Ever heard of a barter economy?
Yes of course, but if you do it for drinks, or food, or a movie ticket, it's called flirting, not prostitution.
So I'll stick to my restrictive definition.
Ever heard of a barter economy?
Yes of course, but if you do it for drinks, or food, or a movie ticket, it's called flirting, not prostitution.
So I'll stick to my restrictive definition.
Ok; and what does it mean to subtract a character from a character?
Obviously, the answer to this question will be RTFM when they get around to writing TFM.
Using existing operators to define new operations on non-numeric types is nothing new. Some languages even define what it means to add strings together, for example.
C++, maybe. Sane languages like C don't disguise indirection and always pass function parameters by value, so f(x) can never modify the x that's visible to its caller's scope.
QFT
As for Haskell, it does it just as well as C.
Do they work? I thought plants needed a full-on spectrum, including infrared and ultraviolet.
Give a blue photon to chlorophyll, it will go to a state where it can absorb two red photons to produce O2, H+ and e- from water. No need for full-spectrum, but the blue photon is absolutely needed.
Don't ask me for the exact wavelengths, I don't know.
It was written by someone who doesn't know how to make sscanf do what he wanted it to do. This is all you need:
[code]
ret = sscanf(filename, "%*s://%p"; &ffpipe);
[/code]
You're overestimating scanf
: %s cannot do that.
@blakeyrat said in Return of the Template:
Somehow BASIC managed it in like 1988, I'm pretty sure PHP could manage it 30 years later.
I'm pretty sure PHP is worse than BASIC.