« first day (2176 days earlier)      last day (1303 days later) » 

5:05 AM
I thought about that but there are 8 places in my code where there is such condition. I really want to find the simplest and most obvious writing
 
 
2 hours later…
7:31 AM
@DenysSéguret If my suggestion works, I believe that is the cleanest and most straightforward way of writing this: you can almost read it out loud and it just makes sense without any implicit and backward logic
But maybe someone else will know the trick to do the same in a single cfg-expression
 
8:24 AM
I believe this is a very misguided and factually incorrect article, but here you go, I assume it will be the talk of the week: What killed Haskell, could kill Rust, too
 
 
2 hours later…
10:21 AM
Hey guys, I need some advice. I applied to work at a company. The company has good reviews from its employees online. I did the interview. They are now offering me a full-time job for 1,100 euros a month (which is what I asked for), with a six month contract. It's all fine except the contract part, which freaks me out a bit. Is this a common thing in this industry? It feels like I'd be left with no option if I don't like working there. Is it shady to be giving a six month contract?
I always thought even if they give a contract, it should be only 1-3 months, since most companies really prioritize avoiding bad hires.
And these guys don't know if I'm a good hire, yet they're locking themselves into a 6 month contract with me? It's odd to me
N.B. This is my first real full-time job, I did mostly freelance work before this
 
You mean there's no probation?
Or the 6 months is the probationary period?
 
@PeterVaro Well, this is how they phrased it: it's a work contract after which we will both decide if we want to keep working with each other. So I guess it is a probationary period?
But 6 months is a bit long for that... lol
Or maybe it isn't, I dunno
 
10:42 AM
In my POV you should understand the implications of that initial period by reading the remaining clauses of the contract. See if it truly means that you are required to exclusively work there for that time span (not very good), or if it means that they are required to keep you employed for that time unless you do wish to leave (good).
 
@E_net4 Thanks! I haven't seen the contract yet, only an offer via e-mail, but this information is very useful.
 
It is not unprecedented to have 6 months for probation for an apprentice or junior level job for instance. It is much harder to judge whether you'd like to work with someone / see potential in them when you actually need to train / educate them at the same time. You didn't mention what level this job of yours is
That being said, what E_net4 said is also true, without knowing the exact details (the rest of the contract) there's not much to go on with..
 
@PeterVaro How do you mean, what level it is?
I'd say a junior position, if that's what you're asking. But the company doesn't use those terms (junior/senior), they said that they "don't believe in them".
 
@EnnMichael apprentice, junior, medior, senior, principal, lead, ...
@EnnMichael Oh, so they are the "hip kids on the block" ;)
 
@PeterVaro Oh yeah hahah
 
10:50 AM
You could say that you don't believe in 6 months long probationary periods :D
 
Hahah
That would make a good joke, but I'm not sure how they'd take it
 
Be sure to check your national legislation as well. In Portugal at least, employers are required to give employees an experimental period in which either part can freely cease the contract.
But we're usually talking about 15 or 30 days.
 
11:21 AM
@E_net4 That is what we call (in the UK) probationary period
 
@PeterVaro Alrighty
 
Usually there's a week / 2 weeks notice period during that time
 
11:35 AM
@E_net4 3 month in france, you can add 3 other month, also this work both way :p
 
@Stargateur Très bien!
Bonjour Shep
 
 
1 hour later…
12:58 PM
hi
 
 
1 hour later…
2:14 PM
What's the name of the lint on omitting lifetimes from structs?
Like Foo instead of Foo<'_>
ah, elided_lifetimes_in_paths
 
Why can't I find this lint here ?
 
@DenysSéguret It's a compiler lint, not clippy
Also part of rust_2018_idioms, so one should probably use that instead.
 
2:38 PM
rust_2018_idioms is required lint in all of my projects.
 
It disappoints me that they still haven't all been enabled by default.
 
whelp
Good news, an Msc student accepted my dissertation proposal of an interesting use case using Rust and DICOM-rs.
Hmm. I'm inclined to say that this one is a combination of POB and request for off-site resource.
 
@E_net4 I get to admit that I max out at a bachelors. I don't know what this means.
your dissertation had a line like "someone should try to do X and Y"?
 
3:38 PM
@Shepmaster Not sure if this helps to clarify, but in Portugal, the Master's degree is what typically follows a Bachelor's, as per the Bologna Process.
 
@E_net4 That is the same in the US, based on my knowledge
 
@Shepmaster It's about using Rust to create efficient, high-performance DICOM data routers.
Hmm, self deleted quickly. People are too allergic to downvotes.
 
I'm also interested in what the proposal is, but my first question was around "my dissertation proposal". I thought that dissertations answered questions.
Is this "your proposal for a dissertation" or "a proposal contained within my dissertation"
 
@Shepmaster Oh, this is just what we call the curricular unit. In the context of a computer engineering degree, it is natural for the "answer" to be a solution in software. :)
@Shepmaster It is a proposal which I wrote, for a dissertation.
 
3:52 PM
This is amusing and frustrating. More words have been typed, but I have no further understanding :-)
@E_net4 So you typed something up that effectively said "someone (else) should try to answer this question / do this thing" and then another person said "yes, I will do that"
 
@Shepmaster That is the gist.
I'd show you the document, but it's not in English.
 
 
1 hour later…
5:01 PM
"how to write an HTTP parser"
 
5:14 PM
@E_net4 agreed.
 
 
2 hours later…
6:47 PM
@FrancisGagné stackoverflow.com/a/48144226/155423 — got a comment:
> I would've loved an explanation in that SO answer on why there's no implicit reborrow made by the compiler there...
Which was responded:
> because in the current compiler architecture, you only get a chance to do a coercion if both source and target type are known at the coercion site
You mind if I edit that in / you wanna do it?
 
@Shepmaster go ahead
 
I take this as OP's assent:
@trentcl: I wish you made an answer in this thread, I'd have given you the credit! — Andrew Rondeau 9 mins ago
thanks
I'm getting pretty close to that gold badge
 
1000/200... vs 966/211
🔜
/me hums to himself
 
yep.
I need to ask more questions
@Shepmaster lol I see
@Shepmaster wait, 211? It says 208 to me
 
hm. 1 question / 210 answers
I don't know where it's getting 208 from.
shrug
 
@trentcl cache
it's always cache
 
@FrancisGagné Probably.
 
caché
 
8:01 PM
This poster cannot find the accept button.
 
8:12 PM
Well, pressuring them to accept an answer is uncool too. So we can't have nice things.
 
Yeah, wasn't planning on it.
Just got a downvote on "how to global variable" so was skimming it.
And realized it wasn't accepted
 
@Shepmaster Oh yeah, that -1 against the 219 upvotes is totally going to make a difference. How can I trust your wisdom now!? ;)
 
@E_net4 2.23% downvote rate on that question.
Now I want to see a graph of my downvote / upvote ratios
 
Enjoy your SEDE trip.
 

« first day (2176 days earlier)      last day (1303 days later) »