 message moved from Python
 
4 hours later…
16:07
1
Q: Equivalent of this Javascript code in Objective-C

ge0rgesI would like to know how to mimic this javascript code: var send_photo_tapgram = function(data){ $.post('${request.route_url("tapgram")}', {prev_msg: "New photo", category: 'photo', sub_category:...

1 message moved from HTML / CSS / WebDesign
 
3 hours later…
18:48
The best idea is probably to avoid php altogether in favor of a more sane language ^^
1 message moved from PHP
 
2 hours later…
1 message moved from C#
21:45
posted on January 06, 2014 by noreply

Summary: I walk through optimising a Haskell string splitter to get a nice tight inner loop. We look at the Haskell code, the generated Core, C-- and assembly. We get down to 6 assembly instructions per input character. Let's start with some simple code: break (`elem` " \r\n$") src This code scans a string looking for a space, newline or $ and returns the string before and the string after. Our

22:33
@tereško could you pls guide me how can I make the if part dynamic, the comparison is relate to the $rows array eval.in/86474
1 message moved from PHP
posted on January 06, 2014

This is an old trick I picked up from a colleague over a decade ago and have re-invented or re-remembered a number of times since. When implementing complicated performance critical algorithms and things don't work immediately, the best idea is to drop back to the old formula of: Make it compile. Make if correct. Make if fast. Often than means implementing slow naive versions of par

user1804599
23:32
11 messages moved from Functional Programming

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