http://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/utree.pl?file=V6/usr/sys
/*
* break system call.
* -- bad planning: "break" is a dirty word in C.
*/
sbreak()
{
<..snip..>
if(d > 0)
goto bigger;
<..snip..>
bigger:
<..snip..>
}
http://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/utree.pl?file=V6/usr/sys
/*
* break system call.
* -- bad planning: "break" is a dirty word in C.
*/
sbreak()
{
<..snip..>
if(d > 0)
goto bigger;
<..snip..>
bigger:
<..snip..>
}
@The_Quiet_One
It's okay, I'm sure it has plenty to do with narrative convenience.
Forced me to do a link binge, this.
Found this during it:
Curious if people here are for or against this, I am.
So why would thantos kill or not kill me? What's the punchline?
And don't say this is a comic thing when it's clearly a movie thing.
I love how everyone talks about not employing best practices and tells him to do usability testing in Firefox while ignoring the obvious fact that thisguygirl has no fucking idea what he's doing.
Fixed for accuracy and/or trolling.
I'm sorry.
All those broken [quote]s hurt my eyes.
(Hint: the ones you're not okay with are the ones not constantly drilled into your head until you accept them without a second look.)
@Onyx said:December being the 12th month of the year is enough of a mindfuck already!OK - I'll bite - what's the 12th month over your neck of the woods (and where are these woods)?
<script=post can be empty>
Gobolinux has a very different packaging system, but I didn't try it myself:GoboLinux is an alternative Linux distribution which redefines the entire filesystem hierarchy. In GoboLinux you don't need a package database because the filesystem is the database: each program resides in its own directory, such as /Programs/Xorg-Lib/7.4 and /Programs/KDE-Libs/4.2.0. Like it? [Learn more...](http://www.gobolinux.org/?page=at_a_glance)
TRWTF is that those images at the top-right of the page aren't just for decoration.
I DEMAND EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOU PICK THE SAME SJW/RAPIST SIDE AND STICK TO IT
I seriously can't keep track of which side you're on.
(... Or maybe it's just Blakey who keeps hopping between the extremes of both sides?)
@error_bot that's about when I give up on those things still...
Sounds interesting over here!
@Weng said in PBP Paranoia?:
Crucially, Friend Computer considers any demonstrated knowledge of game mechanics to be treasonous as well, so there's no need for you to read any damned books.
What if you read all the books and pretend you didn't? Wouldn't that be incredibly advantageous?
And before you ask, no, this wasn't meant asYes: Mobile or desktop client app
No: Something completely different
It was meant as:
Yes: Mobile, good
No: Desktop, used exclusively by dead old men and gentoo developers.
Hard to say without seeing the actual differences.
@Palemoon said:
Why was Windows XP support discontinued by Pale Moon?
Windows XP is no longer supported or maintained by its developer (Microsoft) and lacks continued security updates that are needed in this day and age of malware. It's considered End of Life since April 2014, and using it is inherently taking a security risk. Also understand that Windows XP lacks some features in terms of program security and stronger ecurity certificates.
@Palemoon said:
Windows XP compatibility is maintained for these builds since many older, low powered netbooks/laptops do not run a later operating system. Please be responsible if you are running this operating system that is no longer supported with security updates by the manufacturer.
Why should a browser be so concerned with how supported and secure is the OS its users are running it in?
This feels like something Firefox would do, not a Firefox alternative. (And firefox doesn't do this)
<script>No, I'm not still using Windows XP. Yes, I did see Paley has some less bad reasons for not supporting Windows XP (At least if true. Some were a bit of a red flag in other ways).And I was just frantically clicking on the tooltip like a moron...
I'm curious - does the CV list valid contact information?
Maybe I'm just being too optimistic about the brain capacity of people, but maybe it's a deliberate attempt at "seeing what happens" instead of an honest application?
I mean he can probably be tracked down just by cross-referencing the places of work, but still
<script> Not that I'm sure you're not having us onDefinite Diablo2 nostalgia from this. I'll only play through the normal game, though. Maybe see if there are doable challenges and the like but won't be doing anything random or grindy or crafty.
My character name is Lorebore.
Feel free to invite me to your guild, It could be nice to have somewhere to spam while I play.
Also, since I'm also not planning to be joining any parties and since global chat is global chat, without being able to spam at some guild I'm in, my experience becomes actually indistinguishable from single player. Which might be just as well, come to think of it.
People who are at risk of becoming victims of violent crimes?
They mean minorities and gays and the like? Will they be paid to convert?
@Grunnen said in Dude ruins company who had never heard of proper backups:
@CreatedToDislikeThis As if it is any different on Windows. If you put something like
deltree %foo%\*.*
in a bat file the result is about the same.Well, on Windows you have the option of mounting a backup disk using a different drive letter rather than under a subfolder, but that is just something specific to this particular case.
Anyways, I guess the lesson is that a backup maintenance script should simply not delete files as long as it has the backup medium mounted.
I never claimed BAT files were better. (Though, at least, I doubt "deltree %foo%*.*" would delete too much(/anything?) gven that "" isn't "root folder" on windows).
They are less endorsed for automation on Windows, though. Does Powershell have the same issue (asking - I never used it and have no idea)
You would think that at the very least this Smart Contract nonsense would support rolling back all effects of an execution if it fails somewhere.
God dammit, another necro.
We really haven't done one of these in a while, though...
There was an indie game that had terrible memory leak. A simple (technologically simple, that is) 2D adventure game ate up two gigabytes of memory after some time. You know, the hard(ish) limit of total memory usable by 32-bit apps on Windows. This resulted in various graphical glitches. The community around this game concluded that it's not a problem at all because you can restart the game every so often and continue just fine. Are you one of those people?
A good reason to switch to 64-bit if I ever saw any.
--
But no, I'm actually triggered by glitches.
<script=
@Steve_The_Cynic said in Let's rely on undefined behaviour for memory safety:
@CreatedToDislikeThis said in Let's rely on undefined behaviour for memory safety:
That said I would wish that more lock implementations had debug versions of their lock that'd check for any wrong usage of the API and abort on it, even if this is more expensive.
It's nice to say "it's undefined behaviour", but when you have no earthly idea whether and where you're triggering it, that's not very helpful.Are you complaining that if you don't know what you are doing, things that you don't know what they are will happen? Are you surprised by this?
No, I'm complaining that if I do know what I'm doing but am not omniscient, things that I don't know what will happen and I may well not know about them, depending on what they are.
Are you claiming omniscience? Zero-bugs code?
@pie_flavor said in I hope Belgiumites don't like playing video games:
@anonymous234 said in I hope Belgiumites don't like playing video games:
I for one am sick of seeing so many people throw thousands of euros on virtual hats. I don't care if "it's their money", it's entirely irrational spending on their part and entirely undeserved money for the seller. And the market affects everyone.
I for one am sick of seeing so many people throw
thousands of dollars on cable television. I don't care if "it's their money", it's entirely irrational spending on their part and entirely undeserved money for the seller. And the market affects everyone.
Just popping in to say that this is true as written.
"So if I did break the entire game for certain setups I didn't test on, it'd only take an hour to fix.
Well, an hour after the issue is reported by a customer, who may choose to get a refund or complain to his friends instead.
Plus a few days if this happens on the weekend or while I'm on vacation"
20 out of 20. Agreed, the alternatives were awful, especially as towards the end it was two common languages that were already used as the correct answer and one new more obscure language.
I'd suggest Vivaldi.
I didn't check the actual thing, but I'm liking the direction they're marketing themselves as, at least.
I'll keep any eye on it, thanks.
Everyone else, feel free to begin spooking me with Vivaldi horror stories, though. [omitted]
Can't deal with it because... ... ... ?Fill in the blanks. You have me compelled now.
Because I end up noticing it whenever it pops up or pops down, especially if it clashes with the color scheme of the site around it.
A statusbar exists outside the content area and so doesn't clash with its colors, and I end up only noticing it if I'm specifically looking for it.
But I'm really more concerned with the lack of a Chrome/Opera fork that allows you and extensions to customize the UI at will.
@accalia said in Nvidia Geforce Experience:
@Magus said in Nvidia Geforce Experience:
@accalia It's also ancient, and can't record things in Vulkan.
-shrug- news to me.
all i know is the fix to 'annoying watermark" is "pay the developer money"
I know another - complementary - fix.
Anything good in the video aside from the "hurr hurr computers were so big" laughs?
Neat trick.
Can it be done with png and pretty much any format that you can shove custom metadata into? (I don't see why it couldn't be from the description)
@Tsaukpaetra - cover picture, not avatar.
Hover over the top-ish portion of your profile page to see the upload controls.
See @RaceProUK 's profile for example of a cover picture
Status:
Apparently, in OneDrive for Business, unlike in the regular OneDrive, you can't download more than one file at a time (no downloading entire folders either, you business person, you).
@Luhmann said in The Official Status Thread:
It appears so ... but why would you do that? That's what the syncing is for ...
My mistake, I thought the syncing was to get two new icons on your system tray, only one of which is closable, and then watch as the sync downloads 2-4 files and then starts failing due to spurious authorization/permission issues.
So today I've (re-)discovered that browser compatibility is a joke and that any given time, enterprise aside, only the most popular browser (+IE) is going to work correctly on all popular sites.
For example, in this msdn form (requires login), the large textbox can be used in IE and Chrome, but not in firefox, my current browser (with Classic Theme Restorer).
It seems it's time to switch browsers. (It's not like firefox is going anywhere good in the future, either).
Now, I'm pretty easy to please and can deal with most of Chrome's differences to (Classic Theme) firefox such as the full-page history and - maybe - the lack of easy-access zero-vertical-space bookmarks.
But I just can't deal with the lack of a statusbar (and it being replaced by an ultra-annoying in-content-area popup).
In firefox, this would be easy to fix via downloading an extension to replace the popup with a statusbar, but in Chrome, for whatever reason, extensions cannot touch the UI so we're in a bit of a pickle.
But I'm assuming that since Chrome is open-source, there are countless forks of it that both keep it up-to-date (!), are just as easy to use (install, update, etc.) as the main browser, and allow tweaking Chrome's interface in countless ways (though I'll accept countable).
So, TDTRWTF community, please recommend me your favorite fork of Chrome that allows using a statusbar. Bonus points for allowing to customize the toolbar (adding a bookmarks dropdown) and maybe even change history to be on the left of the browser content like in firefox.
@Adynathos You forgot the part where the human-shaped robot would use its special attack that always destroys the monsters.
The precursor to final fantasy summons.
VS objects to the first two lines on the basis of: Error 17 Type 'LD.Api.IOs.Box524078.Can524078' already reserves a member called 'get_LastMessage' with the same parameter types (same applies to set_LastMessage)
It's the decompiler's fault - it somehow managed to write both the property and its individual get & set methods, having the property's accessors call those. (yes, once you create a property XYZ, the compiler automatically creates get_XYZ and set_XYZ methods (if corresponding accessors exist) and gives an error if you try to define them yourself - try it.
To fix, just rename the individual methods or move their content to the property accessors, or just use a better decompiler.
Then the compiler complained about a syntax error in another file - a closing bracket in the wrong place.
if ((j & 1) == 0)
{
goto Label1;
}
nums.Add(num2);
goto Label0;
You seem to be expecting a decompiler to magically turn your assembly into the original source code - that's not going to happen. At best, it can produce source code that will behave the same as the assembly once compiled.
@dcon - For what's it worth (which is a lot, actually), Help->About->Update did find and upgrade to 50.0.2 for me.
Still can't access any info on it on firefox's site. (Even after the ol' ctrl+F5ing). Guess it's some kinda cache thing somewhere upstream.
@El_Heffe said in Firefox 41-50 is well and truly fucked:
@bugmenot said in Firefox 41-50 is well and truly fucked:
Note that Pale Moon, being a wildly divergent fork of Firefox with all the bullshit stripped out, is not affected by this vulnerability: https://forum.palemoon.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=13984
Big fan of Palemoon. Works great. One of the nice things is that its pretty much being developed by one guy. Which means he doesn't have the time or resources to keep coming up with stupid, pointless shit to add.
Palemoon apparently has its own layout engine which, combined with its unpopularity, is a big con for me - I want a browser whose functionality is equivalent to that of the most popular browser (currently chrome) and whose UI/'chrome'/feel is very highly customizable.
I go to my profile, hover over the cover/profile picture, click on the upload-y icon, select some png, click upload...
Nothing happens - no upload, no error, nothing in the console, no nothing.
Using latest firefox with pagination enabled, in case it matters.
"Reward. Recognize. Retain. Re-order."? They're not even trying to be subtle...
Status - if you press and hold several keys simultaneously, windows will repeat all of them but ONLY if you pressed them all at the exact same moment. (Else, it'll repeat just one or several of the keys you pressed)
Enlightening, I know.
Status: becoming addicted to idiots arguing politics.
Status: just realized that some of my hate of github is actually Discordse's fault
@RaceProUK said in Visual Studio 2017: March 7th:
Generalized async return types: Sounds useful, though I'd prefer a way to avoid the Task<> syntax in the first place.
I will add that having to write out Task<> explicitly, as RaceProUK mentions, is not only ornery but will also prevent the ValueTask<> optimization from being carried out automatically.
@masonwheeler Yeah, could be.
But I think there's still a place for local functions alongside lambdas -
int doMyThing (int x)
{
... some code ..
}
Just reads better than
var doMyThing = (int x) =>
{
... some code ..
}
Lambdas are great for quick & simple function parameters, but local functions read better when you want a well-defined "sub-function" inside your function.
And yes, the fact that's there's a third function syntax (using "delegate") in C# is unfortunate, but it's basically deprecated, so I don't mind it not being taken into account when deciding which features to add.