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.
But there’s nothing stopping you from actually reading boss patterns and dodging them.
Is there enough information to do this on the first time through, if you have enough skill? Or is it necessary to try and fail multiple times to see and learn each pattern?
Web of trust solves this problem, until people start intentionally trusting AIs as much as they do other humans, at which point it’s no longer a problem.
upset that it needs you to login to a specific server before it will let you stream music from other unrelated servers
FTFY
Almost all mobile-only games from mobile-only game developers and advertised in mobile-only environments are trash. Look for mobile games related to other gaming environments or advertising channels. Android games through Humble Bundle are great (although they don’t do mobile-only bundles any more?). Android ports of PC or Switch games tend to be pretty good. Open source Android games run the gamut of quality, but the ways they are bad are the same ways open source PC games are bad, not the very different set of ways that mobile games are bad (microtransactions, ads, etc).
In many parts of the US, not sure about Texas, child support is based on the parent(s)'(s) income/wealth. The same should apply here, but for the drunk driver’s income/wealth.