@Gustav Is that measured in original British Mini Coopers, or modern German Mini Coopers?
There is a significant difference
@Gustav Is that measured in original British Mini Coopers, or modern German Mini Coopers?
There is a significant difference
Also, the retardation of US banks is also why you guys are still using Cheques, and that your banks still believe that a "security question" is an appropriate second factor of authentication...
@blakeyrat : I'm afraid you are a victim of your own country. I work for a bank so I can tell you why you encounter all of those problems:
That explains the major part of your problems.
Audio volume is generally a clusterfuck. I mean if you are watching a video on youtube, you may have up to 5 different controls that affect the final volume (if I'm not forgetting any):
Mute is the same. IIRC, all of these 5 levels can be muted individually.
Also, on some of these layers, setting the volume to 0 is not the same as enabling mute, even though they have the same effect. On others they are synchronized (decreasing the volume to 0 toggles mute on, increasing the volume > 0 toggles mute off).
I believe it's slightly better with bluetooth, because the device mute/volume and the general windows mute/volume are synchronized. I guess lenovo was too lazy to sync their keyboard with windows, so you get the 5-layer volume stack instead of the 4-layer volume stack.
@Yamikuronue said in API design: query string nullable value:
@JazzyJosh if it's REST, it should be maybe a sub-node of the parent: so like:
/api/nodes
for all nodes
/api/nodes/17/children
for the children of node 17but I'm not sure how to specify "only the top-level nodes" in this scheme either
I just logged in to suggest that. If you want top level nodes, just do /api/nodes/roots
( you guys are too fast :-) )
@remi said in I hate printers, with a passion:
@Luhmann said in I hate printers, with a passion:
@HardwareGeek
FuckCyanC'ian!Careful, they've got some pretty nifty powers.
Not sure if this was ever fully confirmed by the author, But Cixi and Ci'an are obviously modeled after two Chinese co-empresses.
Also, there is a literal in this picture.
 @blakeyrat said:
[...] excuses Microsoft or Mozilla from having a completely undocumented class (or interface, or whatever term you want to use.) Even if their documentation had just pointed to NodeList, I'd be perfectly fine with that. But nothing? No excuse!
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/gecko_dom_reference
No documentation? No reference to NodeList? Your google-fu is lacking.
Audio volume is generally a clusterfuck. I mean if you are watching a video on youtube, you may have up to 5 different controls that affect the final volume (if I'm not forgetting any):
Mute is the same. IIRC, all of these 5 levels can be muted individually.
Also, on some of these layers, setting the volume to 0 is not the same as enabling mute, even though they have the same effect. On others they are synchronized (decreasing the volume to 0 toggles mute on, increasing the volume > 0 toggles mute off).
I believe it's slightly better with bluetooth, because the device mute/volume and the general windows mute/volume are synchronized. I guess lenovo was too lazy to sync their keyboard with windows, so you get the 5-layer volume stack instead of the 4-layer volume stack.
@remi said in I hate printers, with a passion:
@Luhmann said in I hate printers, with a passion:
@HardwareGeek
FuckCyanC'ian!Careful, they've got some pretty nifty powers.
Not sure if this was ever fully confirmed by the author, But Cixi and Ci'an are obviously modeled after two Chinese co-empresses.
Also, there is a literal in this picture.
@Gustav Is that measured in original British Mini Coopers, or modern German Mini Coopers?
There is a significant difference
@Yamikuronue said in API design: query string nullable value:
@JazzyJosh if it's REST, it should be maybe a sub-node of the parent: so like:
/api/nodes
for all nodes
/api/nodes/17/children
for the children of node 17but I'm not sure how to specify "only the top-level nodes" in this scheme either
I just logged in to suggest that. If you want top level nodes, just do /api/nodes/roots
( you guys are too fast :-) )
Also, the retardation of US banks is also why you guys are still using Cheques, and that your banks still believe that a "security question" is an appropriate second factor of authentication...
@blakeyrat : I'm afraid you are a victim of your own country. I work for a bank so I can tell you why you encounter all of those problems:
That explains the major part of your problems.
Let's try that:
2undefined = NaN, because the multiplication triggers type coercion on undefined, which becomes NaN and 2NaN yields NaN.
undefined + undefined = "undefinedundefined" because the + operator means concatenation unless both operands are numbers.
So I'd have to say that your expression reduces to NaN !== "undefinedundefined" which is true.
@Ben L. said:
I never understood why browsers let the page know when they are zoomed in. Faking a smaller window size and then transforming the coordinates would probably cause a lot fewer layout bugs.
Well, you have it perfectly backwards. Browsers do not notify the page when they are zoomed in, but only notify the page that the window has been resized, and try to redo all the layout themselves. It's actually worse than that : browsers do not even allow the page to know what is the current zoom level, apparently because this is a user setting that belongs outside of the sandbox in which the page is allowed to play.
In most cases it works just fine. However, when zoomed in our out, they need to play with floating point pixels and coordinates internally. And of course they all have a few floating point derived rounding errors. And none of them makes the same rounding errors, which typically lead to off-by-one errors in one or another browser, which in turn leads to what you can see there.
This is especially common when you start using float:left in your css and that due to one of these off-by-one errors your floating content is pushed to below is sibling and then cropped out by it parents overflow:hidden attribute.
@mott555 said:
ÂWhat is wrong with people? Chrome does the same thing...or my workstation is haunted.
for chrome, you can fix that by opening the dev tools window (F12), clicking on the settings icon (in the bottom right corner), then select "disable cache".
Â
 @blakeyrat said:
[...] excuses Microsoft or Mozilla from having a completely undocumented class (or interface, or whatever term you want to use.) Even if their documentation had just pointed to NodeList, I'd be perfectly fine with that. But nothing? No excuse!
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/gecko_dom_reference
No documentation? No reference to NodeList? Your google-fu is lacking.