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7:36 AM
 
8:29 AM
oh Yvette is back, applying to moderator
 
hehe, yeah...
 
@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)
 
8:51 AM
If the votes on the meta Q/A are any indication, Tschakalla and Yvette aren't going that well
 
Yvette does not have necesarily bad answers, just people know her
Tschakalla, imho, has provided answers to make sure I would definetly not vote for them
I agree with Makoto essentially.
 
@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
 
 
2 hours later…
10:53 AM
Votes on the questionnaire are irrelevant
in SOBotics, Mar 11 '19 at 14:10, by Andras Deak
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
 
Nope
in SO Close Vote Reviewers, Jan 14 at 21:35, by Andras Deak
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.
 
11:42 AM
@AndrasDeak you mean there's a lot of votes coming in from people who voted in neither primary nor questionnaire?
 
11:54 AM
Yes. Not sure about primary... questionnaire definitely
 
 
4 hours later…
4:19 PM
I just used a Lambda in C++, I feel like a superior programmer
 
good++++++++++++job;
 
hahahah
It compiles, no idea if it works :D
 
It's C++, of course it "works"
 
hahaha yeah, I guess. If it compiles, it does something at least
 
90% chance that it does something that at least 10% of programmers would naively expect, given the right compiler
 
4:51 PM
@AnderBiguri Sounds so much cooler than "anonymous function" in MATLAB, but it's exactly the same thing...
 
yes XD
also the syntax is MUCH more comlex in C++, very well designed to scare newbies like me
std::transform(buffer.begin(), buffer.end(),buffer.begin(), [](const float f) { return 1/f;} );
that string contains more non-alphabetical character than anything else!!!!!
its like some obscure street figther combo: "{]::[])const)(::begin()" will make a class that calls your mum twice a week
 
@AnderBiguri looks like a bash fork bomb
 
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.
 
5:38 PM
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
 
@CrisLuengo I vaguely remember that the [] is to declare how closure variables are used ("captured"), so it's probably not exactly [] -> @ in general.
 
6:37 PM
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.
 
7:21 PM
Hmm, I guess yeah
 
 
3 hours later…
10:14 PM
posted on July 08, 2020 by Cleve Moler

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 >>

 

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