Nice tutorial, but I changed my mind about Emacs and stuff. What a waste of time 😂😂 I'll just use Visual Studio which comes also with a very nice debugger out of the box 😉😉
Hmmn doesn't work. I noticed parameter, "persitent" was incorrect. Any other corrections? I don't get a plot window. I see gnuplot in task manager as soon as "'_popen()" is called. But no "demo" window. If i type the commands directly into a cmd window then the "Demo" plot window shows. But not from the c program.
Great tool and tutorial! Thanks! Is there an openGL type version, or similar? I'd like to give my program to others, but don't want them to need to install gnuPLOT. It would be neat if a library were available for c++/c.
Today I learned! That's super useful for message-mode (email composition) to mailing lists. Thanks for sharing! Sadly, I've increased line spacing, so I don't get a dashed line, ah well.
Very interesting. I have to admit that I have not used emacs for e-mail composition yet. It would be pretty nice to send e-mails directly from emacs. I should definitely try and look into that.
@@oxyscbw1690 I was very reluctant because screw-ups would affect, well, all my email :) I ended up not trying gmail at all, because it doesn't adhere to the IMAP protocol in some regards. So instead I tried my own domain's email account and stuck with the lovely experience. Here's some pointers. I set up OfflineIMAP for the syncing with my personal email account (now hosted on FastMail). Nowadays I'd rather try 'mbsync' instead because it's said to be more stable and also faster. This brings mail to your computer in mbox format. I then used 'mu' to index the email, which also comes with 'mu4e' as an Emacs frontend and 'mutt' for vim. This is more a fallback if emacs broke. The real game changer for me was the introduction of notmuchmail.org when I searched for a Hey.com-like email workflow in Emacs. Notmuch manages an index of all messages, and its Emacs frontend basically asks the 'notmuch' CLI tool to perform queries and fetch details, move stuff around by tagging. You can manage all your mail quickly from the command line if that's a thing you like. Super interesting to have CLI to query messages and script things. Notmuch is highly customizable, and I got it into a useful state and really enjoy the result. That required some tinkering with pre/post mail fetching hooks to automatically tag emails based on their IMAP folder. This is a good starting point in my opinion, with YT video: gist.github.com/vedang/26a94c459c46e45bc3a9ec935457c80f
@@ChristianTietze Wow thanks for all the pointers and information. Definitely sounds like a bigger project though. Maybe I can combine it with setting up my own mail server on my raspberry pi.
You are right, I am currently also not satisfied with the video quality even in fullscreen mode. There is definitely some compression visible. I will definitely adjust the font size for future videos, to improve visibility when not in fullscreen mode.
Thank you. This is very helpful. I had some issues with gnuplot 5.4.x, but reverted to 5.2.8 as suggested and all worked well. I still have an issue with the gnuplot window not exiting cleanly and have to kill the process - any thoughts? I have tried without the -persistent option and have also tried alternative terminals: qt and wxt ("set terminal qt" or "set terminal wxt"). The wxt option made no difference - I still had to kill the process, while qt made the persistent problem worse - I couldn't even kill the process! For those discussing matplotlib in python - I haven't seen a C implementation but then I haven't looked too hard either ;) I *think* matplotlib is intended to bring Matlab-style plotting functionality to Python.
I don't think I have had any problems exiting the gnuplot window. I usually use the developer command prompt from visual studio as an admin. I will try to reproduce your problem and get back to you.
@@oxyscbw1690 Sorry, I have just realised that I caused the issue. I added another string element to 'GnuCommands' forcing a replot in an infinite while loop in gnuplot ("while(1){ replot pause 5 }").
I think your macro need a bit of work and I think you need to be more aggressive with your dragoon and some of them should be at the front door. That being said, it’s a nice video overall!
Thanks, nice to know, that the videos are still appreciated. You are right, you should be very active with your dragoons, at least until mines are out for the terran.
@@oxyscbw1690 also, you can snipe mines with dragoons without detection, check out this vod for example ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-leU4lyVFCD0.html , but that's quite hard micro, I think the point that you need to pull back(out of his natural seige range to a bit further) if you have bisu level micro is when seige is done
Fun Fact: the best protoss player, Bisu, binded he's p to tab, and used 4 as hotkey for nexus. Therefore, he didn't have to stretch across the entire keyboard to build a probe and could easily flick between structures. Also, he hotkeyed f2, f3, f4 to three expansions so that he could use 5 - 0 hotkeys for production facilities, 3 for building/expanding probe and 1, 2 for scout army, with a lot of minimap gameplay. Throughout the entire game, early, mid, late, etc. he would change he's hotkeys (for e.g. in late game he would have more hotkeys with units for army, drops, unique units etc.)