@SimonForsbergMcFeely True. If it works out well for you we could even consider it for OLog. You need quite a lot of dependencies there just to get started after all. May attract more contributors.
2
Java, Grails, PostgreSQL, Tomcat, things like that.
Worst of all: version difference could break stuff.
@Mat'sMug You're right. I'm just a tad annoyed at the fact that he's gone and done everything I told him not to do in his previous 2 reviews. Better now?
Stop. Close Excel. Take a deep breath.
Now go and get an actual Database. MS Access. MySQL is free and Open-Source. It doesn't really matter. What matters is that Excel is not the program to be doing this in. At all. 10-Dimensions was already excessive. 31 is a severe case of Over-Engineering.
...
Not to seem ungrateful, but given the consistent inability of the SE team to send out swag in a timely fashion, perhaps you could simply concentrate on actually getting the stuff sent out of the door? — Richard7 hours ago
> Update (Dec. 17): We're going to push the transition date to Feb. 1, 2016 to allow for more time to collect community feedback on the proposed terms, which you can read all about below.
Update (Dec. 17): We're going to push the transition date to Feb. 1, 2016 to allow for more time to collect community feedback on the proposed terms, which you can read all about below.
CC-BY-SA is an ideal license for a crowdsourced knowledge base. We’ve benefited immensely from it, our com...
This feels like you want more than an enum. You can create an abstract class with a protected constructor. A few private sub classes later you have both an enum and objects with behavior directly modeling the parent-child relationships you are looking for:
public abstract class AssetType
{
p...
I have been working on implementing a huffman tree encoding program in c++ for a hobby for a while now. I just finished up with the code and, since this is a learning project, I would love to put my code on here for tips and review. However, I want to make sure I'm within what the community here ...
When you need to break out of nested loops, there are two things you can do. First, you can move the second loop into a different method and return a value signalling to break out of the first loop. An example would be moving the following into a method that returns a boolean.
for( int y = te...
@Caridorc Eh, I've softened a little bit on it after seeing it used in Roslyn's code base but I have yet to see a particular usage that really shows why it is required
@JeroenVannevel yeah, I tend to avoid nested loops too. But remember that not caring about memory makes creating functions easier, but in C sometimes it is easier to inline most of the stuff, hence goto
Reminds me of that video I linked to earlier today. The Roslyn team noticed a huge improvement in IDE responsiveness after switching from C++ to C# because it allowed them to focus on the algorithm's details instead of juggling memory management as well
Now every keystroke is handled within 80ms with a 98th percentile of 40ms. A little annoying that they didn't provide reference numbers though -- but I'll take their word for it
Here you can find a post wrongly marked as duplicate. Facts:
The code was rewritten for vb.net from vba, but initially was designed especially for vb.net. As a matter a fact, the code was initially written in vba because the help of excel's environment for necessary calculations. As a proof, @R...
@Vogel612 He's probably just pissed off. If he's right that it compiles as VB.Net and it's not exactly the same code as the VBA version, I think he has a fair point.
@Zak Oh I'm sure it compiles in vb.net, I still consider those duplicates, especially since that's not really vb.net code, but vba code adapted to vb.net
I admit, I know nothing about coding in VB.Net, but if he wants it reviewed *as vb.net code* then that probably *is* a different question to wanting to be reviewed as vba code. With, admittedly, a huge overlap in non-language-idiomatic parts of the review.
I tried coding a sample Java program to solve a Problem statement.
Java Banking Demo Problem statement
Github repo for Java Banking Demo
I am just looking for honest feedback on the design, coding or anything else on the code :)
Currently I'm working with the LLVM JIT framework. There is some graph i had to implement for internal cost benchmarking. It has cyclic node dependencies, so i have to use std::weak_ptr pointers for node's children instead of their std::shared_ptr counterparts. When it came to implementing child ...
Eh, he is modifying his code for each one, and admittedly, the newer code sections seem to have taken some of it on board.
Re-reading my old reviews now. Some choice comments in there.
"I'm not even going to try and work out how ParseArray works. It's 200 lines of nested for...loops and elseif statements that's been made to work through sheer stubbornness"
That's why it's a dupe in my opinion. It's not been improved yet. At all. Slapping it into a class and using the .Net compiler does not count as improvement in my book either.
Either way, I have no clue about VB.Net and I'm not in a good emotional frame of mind to be constructive with him, so I'll leave him (and his code) in your capable hands.
The code hasn't changed. It has Object instead of Variant, removed some Sets and removed On Error Resume Next. The changes are mostly to appease the .Net-compiler.
I am new to Sails.js, Node.js, and web application development in general. My current understanding is that well-written controllers should be "skinny" meaning they should be as simple as possible, easily readable, and abstracted by using helper functions to reduce the amount of code in the contr...
This is a c++11 implementation of Huffman-encoding that I wrote as a hobby. My main goal in writing it was to get more accustomed to c++11 and STL in general, as well as stuff like bit-manipulation.
Here are the classes bifstream and bofstream (binary ifstream/ofstream). I wrote these so that I ...
Is "hot path" really such a common term? I'm trying to find a nice quote to use as epigraph and explain what it's about but every paper/book I look at just uses the term and never explains it