I'm dealing with a scenario where there are objects which, were they to be deleted, would cause an exponential amount of deletions through cascade-delete relationships. In this way, deleting 20 of these objects can result in ~3,000 objects ultimately being deleted. This can cause for very slow sa...
User: "... any help for this program will be appreciated"
Other user reply: "Yours is a mysterious conundrum indeed ... I am not certain that your rhetoric is computable in occidental climes :) Gifting employees in any program, would surely be stopped by an anti-virus."
When the file that is somewhere else is deleted, I want to delete the one that is in the documents folder too, not depending on file name.
How would you go about this?
My thoughts are: 1. compare hashes, but for a large amount of files this has overhead 2. comparing file system ids, but that means I have to store the id somewhere, bleh
But it doesn't, because they've got a continue statement within their parser, like mine does, which means it just skips anything following an escape sequence.
So *\** means it finds one star, skips the next, finds the second star, "thinks" it has two asterisks in a row, and then bolds the text.
Depends on what you consider a bug I guess. If a bug means you're bolding stuff inserted between the formatting text, then yeah, it's kind of a bug.
Also: "The tone was perfect, and played entirely seriously which was hilarious", maybe you can explain what you mean a bit more here? Since I'm not so clear, which means others likely won't be.
The dark and serious tone of the film was played perfectly which contrasted with the ridiculous premise of the film which created great humor. That one is a little awkward
"The dark and serious tone of the film was played perfectly which contrasted with the ridiculous premise of the film which created great humor"can be:"The dark and serious tone of the film contrasted perfectly with its ridiculous premise, creating great humor".
@mattsven I'm aiming for awkward and uncomfortable
Is it working?
edited
The dislikes section I expect some issues, I didn't know how to explain it perfectly
But like in some of the action scenes, you could tell the sword was just pushed in between their arm and chest or even just off to the side. They hid it pretty well but you could tell it was fake, I don't think they ever showed a sword through a body at all
Some of the battles were good (like sword-to-sword combat) just a few of the zombie scenes you could kinda tell I though, but it was very minor. Maybe they had to reshoot it and didn't have much time, who knows