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den2k88 wrote: street british accent is "oufol". Same as most languages if you are not a native speaker. But chances are the person you were speaking to was not either. Most help lines in Britain these days are manned by foreigners.
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den2k88 wrote: Judging by the accent he was a local descended from the first conquerors in 1061 So either Danish or French.
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Good luck following Shakespeare then
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Not a big problem, I already followed Richard II in 2013 and I didn't find it excessively difficult. I've been more exposed to Shakespearian english than London street english.
Also the new productions tend to go easy on the ancient english, only the traditional plays maintain it in all its splendour and difficulty.
GCS d--(d+) s-/++ a C++++ U+++ P- L+@ E-- W++ N+ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE- Y+ PGP t+ 5? X R+++ tv-- b+(+++) DI+++ D++ G e++ h--- r+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
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den2k88 wrote: Well, they have a site that seem made in the early 2000s It's Shakespeare; late 1500s.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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I've noticed in the past few years that most advertised C++ jobs are in the Linux ecosystem. Apart from legacy applications what new work is being done specifically in the Microsoft ecosystem?
Kevin
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Well, Microsoft itself is always looking for C++ developers.
Apart from that - mostly games and low-level system development.
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Sounds like fun, actually.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.
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my take is:
- windows is a good presentation platform (massage and show information to 1 person, and with interfaces via web and even say office apps programming is lite if not nearly fully automated),
- windows is not well suited to processing information. (poor file handling capabilities and multi-processing capabilities in particular when you try and do those things together).
Just look at how something pretty simple like chrome, excel even word with large documents can still cripple a windows machine (it demonstrates even a moderate level of basic context switching - not multitasking - is a strain for windows.)
windows' core is still based on simplistic context switching (and rumored even some actual code) written for winxp, which let's face it was written for single user machines using a generation of processors and associated hardware that themselves were never designed / intended / even-in-wildest-dreams-envisioned for full-on multitasking
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summary in 1 sentence: windows is a single user presentation platform, not a processing platform.
(and btw: all windows server does is add another layer of [still very basic] context switching and some simplistic semi-'virtualisation' capabilities to the windows code base.)
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So true for end user boxes.
No so for Server boxes.
Windows Server has a different core.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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TheGreatAndPowerfulOz wrote: Windows Server has a different core.
LOL
it's a huge amount the same core just with some extra wrapping (and crapping)
as mentioned before - an extra [sort of] layer on the context switching, some built-in sort-of virtualisation, a few extra facets to the security (albeit more at interface/app level rather then kernel), a few (again mostly app-level) extensions to networking and other libraries).
like buying the basic version of a car, or the all-in version with 7 speed auto, cruise control, ABS, larger engine and ... - underneath still came from the same set of blueprints, aka. the same core design.
(binaries of quite a few low level OS apps can be pulled back and forth between desktop & server - if the 'core' of each were very different that would be highly unlikely - just like you can pull the doors of the cheap model of the car and bolt it onto the top end model - same shape, same fitting points.)
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Much of that is true for older server versions, but no so much since Windows 8/Server 2012 timeframe and certainly not so from Windows 10/Server 2016 timeframe.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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I assume there are a lot of specialized desktop application (all aspects of engineering for example) that still mostly use C++.
They are not fancy or technically state of the art (it is hard to change due to inertia), but they are out there.
That's what I've been doing for the last 25+ years of work ( I know crap of C# or all those new fangle internet technologies)
I'd rather be phishing!
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Are you any good with an icon editor?
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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C++ jobs are mainly in embedded or game programming. Or maintaining legacy applications written 25 years ago with Borland C++ which is not even C++ Builder. Embedded or game industry will not hire a C++ guy like me with mostly VC++ and ATL/MFC experience. Microsoft has pretty much abandoned ATL/MFC.
Not many C++ article readers compared to C# on CodeProject.
Even on UWP, most examples are C#, not much C++/WinRT code examples.
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There's games, but also modelling for professional use in specialty fields. Did that for years (besides another job in the same field). The speed difference wrt managed code can be in the (advertised) CUDA speedup ranges. Some of that, of course, is simply more effort to use finegrained multithreading which has become much more mainstream in C++. Such speedups will convince a lot of people because it allows much more interaction, a model obviously needs tuning and/or scenario's. Self-employed, though.
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Shao Voon Wong wrote: Embedded or game industry will not hire a C++ guy like me with mostly VC++ and ATL/MFC experience.
Yes, that was my background pre-.NET. Not done any serious C++ since about 2004. I did use STL but have no experience with Modern C++. Though I did have a 1-day contract to display an error message in some legacy VC++ codebase. Very strange assignment but hey it was better than sitting at home at the time.
Kevin
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Maybe because nowadays most desktop apps are written in C#, event system utilities.
Behzad
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Chew on this: there have been over 300 C++ change proposals up for review at the next ISO C++ meeting. So many in fact that Herb Sutter, the chairman and a Microsoft employee, had to prioritize the list so the worker delegates didn't get overwhelmed. C# with its runtime module (read: insecure), born out of a pissing contest with java, will never be able to keep up with C++'s evolution. Even Microsoft has been dumping C# for years now. The C# developers just have bothered to notice it yet. There is absolutely no reasonable comparison in quality over time of the two programming languages where one is open-sourced and the other is guided by 100s of top computer scientists best efforts to gradually improve the language under the auspices of the International Standards Organization.
Knowing this at the outset, I never left programming in ATL/MFC which from my perspective are the wave of the future. And guess what. Microsoft agrees with me.
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rtischer8277 wrote: ATL/MFC which from my perspective are the wave of the future
How can a pre C++98 library be the wave of the future?
While I do like C++17, there is still lack of support for desktop and web development, save for a few hobby projects here and there. I thought that with cloud computing people would look to C++ for (micro)service development and such, because of the smaller memory footprint and faster processing times (which translates to lower costs). As for desktop, Microsoft (IMHO) has failed over and over and probably aren't interested in it anymore. So I think that until that changes, C++ will remain a language for specific server-heavy programs.
I hope I'm wrong though, as I like the language more than C# or Java or even F#.
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Fernando A. Gomez F. wrote: How can a pre C++98 library be the wave of the future?
As I said in my posting, by betting on the right architectural horse from the outset. Microsoft did with MFC, but didn't with C# which was a corporate knee-jerk response to java. Whereas C++ is based on the International Standards Organization.
C++20 will have Concepts, which it has taken Bjarne Stroustrup, creator of C++, 15 years to hatch and get through the committees, it will have coroutines, it will have, modules, more compile-time C++ constexpr, etc. etc. Don't know what these are? Then you are probably asleep programming in derivative semantic definition languages.
What do ATL/MFC have to do with that? Simple. ATL/MFC are written in C++. And by the way, the next generation of C++ based ATL/MFC apps are on their way. Plus, Microsoft to their credit, has developed ARM64 which is a non-emulating translator opening the field of non-cross-compiling for other platforms but same (C++) code. My point is, being pre C++98 doesn't make the language non C++17 or C++20-able. That's a big difference between it and scripting languages or ones with runtime modules. Let's face it. Microsoft is a bumbling hero in my book. Fabulous technology, but what a price it took to get there.
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I worked recently for a company developing video processing pipelines on Windows in C++. We could have as easily have worked on Linux. The operating system was not an important factor.
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I am currently employed as a C++ dev on Microsoft operating systems. The oil field services companies still have a lot of work for C++. (I've worked for two so far). But they also have some C# work. I still get calls from recruiters for C++ in the Houston, Tx. area.
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Claimed to be from my provider, said my line had errors etc...
Said it would be disconnected if I didnt help them fix it.
Right... Unfortunately I wasnt as rude as I could have been
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