@El_Heffe said:
Searching for "TDEMSYR" here returns 4 results. 3 of them asking what it means and one using it without explanation.
That doesn't even make sense you retard.
@El_Heffe said:
Searching for "TDEMSYR" here returns 4 results. 3 of them asking what it means and one using it without explanation.
That doesn't even make sense you retard.
Still a better CSV parser than Adobe InDesign. It doesn't let you use newlines, and there's no equivalent character you can use as a delimiter. Just no newlines at all. The best solution I could come up with was:
And a search and replace in InDesign. This is 700 dollar per license industry-standard software.
@Lorne Kates said:
@this_code_sucks said:
@Meh said:Will this work if you point it at another server? Say, a java instance running 3rd party software inside my cluster?
Yep. As long as you have file wrappers compiled in.
You can simplify it further by removing the parens around the echo statement.
echo file_get_contents($url);With a caveat. Server.Transfer will transfer control to the other server. Obvious enough.
This one will just read the contents of another file and execute it in the same instance of the original server. IE:
Server A has: c:\temp\hi.txt
Server B has: c:\temp\bye.txtDo your file_get_contents, and get a program that lists all files in c:\temp
Result: hi.txt
So the answer is "yes, as long as the OP asked a completely different question"
What? Are you saying it downloads code from another server and runs it on your server? How would that even be possible?
@El_Heffe said:
Searching for "TDEMSYR" here returns 4 results. 3 of them asking what it means and one using it without explanation.
That doesn't even make sense you retard.
@Cassidy said:
Then it dawned upon me that Firefox, Foxit Reader and some other apps do updates independent of the OS.
Isn't Windows Update only for Microsoft software? I can't think of any third-party product using it.
@serguey123 said:
No it wasn't
Yes it was.
@serguey123 said:
Are you comparing XP to the Gnome that was available at the time?
I am.
@briverymouse said:
This is a blatant lie and you know it, almost every OS that MS shipped was good at the time (with the exception of WinME which we know is shit).
No they were not. Look, I'm not saying Linux window managers were better. They suck. But they were better in some ways, where Windows was better in other ways. Windows 7 is better in almost all ways.
@Lorne Kates said:
I don't know why your Quick Launch bar is randomly ordered. Does your computer have syphilis or something?
Not the Quick Launch bar, the open applications. Instead of being in the order they are started, they now always sit in the same place you clicked to open them. So I now have my muscle memory trained to restore common applications when they are minimised, instead of having to hunt for their tabs every time.
@Lorne Kates said:
almost as usable as XP, but still with some lingering shit-ass annoyances
What? XP was useless, it was even worse than Gnome. I had both on my PC but I rarely even started Windows. What was the easiest way to move a maximised window to another monitor in XP? The only way I found was to "restore" it, move it and maximise it again. That sucks. Sure, setting up two monitors on Ubuntu was a pain in the ass, but at least it actually worked afterwards. Windows 7 is the first OS Microsoft got right.
@Lorne Kates said:
- Three registry hacks, to re-enabled the Quick Launch bar, and to ALMOST make IE9's menu bar work properly, and something else- Gotta be at least ten distinct google searches for "How do I find xxx" or "How can I customize Y so it actually fucking works?", resulting in hundreds of tweaks that I couldn't reproduce if you paid me-- including that damn "show the fucking desktop" button
What? The "show the fucking desktop" button is in the bottom right, which is a much better place than where it used to be. Also, why would you want a Quick Launch bar, what's wrong with pinned applications? The fact that they're in a consistent order instead of randomly placed annoys you?
@Lorne Kates said:
- Four different third party add-ons: One to access some customizations that W7 has no GUI for, one to restore a sane XP-like Start menu, and one to restore a sane XP-like task bar, and one to restoe a sane XP-like Explorer shell.
What's wrong with the start menu? The fact that you can now just press the Windows key, start typing an application name and press enter is in all ways superior to looking for your app in an unordered list.
You're right, in principle.
What do you mean by "accuracy of 60%" though? If that's for an individual "item", and you're combining N items as a sample of the general population sentiment, your uncertainty is only 40%/sqrt(N), IIRC. If you already did that, and those are the actual data points and error bars, you're completely right. You should notice this in the data, as it will be very noisy (low correlation between adjacent points of the trendline). If you don't see that, their data is better than you think. But that's still no excuse for them to be totally unaware of the accuracy of their data.
@morbiuswilters said:
Unless i is being modified within the loop itself (which would be another big WTF)
#define goto(N) i = N; continue
@rad131304 said:
@MustBeUsersFault said:as it's case insensitive, maybe the 'do not use symbols' is only there to lower the number of troubleshooting/support calls from confused users with caps-lock on.Maybe I missed something, but why would caps lock matter for symbols?
MustBeUsersFault is not American. He probably uses a keyboard layout like the French one, where Caps Lock is actually Shift Lock, so it also works on symbols. Of course, this WTF is from the United States, so Caps Lock is probably not the right explanation.
(Swiss German even has a keyboard layout where ü with shift is é, but ü with caps lock is Ü.)