9/18 what does the term "co-ed" mean?
\_ Co-Education. It is a old term used to differentiate those
who studied in single-sex (boys only or girls only) classes
and those whose classes had both sexes. In the vernacular
a co-ed means "a sexy little sorority slut".
1: a sexy little sorority slut
2: a sexy little sorority slut
3: a sexy little sorority slut
4: a sexy little sorority slut
\- dude, you got it all wrong. there are some fucking ugly bitches
in a sorority who are getting no dick whatsoever. for example,
i remember some fat chicks shaking their groove thing at a
fashion show, and all was not well.
\_ Not all sorority girls are there to get dicks. It's only the few
\_ that's why the term does not apply to them.
\_ BOOL Chick::isSexy() { return !this->isUglyBitch(); }
\_ Back in the old country, people would be grateful for
any pointers they could find.
\_ Get with the program. "bool" is now a fully qualified
type. You don't need to use "BOOL."
\_ Since when?
\_ Since November 1997. Of course, windows still
depends on it....
\_ true/false (all lowercase)
\_ This is ANSI C/C++ right? What are the values
ANSI C++ compiler - which last I checked no
for bool (true/false of TRUE/FALSE or 1/0)?
\_ ANSI C++ only. And only if you have a true
to work in egcs-2.91.66 19990314 (egcs-1.1.2).
I think that I'll stick to BOOL or int until I
can confirm that the SunPRO compilers handle it
C++ compiler had been certified as 100% compliant
\_ Only on the csua motd would a rant about ugly sorority
chicks which started as a simple semantic query turn into
a lesson on the latest aspects of coding.
\_ Which, of course, is why I started it.
\_ heehee, this garbage is too funny.
9/
16 How do I pipe to an rsh? Say I want to do
sort file | rsh machine -l user cat > file.sort
\_ Assuming you have rsh set up properly do something like
sort file | rsh machine -l user "cat > file.sort"
or
sort file | rsh machine -l user dd of=file.sort
-ERic
\_ I just tried a simple program and it seems
correctly. |