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Now that's a fragrant foul!
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment
"Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst
"I don't drink any more... then again, I don't drink any less." - Mike Mullikins uncle
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I've got to admit I was quite scentillated!
New version: WinHeist Version 2.1.1 new web site.
I know the voices in my head are not real but damn they come up with some good ideas!
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Ok, so watched the latest episode last night and though it a little bit of a filler - not very much went on other than the final scene where Ramsay rapes Sensa with Theon standing at the door.
Now, from what I'd read, this was a particularly harrowing scene and should not have been shown.
For me, you don't see anything and hear very little. Most of the horror is beautifully conveyed through the actor playing Theon. It lasts for a minute and cuts to the end titles.
The point is that you would expect no less from Ramsay - he is a sociopathic killer who enjoys hurting people, in particular Theon and, now, his new wife.
I'd be shocked if Theon didn't finally rise up and kill Ramsay next episode.
Anyway, that was my view of it: the lady making all the fuss in the media seems to be trying to court attention.
The show, itself, does seem to be flagging a little at the moment: hope it picks up again and regains its earlier momentum.
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I didn't know anyone had kicked up a fuss. I didn't find it out of keeping with the show as a whole, so I don't see the problem.
I agree this series has been pretty slow going though.
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You think the TV series is dragging?...try reading the books. I started losing the will to live after the Red Wedding and just stayed long enough to see Joffrey get his comeuppance and Tyrion get payback on the old man. I couldn't read anymore after that.
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Actually, I wish that the Series was more in tune with the books, as the HBO series omits a LOT of key components and or entirely changes parts of the story so that they can have certain "star power" on screen more. For instance, Jamie never travels to Dorne in the books, that was someone else associated with the Lanisters.
Much of Tyrion's story after crossing the narrow sea has been extremely compressed. Further, much of the story of the wildlings up at the Wall has been omitted.
I'm more interested in GRRM finishing the story in his books.
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I wanted to see more of the White Walkers...that was cool...snow zombies, but no, has to spend 100's of pages on useless detail.
I gave up on the books after Tyrion killed the old man, so the show is in new territory for me...I'm glad somebody did the hard work of reading through the books and boiling it down into a screen play
We're not going to see Brand at all in the show this year, which was weird.
A lot of people suspect that GRRM might kick the bucket before he finishes...
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GRRM has given HBO a Synopsis of where he plans to go with the books, just in case he does kick the bucket...
As far as Bran, even at the end of "A Dance of Dragons" he was somewhat in stasis ... not doing much of anything...
Just based on everything I read in the books... I believe that it is he (Bran) and Arya that are the most important characters, and I expect them to play very pivotal roles in whatever conclusions GRRM has in mind.
Of course, he may have a Greay White shark eat Arya as a Snack as she travels across the narrow sea, Bran my be devoured by zombie Beavers, and Daenrys may just contract a bad case of Prairie Rot and be self-consumed... You never know with GRRM.
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Yes, you never know with that guy, but I find a good measurement is, if you really like the character, he's gonna kill them off
...who is the most hated character, that's going to be the last one standing...I vote for Cercei
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Python is featured as the programming language for the Raspberry PI. I’m new to this maker thing and now I am also playing with the Arduino. Last night I was working with an Arduino video and found that you can use a version of C. That was so much easier than Python. Admittedly I program in C# every day and C was my first programming language course. With the version compatibility problems in Python, all that indention thing, C is my choice.
Curly braces forever!
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Even Python is written in C
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Python is easier for higher level stuff... since there are so many libraries available for it. I'm definitely a C/C++ guy though.
I'm right in the middle of coding some C++ optimizations in a DSP library as we speak.
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Yup, that "whitespace is significant" mantra of Python is pure nonsense. And together with the fact that it is an interpreter, so for real world end user application it is both too slow and insecure, it's more than just a PITA...
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Earl Owens wrote: Python is featured as the programming language for the Raspberry PI Where?
Simply runs every .NET language. Including WinForms.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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What I mean by featured the UI has two versions of the programming interface.
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Syntactic whitespace is an abomination that should've died when computers capable of compiling something more complex than COBOL went on sale.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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Umm - it's not "a version of C" - it is C (AVR C - and actually C and C++ mixed together). The compiler is GCC.
The "front" you see (with the setup() and loop() functions) - those functions are called by a simple main() - essentially setup() is called first, then loop() is called over and over in a for(;;) construct (or something similar).
A preprocessor loads in the main library (Arduino.h or WProgram.h - depending on the version being used) - see http://www.arduino.cc/en/Hacking/BuildProcess[^] for more details.
That library is actually a huge monster - with tons of compiler directives and checks for which processor is being compiled for - to get the pin and other assignments correct. It's one reason why (on an objective scale) that Arduino code can be comparatively "slow" - because at the core, a ton of checks and other things are being done for you behind the scenes by the library (not to mention the fact that the compiler flags are set to optimize for size over speed - given that you only have a few kilobytes of program space, and even less of memory - that's a good thing).
Could you make your code faster and smaller? Sure - but only at the expense of the code being able to be compiled for only one platform. If you wanted to move the code to another platform, you would be out of luck, until you modified things and recompiled. The system could have probably been made better (ie - independent main libraries per platform, instead of one single giant library) - but given it's origins (the Wiring and Processing hardware/software platform combo) - it's saddled with some baggage that seems impossible to move away from without breaking something or making it more complex for the Arduino's target audience (ie - artists and students, some of whom have never programmed or understand programming). It's also why the IDE is such a (lovable to some) dog - it's based off the Processing IDE, and shares much with it.
You can go more bare metal - remember, the Arduino is not the board or the microcontroller - but an entire platform and a community. Nothing says you have to forever only use the Arduino system. If you get better at things, you can certainly ditch the bootloader, and code for the ATMega328 (or other) in straight AVR C (and include inline assembler if you want). In fact, the bootloader and the main library are all done in regular AVR C/C++ - check it all out sometime and see how they did things. Just be aware, though, that you might code something that works great on say the ATMega328 - but fails on a 644 (for instance).
I'm sure you can code in C/C++ for the Raspberry Pi - just don't expect it to be a super-simple easy process (ie - compile and go, then refactor and do it all again) - you'll likely need to set up a small build chain and a make file at least for each project.
Python is meant to be a quick turnaround language - you can code and run it, quickly make changes, then run it again to see the results. You can also go in an "interactive" editor mode, and run snippets of code and/or commands and see the results instantly. It makes for a very easy and approachable system for development, at the expense of code speed. Nothing stops you, though, from writing some C for speed critical parts, and linking them to your Python code if you want, though.
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Thank you! I've been stagnating in a job where I make web apps for a federal agency, using .NET. At my very ripe old age I feel like a nube in so many areas. The Arduino and Raspberry Pi are hobbies that take the place of vegetating in front of the TV.
I have started on Jeremy Blum's Electrical Engineering series using Arduino. I am over half way into Learning Python the Hard Way.
It just felt so good to be using curly braces again. BTW I am keeping a copy of your reply for reference and use as a base for further study.
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Earl Owens wrote: Curly braces forever!
Hear! Hear!
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So is it still voter fraud if I vote more than once? I'm a bad man!
Hogan
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It's only fraud (by decree) if you don't vote for the governing party!
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The thing I remember most about Kwekwe Zimbabwe is a very large Mosque.
Was Robert Mugabe speaking to Muslims when he said "If you are here supporting Zanu-PF, your sins have been cleansed"?
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
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