Tag wiki for bundle:
Bundles are a group of resources.
A bundle is a directory that has a well-defined structure and can host
anything from classes to controllers and web resources. Even if
bundles are very flexible, you should follow some best practices if
you want to dist...
@QPaysTaxes C++ has become a far relative since C++11. I can't say I dislike it, but it is gampa C I'm a bit concerned about. Imo the committee should cut out old wood from the standard and leave legacies to C11. There clearly is demand for a simple imperative language with full control of used resources (no hidden libraries), but even this could evolve, e.g. allow for enums with user-specified type, a clean null pointer constant, remove the Extrawurst for char, etc.
@QPaysTaxes C# has nothing to do with C! They just did not call it "J#" because they lost a legal cause on that. And both, C# and Java are imo half-baked chimeras between C++ and some higher level languages. Imo, the set C, C++ and Python or Ruby is a good combination of skills for every-day programming tasks. If you are involved in web-development, use Python and JS + HTML.
@QPaysTaxes You really should use emoticons. Not all are native speakers and do really get the subtleties right.
@QPaysTaxes Well, it was a rape on both sides actually.
@QPaysTaxes Not really. We have quite the same phrase, but that's not necessarily funny connotated.
@QPaysTaxes Interestingly Java started to solve all platform-dependencies. And what happened? There is just another language in the zoo.
@QPaysTaxes Yes. Just please keep in mind that even if I understand the terms, I might not know the full cultural background and implications. That's the main problem really mastering a language. Grammar, syntax, etc. are not really the problem.
:-)
@QPaysTaxes Problem 4.0?
@QPaysTaxes Objective-C actually had a long and productive time. It just is now being replaced by Swift. Apple wrote most of the code in ObjC. It was just not noticed much outside the Apple ecosystem.
@QPaysTaxes ObjC seems to have som interesting concepts. Sometimes I wish I had taken the time to get deeper into it. But then I was a bit discouraged by the syntax.
@QPaysTaxes C++ is not mcuh better in that aspect. They add more and more strange stuff to the language. All this looks to me more and more like riding a dead horse, just not to define a new language. Maybe Rust, D or Go would be worth a try, but then these languages also add too much overhead. I really miss a lean language liek C but without the quirks. If you ever programmed Modula-2, you might know what I mean. And that language could easily be extended by the C operators.
@Makyen, you've made a lot of cv-pls in the last half hour. Keep in mind that cv-pls's are for things that wouldn't naturally be closed because of low reviewer traffic. I haven't reviewed the requests you have made just now, I've only been notified of the increased rate.
Yes, they added functional programming features now, AFAIK. While C is very conservatively extended, C++ seems to run after every new fashion in programming.
@QPaysTaxes No risk no fun! But then: there can not be errors in something which does not exist.
@QPaysTaxes I always think should get into it again. Many companies prefer C++ now, as they think one will be more productive and the quality is higher. Both are nonsense.
@QPaysTaxes Why that? Get a STM32F429 Discovery (ca. 20-30 € IIRC, I got one for free from a distributor) and set up he gnu-tools. Just don't use the bloatware STlib. That board even has a small TFT.
@BaummitAugen A language does not become better by just adding things. For C, cutting out dead wood would actually enhance the language. Although it already is pretty lean. C++ is on the way to become a black hole: collapse in itself. I honestly think the day C++ will not be usable is neigh.
@QPaysTaxes Meh! Another project can't hurt. And another and another, and ...
@QPaysTaxes C++ and C are only that strong because they are ISO-standards. That way companies have a defined feature set. Problem with C++ now is that there are just too many ways to solve a problem language-wise.
@QPaysTaxes I have three projects running for 2 or 3 decades now!
@QPaysTaxes That's only for my commercial projects which earn money.
@QPaysTaxes Well, after some decades in the job, one eventually has quite some finished jobs, of course. It is just some of my personal projects which don't finish. Problem with those long-termers is that when I take the time to work on them after some years, I completely redesign them because techniques have evolved and I have new insights.
Now, I just work too much for money, so I simply don't have the time (and the mood) for my own projects. Hope I can take some months for one of my primary projects after the current job.
@QPaysTaxes You want to get some?
@QPaysTaxes And you think it was different for me at your age? No.
@QPaysTaxes I'd bet whatever you do as personal projects eventually does not matter for a later job.
@QPaysTaxes Lots of time? You couldn't be more wrong ;-)
@QPaysTaxes In absolute terms, ok. But relatively, you most likely have way more time. Just consider that if you grow older you also loose the interest in programming all weekend if you program during the week already. But, of course ymmv; we'll talk again in 20 years (hope they have Ouija-interfaces until then ;-)
@BaummitAugen You are right. That's actually a bad habit and a legacy.
@QPaysTaxes I prefer Camel-case for types in C, too.
Those suffixes are problematic. After all struct has it's own namespace anyway, so no need to suffix the name with anything. Same for union and enum`. That whole Hungarian notation thing is mostly missunderstood and wrongly used anyway. And MS started it.
Ok. There should be a comment for that I guess, at least I don't have that memorized.
I'm not a windows guy though, so maybe that's just me.
The return -1 is not that unusual if you just want to report "some failure". After all, the return type is int, so -1 one is completely reasonable from the C point of view. Whatever the host environment does with that int is outside of the scope of the standard.
Again, dunno how Windows handles that. It's a valid remark in the Linux world, I agree.
printf(argv[2], argv[3], argv[4], argv[5], argv[6], argv[7], argv[8], argv[9]); Where do all those argv come from suddenly? 0.o
@QPaysTaxes You've reviewed 40 posts today (of which 2 were audits), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 28 minutes and 51 seconds, averaging to a review every 43 seconds.
And why would argv[2] be a valid format string to begin with?
@QPaysTaxes Heck no.
Tell them to read the How to Ask or go to Meta if they disagree and walk away.
That loop is still weird btw.
'r' is not a real linebreak, so why is it treated as one?
And if we wanna handle Windows style line breaks, why do we make \n\r into two linebreaks?
Also, if we are going to handle escape sequences to begin with, what's with the rest of them? Do we just support those two?
Meh. I don't like C.
Supporting the actual, complete C format string, and even validating it is one in the first place, will be so incredibly annoying.
Also, with that printf line, we have to check that argc >= 10 (ok, that's easy) and that argv[2] contains exactly 7 %s and no other %whatever. Which again is going to be needlessly hard.
@QPaysTaxes Should I keep looking btw or are you done?
I should too, it's getting close to 5:30 again. :(
@QPaysTaxes You've reviewed 40 posts today (of which 2 were audits). The time between your first and last review today was 28 minutes and 51 seconds, averaging to a review every 43 seconds.
@QPaysTaxes heh.. looks like account merging has a lot of bugs.
@NathanOliver docs seems to be pretty buggy. Additionally, I see to have gained around 2k rep after the account merge (not from the old account), and I am gaining more rep every day from the docs even though I shouldn't get it..