Infinite loop in C++
I use them both, but I try not to mix them.
I think that "for (;;)" looks cooler but it doesn't read as well as "while(1)" or "while(true)"
To understand why "while(true)" works, you only have to know the "while" syntax. I think even if you know the "for" syntax, it's not obvious that it will even compile without {stuff}, and it's also not obvious that an empty test condition will evaluate "true".
As for do..while, I just don't like reading a code block before I know the loop conditions.
Infinite loop in C++
I've decided that the entire office wall is getting stripped and rebuilt from the outside in. That way I can replace as much of the header and footer as I need to and I can add some insulation to it. Eventually I will Ship of Theseus this house into a proper structure.
I've been wearing the new Samsung Galaxy Watch for a few weeks now and, honestly, the killer app is the "flashlight" functionality, where you push the crown and the screen goes white at full brightness until you press it again.
So I'm basically paying installments on a wrist mounted flashlight that shares a line on my cellular account, lol
Facebook, guns
Among Facebook's lesser sins is that the home feed refreshes every time you tab away from the mobile app, so posts just disappear back into the wilderness if you have the audacity to answer a text or Google something.
I had opinions on whether or not the FN P90 is an inherently queer firearm and now a bunch of strangers will never hear them.
Studn't
I don't think just fixing this will be enough. I think I have to find the person responsible? and challenge them to a pistol duel?
Studn't
Lost my mind and made an offer on some rare and expensive mid-century demitasse cups and saucers. Let's see how they traveled.
Dammit. They're fucking beautiful.
Lost my mind and made an offer on some rare and expensive mid-century demitasse cups and saucers. Let's see how they traveled.
Maybe this sounds like hippy bullshit, but I think we need a New Utopian art movement. For reasons that are almost certainly too complex to address, most people are not media-literate enough to parse "dystopian future as commentary on the present" (They've never heard the phrase "1984 was written about 1948") and they routinely learn the wrong lessons as a result. Furthermore, it creates an atmosphere wherein artists compete to imagine worse and worse "futures"