I probably should've waited until the first coffee.. this essentially happens almost every morning.. I ask a dummy question which I could've verified myself (and most often than not, I even know the answer without thinking too hard on them) -- but if I would've just waited for that magical first sip I wouldn't even ask them.. Damn, I hate slow mornings..
Not a fan of the choices of abstractions on some things (codifying each "possible input" from a keyboard into different enum representing classes and missing every single non-US-ASCII possibility being one of them), but the goal is pretty impressive if he manages to get there
My kids see me build games, sometimes at their request, be at home when the other parents are busy at stupid meetings, meet people that I know because they use my softs and who come at home with their kids... of course they want to do what I do
the number of times I went to programming meetup events/things in Paris that were literally full of students from 42 looking for somebody to help them build their projects
@DenysSéguret that's natural, kids want to do first what they see from their number one heroes/role models -- but after that, when they truly consider getting into the profession -- what would your advice be to them?
@DenysSéguret I don't doubt that, however I'm pretty sure, that an experienced adult is smarter in many ways (maybe just street wisdom) than a hormone-driven 14 year old who wants to change the world of which they have absolutely no idea how it works..
I'm not saying hire 14yos to disrupt industries, BTW
just saying that there are things and points of view that somebody with a fresh take on the world would have, that somebody who has been in it would not
we have a pretty good idea of that, very well documented and I think we all in this room have been exposed enough of it that we have a rough idea what's going on
My generation should have tried to change the world. We should not prevent the next ones from trying to do what we failed to do. Let's ensure they're smart and know what is to know.
@SébastienRenauld I'd like to see numbers.. because last time I checked, it turned out that all the successful and world changing startup founders are middle aged people.. -- even if the media coverage love to enforce the image that 'geniuses who could change the world under 30 exist'
these days it's literally banned for health and safety reasons
obviously, there needs to be a limit to how deep into a subject those things can go but at least showing/letting kids discover things that's out of their immediate zone of knowledge might be extremely valuable
@PeterVaro no disagreement on the quantity; my point isn't that it's frequent, just that it does happen
@SébastienRenauld I can see the same thing -- and since I've been teaching the next generation in a very elite university for half a decade, I can tell you I'm not going to hold my breath until the next generation is coming up with something great..
@SébastienRenauld When I was a kid, there was no personal computer. They didn't exist. And yet kids today seem to learn exactly the same thing than 40 years ago... the same way
@SébastienRenauld totally. My wife is a teacher. The instructions are clearly to not favor thinking but just the quiet and docile learning. Ask children to think is seen as elitism
@DenysSéguret I heard a rumour from a former philosophy teacher I knew that they were considering banning Machiavelli from philosophy lessons in the french curriculum
The overwhelming majority of people in society the way it works today do not need to think
It's simply down to the fact that most of them will just do what they were taught to do from the start until the time they retire, and that's the grim truth of it
@SébastienRenauld and if most of the jobs which could be automated (which is the vast majority of the jobs) will be replaced by machines, then they don't have to even think as much as they do now
There's always a more meaningless job to do. With the increase in productivity we could have been free to do more interesting things and still have all the needed goods. Instead we're working for stupid targets, like being a little more productive that the other company. And more and more marketing, sales, etc.
@DenysSéguret whhen I said "there is not enough job for everyone know cause of computer, people always answer me, this is what we think at industrialisation", they don't understand the big difference... anyway the unemployment curve is speaking for me since 20 years
again, it's not total elimination of workforce, but that's a case where technology has massively improved QoL for people and reduced the head count at the same time
@Stargateur ME NEITHER! in fact, I hardly have to time to catch up with all the project ideas I'm constantly working on -- but remember, we are the tiny minority here!
@SébastienRenauld I'm not saying that you have to be bored to be creative, or that everyone who is bored is going to be creative -- I'm definitely not saying these
but when you have a little time on your hands -- I'm talking about genuinely creative people -- you would come up with better ideas and find more interesting problems
compared to times when you are under constant load -- even if you have a more direct connection to "real life problems and situations"
(that's why I choose the word 'bored' in the first place)
kids who are bored, in my experience, coming up with their own games, and own toys, and then you would say they are not bored anymore -- or it may seem they've never been bored at all
because they are always coming up with good (?) ideas..
I'm trying to measure the memory size of a rust program I'm writing. I noticed that when I measure the heap size with the command:
valgrind --tool=massif --pages-as-heap=yes ./program
And measure using ms_print, that the memory size was quite large (intially around 16MB). Eventually, I reduced ...
also, I would update the example to have unsafe manual memory management written in Rust instead of C
(after all, it is a question about Rust, with a Rust tag, and even if your answer only demonstrates things which has nothing to do with Rust I would still prefer the code to be written in Rust)
It's 2019 and browsers still don't have an API to tell on which line of a textarea the caret is. I just had to fix a lib I made 5 years ago to guess this simple information...
(fix because Chrome just changed the height of an empty span and doesn't return the same value than other browsers anymore)
@SébastienRenauld quite obviously, yes -- but still, I was under the impression, that you want to demonstrate directly the allocation action without further layers on it, but actually as you demonstrated it, there's nothing surprising or hard to follow magic going on when you allocate a large Vec anyway. However, what I don't understand is that why aren't you using the Vec::with_capacity then in a single line?