@AnderBiguri I wasn't very keen on her being mod the first time around, now even less so given that her reinstatement was refused by other SO mods (judging Undo's and rene's comments)
@AnderBiguri yea, whether the votes on people's meta answers are because of the person or because of the answers themselves, I wouldn't know. In any case, I'd expect people who downvote the answers to not vote for the candidate either, regardless of the reason
It's not "correct" or "incorrect". It's that the election proper is determined by the thousands of clueless users on main who go vote seeing a notification, making full use of their 150 rep. Don't read anything, don't weigh candidates, just look at their 1. name, 2. avatar, 3. a few random lines in the nomination blurb (and nomination comments are hidden during elections)
@AndrasDeak I know; it's the votes in the primary and election that count. However, AFAIK the votes do give a broad indication as to whether someone will be elected or not
I've grown to think that clueless noobs decide the fate of mod elections. Like that "joke" candidate a while back who went through a few rounds before dropping out. Completely ridiculous nomination, all of meta knew that it's not to be taken seriously.
Translation to MATLAB: [] -> @. (const float f) -> (f) (in C++ you need to declare types). { return 1/f;} -> 1/f; (in C++ you need to return and you need to enclose the body in parenthesis. On the positive side, you can actually use more than one statement in a lambda, which you can't in MATLAB.
It's not that different, really. C++ is always a bit more verbose because of the need to declare variables, that's all.
Oh, the begin() has nothing to do with the lambda. I like iterators though.
Also a difference: in MATLAB, variables are always captured by value, in C++ you can choose whether to capture them by value or by reference. That's what the [] is for.
yeah, its not that complex once you understand it, but as someone with mostly C experience I still go WTF sometimes. Luckily if I merge python knowledge with C knowledge C++ knowledge emerges easy
There can be variables specified inside the [], or simply a &, but the [] and everything inside is equivalent to the @ in MATLAB. It's just that MATLAB has only one way of capturing variables.
We are working on a paper about the Kuramoto model of self-synchronizing oscillators. This animation shows the different initial conditions where six oscillators fail to synchronize. I found it mesmerizing.... read more >>