hmm.. I think it can be more specific, I dont like the game are mostly based on PVP
I don't like a game full of swear words, while 'playing' why should human battle each other, and make one team feel uncomfortable, one team feel happy by making their system matched enemy upset?
also I dont like fps shooting game because I dont like guns... no matter that game is PVP or not...
GTA is fine while it isnt fully based on gun shooting๐ค
because us humans have the urge to kill one another if they get on our way and we like being competitive. but being in a more civilized society, we just resort into indirect way to harm others, hence swearing and PVP games :D
@mr5 also, swearing is a lot easier than actually looking up where people live, buy a ticket to there, find out where to pull a gun from and actually killing that person
weakness dont actually directly applied into game player.... just practice then make pro skills... You are proficient in a game, that only proves you are wasting spending time on that game
This podcast is meant to reach the Stack community, so we thought it would be great to have some of the moderators who help keep our communities running come on the show and chat about what they do and what they are seeing.
@Hozuki It's a long story. The short version would be I want to get my fat ass away from the chair and do some exercise, but I only do stuff as a general rule if I enjoy that stuff, otherwise I quit if I see it's pointless.
I tried the gym, running on the street, the bike, etc.
I just need to do something I like, where I can actually spend time and improve.
I have done Judo in the long, long past and am doing archery right now. Traditional archery is a thing, it's very much a discipline sport and much more intensive than you might imagine.
I have no background whatsoever, but a quick look at iajutsu seems like the sport is all about making precise artistic movements rather than sparring people
I mean, there are no dojos in my area for anything weapons-related.
That's the problem that I have too. I am interested in trying Kendo, but it's a 45 minute drive way. It's a bit much, in my opinion. The more accessible weapon-related sport is probably Olympic Archery. There are tons, and tons, and tons of archery ranges almost everywhere in the world. It's weapon-based, not a sports team, and requires a lot of work and discipline. Your only enemy is yourself. I like that :P
Kendo useless? No way. It's a derivative from Kenjutsu, the historical name for all Japanese swordmanships. The Samurai come to mind, for example, and their skills were definitely not useless.
"Grazing a spot" is sufficient to kill a human. If you "graze" someones shoulder they can't fight back properly, so the killing blow is easy. It's not about killing someone in one go, it's about removing the fight so it's easy to give that blow. That's what Kendo and Kenjutsu is all about. Kendo is the sport-form, of course, but don't think it would be useless in a historic setting.
Of course, with guns and technology today, all martial arts are effectively pointless.
IDK what to say, I'm not an expert on the sport but if you google the usefulness of kendo for self defense, all you'll find is that kendo gives you nothing. All of their moves are designed to go all-in to risk 1 hit first, but you stop after that hit, because all moves are 1-time stuff
if you miss the first hit you are screwed
if you don't literally disable the person in front of you in 1 hit, you are screwed.
your movements won't have any strength at all, because they are meant to just... touch
I still am looking for what real-life setting you're talking about. There are so many situations imagineable where you can say "but self defense" and there's always a way it's useless.
Don't grab a sports-stick, grab the sharp katana thingy...
The point of martial arts is to use them for the goal they are conceived for. Kendo is about sparring someone and touching them like fencing. The utility of this art should be compared to other sparring arts.
No I'm not. I'm saying that you should not use SPORTS EQUIPMENT if you intend to DEFEND YOURSELF. Use the historic weapons associated with the style. If Kendo, use Katana. If fencing, use rapier.
Those styles are VERY effective with the tool they are designed for.
If you want a sport self-defense type that can be applied to a situation where you are attacked unexpectedly and happen to have a chance to react, look at karate and similar sports.
Nothing to do with Kendo, just about being able to unsheathe, control one move perfectly, sheathe.
also it's one of the few arts where you are actually encouraged to use a katana rather than a bokuto
Iaito also have the versatility to be built for sturdiness rather than utility, since normal katanas are rather feeble, it's great to have one that doesn't cut and also survives longer without chipping the edge for someone like me, who is a total noob.
I'm seeing people "critising" the police for using drones at the moment
saying its "becoming a police state" blahblah
instead of saying
"STAY THE FUCK HOME YOU PRICKS"
honestly, the fact that people are more annoyed at the police using drones to catch people not obeying the fucking lockdown instead of being annoyed at the people not obeying the fucking lockdown really pisses me off
A dictionary is used like an array, but instead of an index integer you can use anything you want, any datatype or even class object to define the access to each entry.
It's just that all keys have to be the same datatype and all values have to be the same datatype
Yes, it is an interesting view. However, this view makes the keys not so important, if this is the case, probably we could use an array in first place.
albeit keys are dynamic type, it does not make it any less important, but by doing so, you are creating a pile of cluster fuck ready to explode any time soon.
@mr5 they made easier for C programmers to read ahead exactly T, N, etc. inputs. That's why they combine inputs and numbers. So for example if you have 3 testcases, you can foreach(readtestcases...) only if you know where the testcases end. So they put a T in it, so you can for (int i = 0; i < T; i++) readtestcase in C
@ntohl it was the initial diagram with diagonals for one, what the diagonals mean is not explained very well, also how they relate to the output examples below it with #