"We paid $99 for Threshold delivery. A third-party deliverer brought the delivery, but initially refused threshold service, since their paperwork didn't show it. I called Home Depot in front of them, and they changed their tune fast. Not sure if Home Depot is at fault or the delivery service, but my wife and I came away frustrated with this process. Improvements must be made!"
The Home Depot
2.5
43
2480 Brice Rd, Reynoldsburg
OPEN · 06:00 - 21:00 · +1 614-577-1601
"They always mess everything up and they canceled my reservation for my rental this morning because they don't know how to operate a computer."
Advanced Drainage Systems, Inc. - Corporate Office
In this case, depending upon what your use case is, you might be better off using int (or long long) for s1 and s2. There are some functions in C/POSIX that could/should use size_t, but don't because of historical reasons. For example, the second parameter to fgets should ideally be size_t, but is int.
If the size of the int is that important one can use int16_t, int32_t and int64_t (need the iostream include for that if I remember correctly). What's nice about this that int64_t should not have issues on a 32bit system (this will impact the performance though).
The approach basically builds on other work where people experimentally identified the size of primitives and typical Java objects and then apply that knowledge to a method that recursively walks an object graph to tally the total size.
How can I see the size of files and directories in Linux? If use df -m, then it shows the size of all the directory at the top level, but, for the directories and files inside the directory, how do I
As you know, matlab deals mainly with matrices. So, the size function gives you the dimension of a matrix depending on how you use it. For example: 1. If you say size(A), it will give you a vector of size 2 of which the first entry is the number of rows in A and the second entry is the number of columns in A. 2. If you call size(A, 1), size will return a scalar equal to the number of rows in A ...
typedef size_t intc; // (instead of unsigned int) typedef ssize_t uintc; // (instead of int) Because strlen, string, vector... all use size_t, so I usually use size_t. And I only use ssize_t when it may be negative. But I find that: The unsigned integer types are ideal for uses that treat storage as a bit array. Using an unsigned instead of an int to gain one more bit to represent positive ...
What is the command to find the size of all the databases? I am able to find the size of a specific database by using following command: select pg_database_size('databaseName');
The OP was asking 'Array.size () vs Array.length'. From the previous discussions, it was make clear, that the 'size' Function is not part of standard JavaScript but implemented by libraries. So I'm assuming that the OP is interested in how to retrieve the real length of JavaScript arrays.