Anyway. My new vaper is ridiculous. It gurgles. I tried a different juice (raspberry ripple - cuz there was no cookie dough). It gurgles less, but still gurgles.
Well, I don't do either, personally. But I've had at least one occasion where a friend really wanted nicotine, and I was glad they chose to vape instead of smoking :-)
The election ends in 21 hours. The room will probably freeze soon unless someone starts a bot to keep randomly posting messages. Like ElectionBot's "This election is in the ____ phase" message.
See Andrew's latest (?) post about that. He's now decided to globally disable it, after some discussion in chat (I linked our previous exchanges in here). I really think I should do something to that answer - maybe ask him to unaccept it, so I can just turn it pink, or just put a disclaimer in.
Yeah, ATL/WTL are surely better in theory, but somehow worse in practice.
I started some time back writing my own modern C++ wrapper. Well, not "modern" in the sense of "complicated template magic", but modern in the sense of "elegant OO design".
Then I got a job, and I haven't been able to finish it yet. It's only partially complete.
I maintain an extensive class library for the types of applications I do write. It saves me an inordinate amount of time for each new app, way more than the small amount of time it took to write each new function in a reusable way.
Plus, maintaining the class library means that all applications based on it benefit from a bug-fixes with a simple re-compile.
It's both wrong and right. I know that purer code will be better, in the long term. Most of my colleagues have no concern for any time-frame longer than ~2 years. I have an ongoing goal of 're-wrapping' MFC/WinAPI, so that my software is (ultimately) platform-independent. But why would those who all use Windows care about that?
But, considering my original software was developed on Windows 98, then working on Windows 10 is almost a different platform. I'm still impressed with myself that that code (with a very few tweaks) still works, after over 20 years.
If not, it's because they did something very wrong, like not writing correct Win32 code.
"The current version is 14.x for Windows 2000 to Windows 10."
The run-time libraries will start to interfere with downlevel version support long before correct Win32 code will.
You need the Visual Studio 2008 toolchain to officially target Windows 2000. (Although I have a workaround that works a treat in VS 2010 to target Win 2k.)
As a programmer, I can 'sense' the faults in the SigmaPlot code. Particularly how they handle automation/interaction with excel. Errors like (from memory): The operation cannot proceed because the other program is waiting for another program to respond.