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Programming motherfucker

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 16:52

programming-motherfucker.com
>>Learn C the Hard Way

What do you think of this book ?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 16:53

Way better than Learn FIOC the Hard Way.

What the fuck was the point of appending two >>s to the name of a book? Are you braindead or a Reddit user?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 16:55

More likely braindead.

FIOC ?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 16:56

>>3
As suspected, you come from the ima/g/eboards. Please go back there.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 16:58

Long time lurker, never posted anywhere.

Anyway, why is there more talk about jew than prog here ?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:00

>>5
Yeah, you've been lurking for a long time, but you don't understand the antisemitic posts.

Yeah.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:02

Lurking for a long time.. on other board. And last time I checked this board there wasn't any post about them.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:04

>>7
Learn C The Hard Way is good if you want to re-learn C or if you have experience with another imperative programming language. Otherwise, it's shit.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:08

>>5
There's one crazy guy who blames everything he hates on the jews. He really needs to get some medication and counselling.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:09

Yeah, what annoy me is the course for 29$, it looks helpful and give information and tools that are not mentioned in the books. Too bad it's that expensive.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:10

>>9
All those thread come from one guy ?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:13

>>10
Don't buy that bullshit, the book is more than enough.

>>11
No. Please go back to /g/ already.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:21

Okay, but sometime I feel like it'd be nice to see someone else coding.
I've got vim, valgrind on fedora. Can you recommend me some stuff ? (Obviously for programming in C)

Oh and, are text browser useful in some way ?


Nah, I don't want to go to /g/.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:34

>>13
vim and gcc are all you need to make C stuff.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 17:51

Bah. Okay, i'll go on reading about those pointers.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 18:05

>>14
any text editor, gcc or clang, gdb, valgrind

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 18:39

>>11
Yes, he is dedicated in his hatred.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 21:42

>>11
Don't listen to chaim, he's a jew and therefore everything he says are lies.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 21:54

>>18
Don't listen to nikita, he's a goy and therefore everything he says is dumb.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 22:04




function Fstr = Parsefile(fileName);

fid = fopen(fileName, 'r');

Fstr = fread(fid);

fclose(fid);

Fstr = char(Fstr');

Fstr = strsplit(Fstr, char(59));

endfunction;

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 22:37


Gstr = ParseFile("Parsefile.m");

eval(fileName = "Parsefile.m");

for(iter = 2:size(Gstr,2)-1)

  eval(Gstr{iter});

  endfor;

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 22:52

* eval("fileName = 'Parsefile.m'");

What say you, /prog/?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-18 23:43

matlab is shit

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 0:37

too expensive anyway.. i've never even used it ;)
but anyhow, where's all the lispers when you need them..?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 9:32

>>1
is it a blank book? ^^

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 13:53

LCTHW is possibly the worst choice you can make in selecting a book to learn C from...
Just stick to K&R, do all the exercises, and you'll be fine.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 17:25

>>24-25
What do you smoke, retard-kun? I really want to know.

Also, smoking when you're 13 is bad for you.

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 17:58

420 SMOKE WEED EVERYDAY BLAZE IT FAGGOT

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 18:02

>>24
[code]/prog/> (is-here LISPPER)
#t, retard-kun
[code]

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 18:03

>>25
FUCK FUCK FUCK
/prog/> (is-here LISPPER)
#t, retard-kun

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 22:11

mostly tobacco from holland ^^ +trace amounts of cannabis
Well, for a book called 'Learn C the Hard Way', it should contain little more than a list of commands, and perhaps a few example usages of said commands... (95% of the reason Turbo Pascal was so good for learning.. That was effectively the help file..)
Or do you not want to learn to write programs..?

Name: Anonymous 2013-02-19 22:20

eg. i probably couldn't write an essay, but that doesn't mean if i go and copy n essays word for word, i will write perfect essays from there on..

Name: Anonymous 2013-08-31 7:43


The notion of cardinality, as now understood, was formulated by Georg Cantor, the originator of set theory, in 1874–1884. Cardinality can be used to compare an aspect of finite sets; e.g. the sets {1,2,3} and {4,5,6} are not equal, but have the same cardinality, namely three (this is established by the existence of a one-to-one correspondence between the two sets; e.g. {1->4, 2->5, 3->6}).

Name: Anonymous 2013-08-31 8:28


If 2 ≤ κ and 1 ≤ μ and at least one of them is infinite, then:



    Max (κ, 2μ) ≤ κμ ≤ Max (2κ, 2μ).

Name: Anonymous 2013-08-31 9:14


One of the needs of any physical and scientific theory is to give usable formulas that correspond to or at least approximate reality. As an example if any object of infinite gravitational mass were to exist, any usage of the formula to calculate the gravitational force would lead to an infinite result, which would be of no benefit since the result would be always the same regardless of the position and the mass of the other object.

Name: Anonymous 2013-08-31 9:59


This assumption gives rise to paradoxes, the simplest and best known of which are Russell's paradox and the Burali-Forti paradox. Axiomatic set theory was originally devised to rid set theory of such paradoxes.

Name: Anonymous 2013-08-31 10:45


Within set theory, many collections of sets turn out to be proper classes. Examples include the class of all sets, the class of all ordinal numbers, and the class of all cardinal numbers.

Name: Anonymous 2013-08-31 11:30


 Since X isn't measurable for any rotation-invariant countably additive finite measure on S, finding an algorithm to select a point in each orbit requires the axiom of choice. See non-measurable set for more details.

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