That said, for a printed CV I would usually resort to LaTeX, if only because of the superior typesetting – but for CVs which don’t have a lot of flowing text this is less important
@KonradRudolph I like Freie Universitet Berlin, because for a long time they had the last really good free Usenet server. And then when they had to, they charged minimally. I used it, but after a year I was unable to renew cause the Norwegian end of the payment service didn't work.
I'm just gonna have to bite the bullet and make an octree
the thing is, I really need an octree which goes from AABB to render object, and another which goes from AABB to sim object, and I don't want to duplicate them
@KonradRudolph well, i think any organization that supported or supports infrastructure for a free net and free communication and discussion, deserves credit. and in that connection, apparently google has recently removed google groups (and thus also usenet groups) from the places you can search via ordinary google search.
From the doc, sending a request returns a QNetworkReply *. QNetworkReply has a few signals like error or finished. Perhaps you could connect to those signals?
@Maxpm Easy. C++ is one of the most botched languages in the history of programming with a horrible syntax. All thanks to its C legacy and damned backwards compatibility.
But you can still build impressive stuff with defective tools
And it bears noting that these tools, while defective, are very impressive in themselves. If C++ didn’t suffer from backwards compatibility issues then it would probably be hands down the best designed language
@DeadMG The annoying part is: the original code in the question had an obvious possible source of UB (missing copy ctor). After I mention that in an answer, OP says "Oh, I have that, I just didn't post it"...
I have a class Bar with references to inside of one of its members (Bar::foo), which is a union:
union Foo{
int data[2];
struct{ int x, y; };
};
struct Bar{
Foo foo;
int &x, &y;
Bar(): x(foo.x), y(foo.y){}
// copy constructor and assignemnt operator
Bar(const Bar&a...
I was taking a leisurely scroll down Regex Road, heading toward HTML Avenue in the (as I had thought) great city of Stack Overflow when suddenly a band of hoodlums dressed in Larry Wall masks appeared out of a universal serial schoolbus and had me surrounded faster than parentheses surround funct...
> a band of hoodlums dressed in Larry Wall masks appeared out of a universal serial schoolbus and had me surrounded faster than parentheses surround function arguments.
> I eventually found out where they live and asked them how to get to HTML Avenue from Regex Road. That threw them for a loop, forever doomed to refine the way they express the path to HTML from Regex. Fools.
By the way, what is the difference between "I have become Foo" and "I am become Foo", apart from the latter sounding both powerful and retarded at the same time?
I am become the Encapsulator.
I have become the Encapsulator.
Until someone in the Stack Overflow chatroom mentioned it, I have never considered the second version to be grammatically correct. Are both forms acceptable in modern usage? If so, what are the differences between them?