Nope, it took a full system reboot. Apparently Windows had fucked itself up enough to run out of socket handles at a system-wide level.
Sounds like my experience with buggy NFS servers on Linux...
Nope, it took a full system reboot. Apparently Windows had fucked itself up enough to run out of socket handles at a system-wide level.
Sounds like my experience with buggy NFS servers on Linux...
I look forward to seeing “Commit e820171ac9acf39bf96c86a36891c2189049b385” on Discourse posts.
brb, changing my profile fields so Discourse doesn’t load 128K of data every time my profile is accessed...
$ microcom
connected to /dev/ttyS0
Escape character: Ctrl-\
Type the escape character followed by c to get to the menu or q to quit
Enter command. Try 'help' for a list of builtin commands
-> help
speed - set terminal speed
exit - exit from command processing
flow - set flow control
break - send break
quit - quit microcom
help - show help
x - execute a script
# - comment
md - Display memory (i.MX specific)
mw - write memory (i.MX specific)
mwb - write memory byte (i.MX specific)
mwh - write memory 2 byte (i.MX specific)
upload - upload image (i.MX specific)
connect - sync communication to Processor (i.MX specific)
sniff - sniff and dissect communication from ATK (i.MX specific)
->
Here quit
is the most destructive option...
Not to mention that it says “Search this topic” instead of “Search this PM thread”...
What about \0 separated values? Isn't the point of the null character as a string terminator?
You can use \xff
to separate UTF-8 encoded values.
What was it, a multi-terabyte ext2
disk or something? O.o
Probably a multi-terabyte ext3
disk... When fsck
is run at boot because of a scheduled disk check (“/dev/somedisk has gone 42 days without being checked, check forced”), it ignores the journal and checks everything.
At least it won't take hours to scan the filesystem when you bring it back to life
Unless you forget to disable the automatic fsck
on reboot, like the IT department at my engineering school did. Their NFS server crashed while I was using a lab computer, it only came back online 5 hours later, after a full disk check.
Just noticed Opera doing some weird shit as well when encountering emoji here:For reference, correct font that should be used in tab text:
Font managers usually switch to a different font only when necessary. Since the microphone emoji is not in the tab‘s default font, it switched to another font, and since this font also has glyphs for ASCII characters, it kept using it for the rest of the text.
fmt.Println("Hello, World!")
makes about as much sense as fmt.Println(("Hello, World!")) to me. Why are you putting parentheses around a simple expression?
I don't even know what the author of that comment was even trying to say.
Who cares? He was only trying to fulfill Slashdot’s weekly systemd
flamewar quota...
…TortoiseGit is a git
client…
It’s a git
client, meaning that it executes the git
command with various parameters to perform the required actions. But it’s not a Git client because it’s not directly working on Git repositories
It's like the software releases I did when I was 8. Fuck something up, don't test it, release, and then test afterwards and release again because you found one of the billions and billions of bugs.
That’s still better than most Github projects, where there are no releases at all and you’re supposed to use the tip of the master
branch.
I'm not aware of any other language using nil rather than a variation on null.
Actually, on Objective-C and some BASIC-based languages...
I've noticed that and it's really annoying. How do you turn it off from the registry? I'd be willing to mess around with that to get rid of CCC.
Proof of concept. All your likes are belong to me. And aliceif. I'll be amused if someone followed the instructions and cross-topic replied to allow this code to run. I have posted this courtesy of darkmatter.<0.3009734444785863
You can add an alphabetical character after the < to hide the random number.
Hmm... no dice...
Ah sorry, that’s UNIX-only. Your best bet is probably to run cls
, or port this code to Rust.
.so is the usual file extension for static libraries in Linux (the "DLLs of Linux", if you will)
I meant that commented quotes trigger quote notificiations.Do they not?
[ quote=""][/quote]
, maybe?
Not Wordpress:
More specifically:
https://github.com/tdwtf/WtfWebApp/blob/master/TheDailyWtf/Common/Discourse/DiscourseHelper.cs#L55
It uses the Discourse API to create a topic in the Articles category, and gets the created topic ID in return (which is then used to fetch posts from Discourse and build the “Continue this discussion” link).
Not sure if it’s possible to do this with WordPress, though.
clicking “Quote whole post” when replying to your post triggers a JS error in Firefox (but I thingk I’ve already seen it in other cases)
EDIT: Yes, it’s not linked to the [quote]
contained in the HTML comment.
I guess that if you complain about it on meta.d they’ll “fix” it by removing all the quotes from the original message...
The Full Quote function seem to have the same behavior. “Quote whole post”? LIAR!
The AMD drivers work just fine without it.
The AMD drivers tend to erroneously enable underscan on 1080p HDMI monitors, and the only way to turn it off without messing up with the registry is from the CCC.
Status: Finding out why a program takes 17 seconds to save its parameters to a leveldb database.
So I finally got the opportunity to rewrite this part of the program from scratch, and reduced the ”save” operation time from 17 seconds to 0.0028 seconds. And the parameters are stored in an XML file now, so they are readablea bit more readable than before.
Progress!
Which meanslibxml2
is Doing It Right. Passing a non-literal string as format parameter is asking for trouble. Imagine the format parameter containing%<whatever>
and how that would blow up.
I see your point, but why bother with a format string then? The libxml2
API could have defined its error callback as taking a simple message string. I was expecting it would use the format string to return detailed errors, for instance
sax_handler->error(context, "Invalid tag at line %d", line);
but so far it seems to always use it like this:
sax_handler->error(context, "%s", "Invalid tag");
which makes no sense IMHO.
I do not use a graphical web browser. I use a combination of cat, wget, and ssh to read my news websites.
AFAIK wget
doesn’t actually allow sending PUT queries, so I guess the 4 people who chose this option actually used curl
to do it.
Status: Got trolled by libxml2
. I have defined a callback function which is called when the SAX parser encounters an error; it’s a variadic function which takes a const char* format
.
I got lazy and wrote this:
void error_callback(void* context, char* format, ...)
{
internal_log("SAX parse error: %s", format);
}
because after all the format string should give enough information about the problem, right?
Well, I now have this in my logs:
SAX parse error: %s
The first post in a topic, if you attempt to delete it, is treated as deleting the entire topic with attendant permission check.
There were reasons for this at the time but I have long campaigned to simply flip a flag on the post/topic instead of moving them around (so deleting replies still leaves them in-situ for moderators)
http://what.thedailywtf.com/t/how-does-one-delete-a-private-message/1143
CLOSED_WONTFIX
(The fact that toxic-hellstew-90s-forums are able to allow individual people to delete PMs is irrelevant, of course)
EDIT: Hanzo’d (but I bothered to DiscoSearch the original topic)
http://what.thedailywtf.com/groups/moderators.json
[error: 'invalid access']
[
instead of {
, and '
instead of "
, no quotes around error
)It's a normal failure mode for combining characters. If you're lucky, normalising to NFC first will help, but not everything normalises. (The fact that not all combinations of accent and character have their own codepoint is why we have combining characters in the first place.)
So maybe the real solution is to stop trying to reverse strings in the first place?
Bonus WTF:
300 lines of text crammed in a 3-line non-word-wrappable non-resizable text box. At least the text is selectable and copyable...
Status: Realized after staring at this window for 20 minutes
that it was waiting for me to answer some question... on the terminal prompt in the background, of course. *sigh*
I should know better by now...
http 123456789012345678901234567890123
...
It works if I add a newline, though.