@EatSleepCycle @ianlivy1 Could also give https://t.co/DDso9SX7Ey a try for the baseline planning. It usually does a fairly decent job of finding a route that isn't overly busy.
@derJamesJackson Doesn't sound particularly odd. If you showed a German Ausweis, they just quickly glance at and use it to enter your name with the correct spelling. If they encounter a foreign passport, they'll also check for expected/unexpected stamps (ie, is it valid for Germany).
@EatSleepCycle Do you just knock on the doors of various farms until someone says "ok"? Not very familiar with how bike (camping) tours usually work in the UK.
@ninkibah@lemire It's certainly really useful for things like this:
auto view() const -> decltype(buffer_type::view())
{
return buffer_type::view();
}
@Avinashabroy I think you would have liked the old CDC machines with a 6-bit char, a 12-bit byte and a 60-bit word, which I believe was also used to represent a floating point value (so technically had floats with 5 bytes).
@AlanFJr@daniel_grenat@virtaava The idea of chlorinated chicken just makes a lot of people shake their heads and question why it's necessary. Chlorine in the water? Very regional. The last time we had chlorine in our water was 1999 (local flooding). No ozone water treatment either. UV is on standby mode.
@ccallac7@csjh__ Why not add begin(), end() methods to the meshlist?
You could then use a range-for, or a for_each() to loop through. Not going to be much faster than simply getting the number and looping like you are now doing, but would definitely look cooler.
@DEEP__FRYER@sysxplore If you are still distro-hopping, could also take a look at openSuSE for a reasonable development environment. Not bleeding edge, but stable and reasonably fresh packages, easy to install different compiler and MPI versions, cross-compilation etc.
@nixcraft Isn't the use of an MIT license always a bit concerning? Perhaps I worry too much, but after lots of people pour time and energy into development, nothing stops a large enterprise from hoovering it all up and repackaging into a different proprietary product.
@potatoslav No argument there that most of the text is recognizably English, it's just that "yummy" is the only word that actually looks a bit out of place in new German.