We've talked about why swapping is important, and about how to use it to implement other operations such as assignment. We shall now look more closely at how to use it.
anyway, I just found that people who pay private file-hosting services for extra space are idiots.
You have to pay google for 25 GB, however 5 GB is free right?
my (free) solution:
My Google Account / 5 GB + My Sister's Account / 5 GB + My MS SkyDrive Account / 7 GB + My DropBox Account / 2 GB + My other Google Account / 5 GB = 24 GB?
I can find that information with man ld.so I think.
@Ell If it's an Ogre lib, you probably want to install it for the system. Otherwise, or if installing is out of the question, using LD_LIBRARY_PATH like Collin said is the preferred way.
@bamboon I will try /usr/local/lib/OGRE because I know it can find the libs in /usr/local/lib, its just dynamically loading the plugins thats the trouble
The following question was given in a college programming contest. We were asked to guess the output and/or explain its working. Needless to say, none of us succeeded.
main(_){write(read(0,&_,1)&&main());}
Some short Googling led me to this exact question, asked in codegolf.stackex...
@DeadMG Oh, don't be so harsh. Code golf can be kind of fun, if utterly silly. On the other hand, real code golf should be done in assembly language, and measured by size of executable, not size of source code.
@stdOrgnlDave You could probably try, but in most cases, you'd lose badly. Nearly the only format that's competitive in most cases is a DOS .COM file (or equivalent).
@DeadMG They aren't nearly as large as a normal linker produces, but when your target is under 64 bytes, they're at a severe disadvantage.
For example, one old one I did was: Write a program that prints out consecutive numbers each time it's executed. The first time you run it, it prints "1". The second time, it prints "2", and so on. Must be a standalone executable that uses no external storage.
Well, this was in an assembly language group, so I doubt anybody would have even considered a batch file, but I'm not sure how you'd do one anyway. If memory serves, the winning entry was somewhere around 40 bytes. Instead of self-modifying, it used/modded its own time stamp in the directory entry. There was disagreement over whether that was external storage or not though.
Doing a bit of looking, I still have the code to my entry (56 bytes).
@stdOrgnlDave It certainly shouldn't. && is clearly defined to do short circuit evaluation, so the right operand is only evaluated if the left is true.
is anyone else sick of writing out a thoughtful response only to have a repwhore smash in with a quick and dirty thing that doesn't explain much and it gets upvoted and answer status?