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`testl` eax against eax?
I am trying to understand some assembly.
8 Answers
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How to implement common bash idioms in Python? [closed]
...y textfile manipulation through a bunch of badly remembered AWK, sed, Bash and a tiny bit of Perl.
17 Answers
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Why is “copy and paste” of code dangerous? [closed]
...a bug in your copy-paste code, you will need to fix it every place you did and hope you can remember them all (this also holds for changed requirements).
If you keep logic in one place, it is easier to change when needed (so if you decide that the application needs updating, you only do it in one p...
Lock-free multi-threading is for real threading experts
I was reading through an answer that Jon Skeet gave to a question and in it he mentioned this:
6 Answers
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Getting the closest string match
I need a way to compare multiple strings to a test string and return the string that closely resembles it:
12 Answers
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What is the relation between BLAS, LAPACK and ATLAS
I don't understand how BLAS, LAPACK and ATLAS are related and how I should use them together! I have been looking through all of their manuals and I have a general idea of BLAS and LAPACK and how to use them with the very few examples I find, but I can't find any actual examples using ATLAS to see h...
Swift and mutating struct
There is something that I don't entirely understand when it comes to mutating value types in Swift.
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In plain English, what does “git reset” do?
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In general, git reset's function is to take the current branch and reset it to point somewhere else, and possibly bring the index and work tree along. More concretely, if your master branch (currently checked out) is like this:
- A - B - C (HEAD, master)
and you realize you want maste...
Learning assembly [closed]
... learn Assembly language. The main reason to do so is being able to understand disassembled code and maybe being able to write more efficient parts of code (for example, through c++), doing somethings like code caves, etc. I saw there are a zillion different flavors of assembly, so, for the purposes...
Which equals operator (== vs ===) should be used in JavaScript comparisons?
I'm using JSLint to go through JavaScript, and it's returning many suggestions to replace == (two equals signs) with === (three equals signs) when doing things like comparing idSele_UNVEHtype.value.length == 0 inside of an if statement.
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