(switched the positions of two arguments, and accidentally one was 4 and other 8 and they are both valid sizes.. so it made sense to the compiler.. anyway.. hunted down ;)
@BartekBanachewicz more convenient, but just in some tiny pieces. Why not spent time enhancing USB drivers instead of putting all of those eye-candies and twitter links? In BIOS. Seriously, Twitter? What about some more help options? I'd prefer less bugs instead of eye-candies, please. Thank You.
and that movement I've described with another magical word "instead". More time spent on eye-candies - less time spent on whatever anything else. Having in mind that the device is considerably new and full of recent features and technologies.
Actually, in this case only usability change is that You have to use mouse instead of keys for switching between same tabs. And the same way as in ol'good'BIOS organised options.
but when writing a program, it couldn't be less relevant.
@PeterVaro in the very context we were discussing, come on.
I suppose you C people can't really infer much :P
So to make it explicit, the fact that Obj-C is a superset of C is meaningless when writing Obj-C code. It's useful when you want to run C code through a Obj-C compiler, but then it's not really writing Obj-C.
@BartekBanachewicz and cheap :} Actually... it's not entirely my wishes... personally I know how long does it take to make at least managable code. But still being pushed to do it faster. To fast.
@BartekBanachewicz Personally, I'd prefer C instead of C++ filled with templates and shit. There are some shit in the modern computing to such a languages as Lua. Writing minimal core in those low level languages You're mentioned and scripting everything all the way up :}
@BartekBanachewicz There are at least not that much rules describing when garbage is being collected or not. :} Also it's solvable pimping it. A little bit.
Intuitively, it would seems that a compiler for language Foo, cannot itself be written in Foo. More specifically, the first compiler for language Foo cannot be written in Foo, but any subsequent compiler could be written for Foo.
But is this actually true? I have some very vague recollection of ...