HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

Hunpeter

no profile record

comments

Hunpeter
·19 days ago·discuss
Afaik there wasn't a single widely accepted standard in the Baroque era, but rather different places had different tunings, with the "normal A" varying roughly between 400 and 500 Hz.
Hunpeter
·last month·discuss
But what if Tony the Pony comes?
Hunpeter
·2 months ago·discuss
An important tenet of modern education is that true knowledge is that which the learner (re)constructs in their mind. Heuristic learning (i.e. "trying to figure things out") is often a great way to do this.
Hunpeter
·3 months ago·discuss
>For classical students, theory doesn't really start until college.

Well, unless, you are studying here in Hungary, for example, where it starts pretty much right away... (though it is a separate class).
Hunpeter
·6 months ago·discuss
"Normie" and "happens to own one or two extra homes" seem a bit contradictory to me... And doesn't everyone who invests in something that makes them money exploit economic conditions?
Hunpeter
·8 months ago·discuss
How does one become a "student of floating point math idiosyncracies"?
Hunpeter
·8 months ago·discuss
Oooh, I really liked ToriBash! I didn't play for very long for whatever reason, but I did think it was a creative and fun game.
Hunpeter
·9 months ago·discuss
Someone said in another comment, that it makes more sense together with the dereference operator, so int *var means: "dereferencing var gets you an int."

I don't really know C, but personally prefer your version. However, I can also get behind considering the * to be part of the variable, rather than a type: "var is a pointer that happens to hold an int". I mean, maybe they could have used the & operator meaning "var is an address holding an int"? Honestly, it just feels like there's too much tradition and legacy and so on, and what one considers intuitive is the thing that they're most used to.
Hunpeter
·10 months ago·discuss
This is also well known here in Hungary, there was even movie about it. It's called "unokázás"; literally: "grandchilding".
Hunpeter
·10 months ago·discuss
A somewhat more depressing take: "There comes a time in everyone's life when you look into the mirror and realize that what you see is all that you'll ever be. And you accept that fact - or you kill yourself. Or you stop looking into mirrors." (Babylon 5, quoted from memory, so probably not 100% correct)

As I'm nearing 30, still in the "I can be anything I want" phase, I wonder when this time will arrive. And whether it is true for everyone - maybe some people possess the ability to reinvent themselves no matter their age. But can you even do that without giving up some contentment?
Hunpeter
·3 years ago·discuss
Why wouldn't they? There are probably loads of people here who don't work in tech whatsoever. (e.g. myself: a holder of degrees in English and classical piano; a student and part-time shop assistant. Programming/tech/science related interests are only a hobby.)