Daniel

2.9K posts

Daniel banner
Daniel

Daniel

@beryldev

Lutheran. Game developer. ECE student.

Florida, USA Katılım Nisan 2023
206 Takip Edilen172 Takipçiler
My Friend Don
My Friend Don@TheDonStein·
If your church charges you money to be baptized, find an LCMS congregation.
English
25
17
269
7.5K
Daniel retweetledi
Theo Jaffee
Theo Jaffee@theojaffee·
Reading history is awesome because it's like fiction but useful
English
7
1
57
2.1K
Daniel retweetledi
Ryan Fleury
Ryan Fleury@rfleury·
"The stack" is a per-thread address space range, dynamically reserved by a kernel when a thread is created. The reason why "stack" is often presented as preferable to "heap" is that, when using a thread's stack, the expensive part of allocation - address space reservation, and preparation of physical pages for backing the address space - has already been performed when the thread was created. But kernels also provide mechanisms for doing your own address space reservation (mmap, VirtualAlloc), and there is nothing stopping you from using these to do bulk allocations up-front to create your own stacks. This can make common case allocations as cheap as "the stack", but the advantage is that you now control the semantics and lifetime of the stack you've created. Thus, it does not need to be coupled to - for example - the lifetime of a scope or function, as the thread stack is. The "stack versus heap" dichotomy is an unfortunate mythology because it seems to, in practice, communicate the idea that when a thread stack is insufficient for some purpose (allocations must exceed scope boundaries, allocations may need to exceed thread stack limits, allocations require more fine-tuned reserve/commit behavior, and so on), then the only alternative is the heap, particularly for very granular allocations. This is, again, a mythology, and it has confused the C++ world in particular for decades.
Boost C++ | Open Source Libraries@Boost_Libraries

std::vector always heap allocates. std::array can't change size. For decades, there's been no standard container that gives you a dynamically sized array with a compile-time capacity limit and zero heap allocation C++26 finally adds std::inplace_vector. Guess where they got the idea 🧵👇

English
32
60
1.1K
69.3K
Daniel
Daniel@beryldev·
@theojaffee I thought that was the Malachowsky hall
English
1
0
0
204
Theo Jaffee
Theo Jaffee@theojaffee·
we have Tokyo at home
Theo Jaffee tweet media
English
10
3
143
7.1K
Daniel
Daniel@beryldev·
@TheDonStein @megbasham @J_D_Sarfati3 The president is not pro-life, no matter how much he tries to pander to Christians. That being said, it’s still preferable to having a “principled conservative” who will inevitably lose the ticket to an infanticide Democratic.
English
3
0
1
72
My Friend Don
My Friend Don@TheDonStein·
@megbasham @J_D_Sarfati3 @beryldev Even you concede the indisputable fact that PP is receiving more funding under this Administration than any other. Make any excuse you wish; it’s still his ineffective leadership at the top. “The buck stops here.”
English
2
0
2
121
Daniel retweetledi
Ryan Fleury
Ryan Fleury@rfleury·
I'd like programmers to retire the "isn't this just reinventing ?" responses. Nobody has read every Wikipedia article. Nobody agrees on every piece of terminology. Reinvention is a good & necessary thing, because it renews, updates, and clarifies ideas. It's also admirable, because it means that someone discovered something important without it being told to them already. That is a much more valuable trait than memorizing terminology and facts.
English
59
61
1K
25.3K
MimiSchizoRambling
MimiSchizoRambling@MimiSchizo·
Is redeemed zoomer becoming a WELS patriot?
MimiSchizoRambling tweet media
English
4
0
28
863
Mav
Mav@NoMavericks·
@MimiSchizo No he’s a subversive jew and closeted Papist
English
1
0
0
58
Ryan Fleury
Ryan Fleury@rfleury·
@ecoezen @TheGingerBill @SaschaWillems2 Again, is driver reliability better? The API is terrible but secondary to my main concern, which is: if I build a binary, or ship source, what is the probability that the program works as-is on user machines? This basically disqualifies “modern” APIs.
English
5
0
7
2K
Ryan Fleury
Ryan Fleury@rfleury·
Stop writing OpenGL state machine management bugs with this one weird trick
Ryan Fleury tweet media
English
20
4
406
56.1K
Daniel
Daniel@beryldev·
@GOP__Ls “He is the same judge FOX 26 covered a few weeks ago who mandated the parents in a divorce to get a COVID-19 vaccine in order to see their kids.” I don’t care what party this judge belongs to, he’s obviously not a conservative.
English
0
0
2
289
GOP Ls
GOP Ls@GOP__Ls·
🚨 This Texas man raped a 14-year-old. A Republican Judge sentenced him to only 100 days in prison.
GOP Ls tweet media
English
544
1.9K
7.3K
3.7M
Daniel retweetledi
Auron MacIntyre
Auron MacIntyre@AuronMacintyre·
The brutal truth is that our entire system relies on abortion You can’t keep women in the work force without abortion You can’t maintain the casual sex culture and disrupt family formation without abortion Women with children find themselves dependent on men, single women find themselves dependent on the state Women are more likely to take abuse from employers, less likely to demand raises, less likely to oppose their replacement People have been conditioned to believe they couldn’t function in society without abortion, and at some level we’ve ensured that’s correct We’re far from the first civilization to base itself on child sacrifice but don’t lie to yourself, that’s exactly what we’ve done You can look back on the Mayans in horror because they did their sacrifices on an altar but they could never hope to match our level of slaughter Until the paradigm shifts there will be no popular support for it’s restriction
Cernovich@Cernovich

Abortion has never been more normalized or popular. The pro-life movement, if their goal is to save lives rather than pay themselves $400,000 a year to go on podcasts, should ask why they keep losing at the state level, rather than agitate against Trump.

English
308
2.6K
16K
614.7K
Daniel retweetledi
Ryan Fleury
Ryan Fleury@rfleury·
Stepping through RADDBG, with RADDBG, on Linux (or at least WSL). So close now!
Ryan Fleury tweet media
English
41
55
1.2K
47.5K
Centinel_1787
Centinel_1787@1787Centinel·
@TheCalicoChamp @WarClandestine We both know that you know there’s a chasm between how Western Europe and Russia deal with Islamist fundamentalism, radicalism, and integration.
English
6
0
29
2.2K
Clandestine
Clandestine@WarClandestine·
IT’S HAPPENING 👀 Trump JUST spoke to Putin and said things were positive, and now Trump announces they are looking into reducing our standing army in Germany. Just as I hypothesized, Trump is reducing our military footprint in the Eastern Hemisphere, which will lead to normalized relations with Russia and China, and the end to the war in Ukraine. US Military presence in Germany is essentially the standing deterrent for all of Europe, and is Putin’s biggest threat, if NATO/Ukraine were to draw the US into direct conflict with the US MIL, which he does not want. Long story short, Trump looking to remove our standing military presence from Germany signals the coming of the end of US involvement in NATO, and thus the end of the war in Ukraine, and potentially the end of the Cold War with Russia that never really ended. Trump is beginning the process of consolidating our forces in the Western Hemisphere, and resetting the global order. Extremely good sign.
Clandestine tweet media
English
651
5K
24.9K
907K
Daniel
Daniel@beryldev·
@MerriamWebster I always spell “receive” as “recieve.” It would be right if this was German.
English
0
0
0
7
Merriam-Webster
Merriam-Webster@MerriamWebster·
What word is your spelling nemesis? This is a safe space.
English
5.4K
316
5.4K
977.3K