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03:39
@MartinJames whotf is that
@ScarletAmaranth there are new ones?!
what have i missed lol
also hi
@MartinJames what you all need to do is come to the Bar instead
sorry i did not post the whole code i'm not new to C or C++ i'm new to this thread thing and simply did not know i had to use -pthread. adding that made the thing work — Tychus 7 hours ago
HALP
omg has it been 7 hours lol
There's nothing "harsh" about it. You did miss the includes and statements and, when they were added, your problem was not reproducible. So, you were wasting our time. This is not "harsh": it is a fact. It's the reason we ask you to produce a testcase: it proves that the problem is what you say it is. In this case, it was not. It's not just for us: learning this skill is akin to learning how to debug, which is crucial for your own career. Cheers. — Lightness Races in Orbit 9 secs ago
too on the nose?
04:18
I tried to use images but that is highly impractical! — pipa 3 mins ago
!
 
6 hours later…
10:18
Do you guys just hang around trading bad questions? :(
 
5 hours later…
15:33
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes :)
Caption: Go and love some more (iwdrm.tumblr.com/post/50844805863)
We can post gifs?
I'll spam IWDRM here.
IWDRM?
I Wub Digital Rights Management?
16:09
"If We Don't, Remember Me"
Best tumblr ever.
Also, man, Sharon Tate was beautiful.
16:40
sorry for being so much casual ...ill keep that in my mind and start acting little professional and thnxx for the suggestion — Deepak Dahiya 26 secs ago
rofl
> I'll stop talking like that, sorry. thnxxxxxxxx bro
17:07
@DomFarolino: Looks like a (glaring) error in the book. It's worth noting that's it been an error since at least the 2nd edition in 1995, and is still there in the 4th edition from 2012!!! Oh dear. — Lightness Races in Orbit 3 mins ago
 
2 hours later…
18:44
13
A: How to not sound like a pedant for seemingly simple complicated questions

Bruno RomaszkiewiczThese questions exist to weed out programmers who can't program. You don't actually need to implement the perfect solution, you only need to display the fact that you know the solution to the problem. Give the simple, straightforward answer first. If you need to take special conditions into accou...

see this is the sort of shit that scares me about interviews
I really should do some for practice though
need to get over the fear
18:57
what fear
would you like to be working for people who make big deal out of reversing a string?
"reverse a string" -> "here, done" -> oh, but what if it runs on a quantum computer? -> alright, here's solution #2
also, for such questions, I would be really annoyed if I couldn't, say, traverse with a reverse iterator, or just call reverse if the language has it
19:48
I just hate algorithm questions
It's not like I couldn't reverse an ASCII string in a few minutes if I had to (swap first with last, meet in the middle?) but I hate that crap when on the spot
Bring Unicode into it and I flail entirely. Look up the appropriate API FFS
If asked that, I'd just ask questions back. It's not exactly underspecified, but it's a common misspecification.
I guess that's where my skill lies, if anything: identifying underspecification. Rattling off individual algorithms step by step not so much.
"What is the worst case complexity of a bubble sort?" -> fuckoff.png
I ain't got time to maintain a memory for such things
I don't memorize that. I just remember things like loop invariants and deduce the rest from there when needed.
Compression, if you want.
A reasonable approach
Pub quiz about to start. Wish I could do that instead to get my next job :p
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It's how I've studied mathematics and such all my life. The hard part is to identify the important core that you need to memorise.
> The real world use-case for reversed strings tends to be nothing, so it's difficult to get an answer to what you might want to do with the result to get to understand the requirements.
This is the real kicker for me.
20:10
Yeah
Same for reimplenting bubble sort from memory :p (sort of)
I dunno I just don't like tense situations. Who does I suppose
bbiab.gif
20:29
to be fair, you should be able to implement bubble sort without problems (and complexity of "simpler" algorithms is generally easy to infer)
I think the problematic part of doing impromptu programming on interviews is to deal with corner-cases
(but any reasonable interviewer will not care - or, if he does, he will simply ask you to fix for <some conditions>, or at least ask how you would make it work for said circumstances)
 
2 hours later…
22:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm fairly sure that I've never reversed a string in my entire life.
OK. maybe in some pub quiz, or the like, and never with software.
I hate being asked stuff that is trivially Googleable. It's of no use whatsoever with typical real-world problem, eg. when faced with some intermittent bug in a distributed, networked system. "Wheeee.. I cas doh teh fizzbuzz". Great:(

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