Allowed people to buy drugs online
Allowed people to buy drugs online
I’m not sure if there’s anything enable_if
can do that concepts can’t do somewhat better but yeah there’s definitely a lot of subtleties that reflection is going to make nicer or possible in the first place
You already can do that with C++20 concepts and the requires expression
template <typename T>
concept has_member_foo = requires(T t) {
t.foo();
};
// Will fail to instantiate (with nice error
// message) if t.foo() is ill-formed
template <has_member_foo T>
void bar(T t) {
// ...
}
// abbreviated form of above
void baz(has_member_foo auto t) {
// ...
}
// verbose form of above
template <typename T> requires
has_member_foo<T>
void biz(T t) {
// ...
}
// same as above but with anonymous concept
template <typename T> requires
requires(T t) { t.foo(); }
void bom(T t) {
// ...
}
// If already inside a function
if constexpr (has_member_foo<T>) {
// ...
}
// Same but with anonymous concept
if constexpr (requires(T t) { t.foo(); }) {
// ...
}
C++26 reflection is compiletime
There’s a bunch of species of cactus (family Cactaceae) but only Rhipsalis baccifera is found in the old world. Even weirder is that it’s not just found in the Americas and sub-Saharan Africa but also Sri Lanka for some reason.
\mathbf
. It’s consistent with \mathrm
for well-defined constants
My uncle was a med lab tech in the hospital. They still had “no mouth pipetting” signs up in the late 90s.
Organisms need some oxidizing agent to respire. We use oxygen because it’s very highly reactive and thanks to photosynthesis is goddamn everywhere.
When avoirdupois pounds and pounds-force are used together I’m pretty sure it’s more common to use ‘lb’ for avoirdupois pounds and ‘lbf’ for pounds-force.
Maximum is 100 °F and minimum is 95 °F. Those seem pretty arbitrary to me
“Had to hand-lower it in to prevent splashback. WorkSafe you know”
Don’t forget ethnographers and the surname Tree
I think the comic is about types of published articles with the 3rd being “we collated and collected a bunch of data to make this database that other researchers will find useful”-type papers. So you don’t need to rely on the map of every tree if you just map some trees yourself.
How things work in BC:
When a practitioner changes for a service, they can’t bill any more than what the Payment Schedule says that procedure costs. So if the Medical Services Plan isn’t being billed (eg the doctor or patient opted out of MSP, the patient is a non-resident, the service is in the Payment Schedule but the Payment Schedule requirements consider it unnecessary) or MSP isn’t covering the full cost (some stuff like a second or third biopsy will only be covered 50 %), then the doctor can’t bill the patient any more than they would’ve billed MSP. This means practitioners have no incentive to not bill MSP.
The Payment Schedule (and thus allocation of the MSP budget) is set out by the Medical Services Commission which is composed of three representatives from the government, three from the Doctors of BC (the professional association which promotes the interests of member doctors) and three members of the public. So even if the government pushes for more stringent coverage requirements and budget surplus, the doctors are there to push for higher fees and less billing paperwork (besides exceptional circumstances like out-of-country care, patients can’t submit claims directly; everything is on the practitioner’s end), and the public is there to push for more coverage.
In practice this means that for the vast vast majority of services, the only justification that the practitioner needs to give MSP for coverage is the International Classification of Diseases diagnostic code for the condition being treated.