Ooh, I see! I hadn’t picked up on that. Fantastic 😁
Ooh, I see! I hadn’t picked up on that. Fantastic 😁
Does this tool actually calculate regex differences? It seems more like a playground to look for the differences oneself.
In any case, nice work! I’ve been looking to understand more of the mechanics of regex-to-dfa translation myself.
What brand of TV to you recommend that still sticks to the ‘old ways’?
It’s an island! Who needs a car on an island? At least on one as small as this one.
I haven’t tried any custom roms on my FP4. But I can say I wholeheartedly support their work. Maybe the older ones had issues, but mine has been running smoothly ever since I bought it when it launched.
I’ve also dropped it like 200 times already, and haven’t a single crack. The back cover is cracked though, but that’s because I took it off so often to show people :P
All in all, 10/10.
I highly doubt any company will take such an online school seriously for senior positions.
True, though here the hack is incredibly unintuitive for the programmer. You have to declare the constructor, but then leave it unimplemented. Not to mention the compiler error that should catch this now only occurs at link time, and linking errors are even more cryptic to grok.
When they made RVO mandatory, they should’ve removed the constructor declaration requirement as well, instead of a half-ass solution like this.
As a final nail in the coffin, std::is_move_constructible<> suddenly returns true for this non-move-constructible type 😉
Well, it’s really interesting that this is a hack that works, but you’re really fighting the compiler here.
This is making me all the happier I switched to Rust 😂
This is the only way really to move forward with ISA extensions.
Though, I think for this update we don’t need to be too concerned. Since it changes the code in such an extensive way, compiler writers will be strongly incentivised to produce this duplicate path themselves. Instead of letting the burden of dispatching fall on the programmer like with AVX and friends
Well, yeah probably some websites will require it, probably google’s own will, and people will have to run two browsers for the sites that do, and the sites that don’t.
And yeah they can force sites to switch, by downranking them otherwise, like they did with AMP. But I think that’ll only really alienate people.
I would argue it doesn’t even make anyone’s life better, except google and advertiders’
Really nice article. It’s almost always that optimizing a piece of code involves restructuring the data structure it operates on, instead of altering the details of how it operates on this datastructure. Optimizing compilers are already really good at the latter, while doing nothing about the former
There’s currently no place in the fediverse to talk about this
I actually like this, at least in some way it could lower the barrier for actually explaining what a function does. Though I don’t see this working in an office environment