There are a few results, but not the one I’m looking for, and none like it.
There are a few results, but not the one I’m looking for, and none like it.
I have considered that approach. I’d probably do it in the cloud, in parallel, maybe even in a serverless compute environment. But it does seem like a big endeavor.
Any chance you’d be willing to share those results? The site isn’t accepting signups any more.
The unnamed language that is compiled by cc
.
To elaborate… C[++] is really two different languages, with mostly distinct feature sets, handled in most cases by different compilers, interpreters, parsers, etc.
The unnamed language with keywords like and
which produces text output is a templating system that is functionally independent of the unnamed language with keywords like
for
and unsigned
which actually compiles to a binary.
You can use cpp
to run all the logic and conditionals in that first language to produce output, even if you replace the second language with something else like python or assembly.
You can use cc
to compile that second language from source to binary, without support from the preprocessor.
That second language, the one that cc
understands and compiles, does not have the ability to import functions or values or whatever from other files.
Nah, you’d just get a preprocessor like C/C++ to do #include for you prior to compiling.
Using a “laundry basket with a search robot” IS inherently a worse way to store data than a “file system with hierarchy”.
Nested folders are reliable and predictable.
Tagging is also a good option.
Relying on search that is likely to fail in predictable ways is an awful way to do anything serious. And therein lies the problem… These people have mostly never done serious work with a computer before, that other people rely on. As soon as someone else stands to lose money or fail a class because you can’t find a file, the distinction will come into sharp focus.
https://www.pcgamer.com/students-dont-know-what-files-and-folders-are-professors-say/
Students don’t know what files and folders are, professors say A whole generation has grown up with powerful search functions, and don’t think about computers the same way.
Apparently this has become a widespread problem in colleges starting in the last decade.
That person was already evil before they became a billionaire.
The amount of evilness from being a billionaire, separate from how they got there, is approximately the same for both of them.
Nobody “works for” a billion dollars.