@sehe It's quite funny how useful latin can be, sometimes ... :) (It's even funnier that knowing a language that's actually in use would be kinda more useful :P)
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah, it will totally save the day when 'Harrius Potter' arrives in the mail
@RadekdaknokSlupik You are a freak of nature. Make sure they don't hire you midway college. You'd be dealt a low deal if you skip college with that kind of learning ability
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah. I'm dumbfounded on how to explain my exuberance there. I expect to locate the related post where I explain how I had to pare down my order on Amazon for budgetary reasons.
@JerryCoffin In case you still wonder, it never resolved the issue. The only way I can have the runner main "hosted" in a separate solution is by (a) linking source objects of dependent projects - breaks linking, not worth the trouble (b) by manually referencing all objects that define tests in the runner target... Too tedious, also not worth it :(
@Code-Guru Don't tell me you edit/star/reply with the drop down arrow o.O
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There. I pared it down to $263.31. I threw out Bruce Eckel's thinking in C++ (since I won't need it, I would just want to browse it out of curiousity - occupational deformation) /cc @Ell let me put up a list if I can easily
@ScarletAmaranth Does it matter? I didn't know I was responsible for keeping your world view accurate :)
I'm actually quite content that I did read a significant portion of the books there. (C++TTCG, LYAH, AccelC++, C++CiA). I think the worst years have passed then
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@TomW It was a nice talk (stopped before the Q&A, bedtime). Re-learned a few things I already knew, and a few nice caveats to know (Enum.GetHashCode boxing, foreach being smart with valuetype enumerators, int.ToString() avoiding boxing in String.Format parameters (they should tell R# this))
Cheers
user3010322
03:56
@Telkitty I think you'll be alright if you don't have unhealthy food.
@sehe Bummer. Oh well, such is life (or Microsoft) sometimes.
@sehe More reading on Crypto, in case you care: cacr.uwaterloo.ca/hac. Good enough that even though it's now freely available online, I don't regret having paid for a printed copy.
Why I think another feature is needed:
There are currently 2 primary methods of gamification for the site: Reputation and Badges.
(Hats seem like a tweaked form of badges, and as they're seasonal, don't they go away soon?...)
Reputation most strongly incentivizes good answers, (which is certain...
It is pretty much never useful in Java. Generics in Java are about Type Safety. There is almost no circumstance when this would have any type safety benefit compared to class A<E>. C++ templates do not have type safety; it's completely different. — newacct5 hours ago
> I am an expert at the programming languages Haskell, OCaml, Java, Python, Ruby, Standard ML, Scheme, C++, Perl, C, Objective-C, PHP, Go, and JavaScript. I love making connections between programming languages. I also love calculus.
expert at C++ yet thinks templates have no type safety..
Consider the following sample code (I actually work with longer binary strings but this is enough to explain the problem):
void enumerateAllSubsets(unsigned char d) {
unsigned char n = 0;
do {
cout<<binaryPrint(n)<<",";
} while ( n = (n - d) & d );
}
The function (due to Knuth)...
the problem is, the label lists a bunch of stuff where it's like, "OH MY GOD STOP TAKING IMMEDIATELY if you encounter XYZ", but I already had half of them before so it's not particularly useful to work out what to do.
in partially observable decision processes you would model a belief state in such situation, but I guess you don't have a probability matrix and estimating it seems not feasible :|
@ThePhD I have a friend who works frontend here at this company and she's moving to the states, she's pretty good and trustworthy and we don't like the fact we're losing her here. That said, I figured I can ask here if anyone is looking for developers first. Finding good developers is a PITA.
Exactly, and while I wouldn't rank her in the top 0.01% that do the impossible, she's hard working, pleasent to work with and gets the job done. She's done a good job here.
@BenjaminGruenbaum The OP seems still active, so I'll wait and see if he likes my solution. I doubt that it will be still useful to him after 4 years though : )
but thanks for the idea, I'll try it in case this fails ;0 - I found he's question on google when I had similar problem, and there is really no answer there, just kludgy workaround
@MartinJames sure, lots of things. There is nothing slow about the language but I bet the interpreted C implementation I wrote in highschool is way slower than Ruby :P
@DeadMG do you have even the slightest of doubts about what I was talking about there? Or perhaps the fact everyone involved in the conversation understands the context?
@DeadMG or was that just a jab at how broken the java static typesystem is and the fact you have endless casts and stupid stuff that breaks all compile time safety?
if you have a virtual function that you look up, that's an index into a table, and if you're looking up a function on a dynamic type, that would be... you pre-hash the identifier and use the hash as an index into a table.
the only difference between Lua/JS style "dynamic typing" and Java-style "static typing" is that in Lua/JS/Ruby/Python/etc, you don't typically go through ten interfaces on average before reaching the real logic, you only go through one or two.
so I'm going to bet that it would be more than possible for the average Lua method call to result in substantially less indirections and dynamic lookups than the average Java call.
@sehe C#'s methods are not virtual by default and its JIT is a lot simpler. HotSpot produces pretty strange code but that's because of the JVM and not the JIT
all I'm saying is that the exact same optimizations that apply to removing indirected calls in Java are going to apply to removing indirected calls in Lua
@BenjaminGruenbaum Wut. Runtime generics? "Nice to work with". Well. The rest is ... type erasure. The definition and guarantee of suboptimal performance. Yes. It will share more code among instantiations (after, all generic code needs only be instantiated precisely 1 time. Everything is an Object Yaya)