> Buggering op[] would be the slowest possible way to get the NUL there. > Evidently that is a minority preference. What evidence? Pointing out a fact isn't an endorsement. > If you think anybody is complaining about…
Not a particularly informative or well-written one frankly. "Also, with more memory, there are simply many more possible features that MIDI 2.0 can try to emulate. More memory should also reduce the chance of the timing…
No. The popular C compilers have a feature where they will do some additional type checking on the arguments passed to "format" functions. You can mark your own functions with this attribute. See the format attribute…
> Anyway, that was true until somebody jiggered the Standard, just before 1998, to require a NUL visible to s[s.size()]. This is not technically true. You could plugin your hated NUL byte in the implementation of…
The front-end is in Visual Basic. The backend is most certainly not in anything close to Visual Basic.. (MUMPS - using Intersystems Cache as the object store implementation)
hardlinks are paths pointing to the same inode - the same metadata, the same contents - they are the same file - just happen to have multiple addresses. Inodes that happen to share blocks are not the same file. ie…
How do you "plugin" the NUL. If there's no space for it, then everytime you want a C string, you need to do an allocation. And why would you put something in it's place - as you said if you modify the c_str that was…
Umm.. in any implementation you can already "cast" a std::string to a null-terminated string without a buffer (cf std::string::data() and std::string::c_str()) -- C++11 essentially mandates that. c_str must return "a…
> Hard links mostly work as you tell them to. You may need to set things up properly, but it's essentially the same thing being done. That's bullshit. hard links are the same exact inode, with all that entails.…
In the US for home connections (cable, fiber, DSL) everybody gets an accessible IP address pretty much -- the worst is that some ports are blocked like port 80 or 25. Phones don't get a dedicated IPv4.
> Afterwards, you will start to see the shell as a glorious, essential element of our civilization, worth of respect and deserving our careful attention. Nah. There should be (probably is) a term for the…
Yeah, unfortunately color perception is one of those things that is a bit too complex for a self-discovery method. While the "symmetry" explanation is satisfying it really isn't correct at all. Color perception and…
You can't trigger cones individually. The cones are responsive to a wide-spectrum and they overlap, especially in the case of the L and M receptors. The peak wavelength of the L receptor (the "reddest") is about 580nm…
> If these are the primary colors, why aren't they what printers use? Printers use cyan, magenta, and yellow. There really is no such thing as "the" primary colors. The school primary colors are still primary as those…
> The general consensus is that putting big files in git means you're doing something wrong and the problem is with your environment not git. This is not a “general” consensus. It’s a consensus among hardcore proponents…
That still leaves ridiculous, ludicrous, and plaid.
> However, those keyswitches are quite heavy by modern standards and you may find your fingers getting tired. I find fatigue to be a bigger problem on most rubber dome keyboards. I know the peak force for a Model M is a…
Technicians don’t interpret blood tests, and radiologists don’t perform most imaging procedures, so I don’t understand the comparison.
> Statistically, you still earn way more with a degree than without. Applying population statistics to individuals is a fool’s errand. Not everyone is cut out to be a software engineer.
You’re not getting a fake for 30% off... because then it is not a fake.. that’s just some off brand crap It’s a fake when you get a counterfeit item that is sold to you at full price under the listing for the real…
Maybe he is aware of the existing maps ... and as he states “this isn’t an improvement”. Since the current NYC maps serves both purposes astonishingly well.
Uber, Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon all are present. What’s clearly wrong or at least misleading about this data is that they represent only a small fraction of the tech workforce in pgh. Other than Uber and Google…
The data we have is the 737 MAX itself that stands out in the backdrop of ever increasing safety. That happened. The 787 possibly being a safe plane is irrelevant and doesn’t change that. > And yet, air travel today is…
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetically_excited_... Ie “coil whine”.. not saying this guy isn’t a nut. But it is possible to hear electronic devices. On a computer streaming video the increased current…
The only one that sounds indefensibly vapid, is you. I thought they were thoughtful comments that would be valued in a more open-minded, and frankly more interesting venue. Certainly not worthy of being flagged. Not…
> Buggering op[] would be the slowest possible way to get the NUL there. > Evidently that is a minority preference. What evidence? Pointing out a fact isn't an endorsement. > If you think anybody is complaining about…
Not a particularly informative or well-written one frankly. "Also, with more memory, there are simply many more possible features that MIDI 2.0 can try to emulate. More memory should also reduce the chance of the timing…
No. The popular C compilers have a feature where they will do some additional type checking on the arguments passed to "format" functions. You can mark your own functions with this attribute. See the format attribute…
> Anyway, that was true until somebody jiggered the Standard, just before 1998, to require a NUL visible to s[s.size()]. This is not technically true. You could plugin your hated NUL byte in the implementation of…
The front-end is in Visual Basic. The backend is most certainly not in anything close to Visual Basic.. (MUMPS - using Intersystems Cache as the object store implementation)
hardlinks are paths pointing to the same inode - the same metadata, the same contents - they are the same file - just happen to have multiple addresses. Inodes that happen to share blocks are not the same file. ie…
How do you "plugin" the NUL. If there's no space for it, then everytime you want a C string, you need to do an allocation. And why would you put something in it's place - as you said if you modify the c_str that was…
Umm.. in any implementation you can already "cast" a std::string to a null-terminated string without a buffer (cf std::string::data() and std::string::c_str()) -- C++11 essentially mandates that. c_str must return "a…
> Hard links mostly work as you tell them to. You may need to set things up properly, but it's essentially the same thing being done. That's bullshit. hard links are the same exact inode, with all that entails.…
In the US for home connections (cable, fiber, DSL) everybody gets an accessible IP address pretty much -- the worst is that some ports are blocked like port 80 or 25. Phones don't get a dedicated IPv4.
> Afterwards, you will start to see the shell as a glorious, essential element of our civilization, worth of respect and deserving our careful attention. Nah. There should be (probably is) a term for the…
Yeah, unfortunately color perception is one of those things that is a bit too complex for a self-discovery method. While the "symmetry" explanation is satisfying it really isn't correct at all. Color perception and…
You can't trigger cones individually. The cones are responsive to a wide-spectrum and they overlap, especially in the case of the L and M receptors. The peak wavelength of the L receptor (the "reddest") is about 580nm…
> If these are the primary colors, why aren't they what printers use? Printers use cyan, magenta, and yellow. There really is no such thing as "the" primary colors. The school primary colors are still primary as those…
> The general consensus is that putting big files in git means you're doing something wrong and the problem is with your environment not git. This is not a “general” consensus. It’s a consensus among hardcore proponents…
That still leaves ridiculous, ludicrous, and plaid.
> However, those keyswitches are quite heavy by modern standards and you may find your fingers getting tired. I find fatigue to be a bigger problem on most rubber dome keyboards. I know the peak force for a Model M is a…
Technicians don’t interpret blood tests, and radiologists don’t perform most imaging procedures, so I don’t understand the comparison.
> Statistically, you still earn way more with a degree than without. Applying population statistics to individuals is a fool’s errand. Not everyone is cut out to be a software engineer.
You’re not getting a fake for 30% off... because then it is not a fake.. that’s just some off brand crap It’s a fake when you get a counterfeit item that is sold to you at full price under the listing for the real…
Maybe he is aware of the existing maps ... and as he states “this isn’t an improvement”. Since the current NYC maps serves both purposes astonishingly well.
Uber, Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon all are present. What’s clearly wrong or at least misleading about this data is that they represent only a small fraction of the tech workforce in pgh. Other than Uber and Google…
The data we have is the 737 MAX itself that stands out in the backdrop of ever increasing safety. That happened. The 787 possibly being a safe plane is irrelevant and doesn’t change that. > And yet, air travel today is…
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetically_excited_... Ie “coil whine”.. not saying this guy isn’t a nut. But it is possible to hear electronic devices. On a computer streaming video the increased current…
The only one that sounds indefensibly vapid, is you. I thought they were thoughtful comments that would be valued in a more open-minded, and frankly more interesting venue. Certainly not worthy of being flagged. Not…