I noticed it when I was driving back from lunch. My radio cut off and I tried to turn it back on, nothing. Then I realized my entire instrument panel was dead/haywire
@TylerH My car did that once - the air conditioning turned off and then the radio turned off... turns out I was so low on fuel - the car did that to preserve fuel... but I was thinking the car was failing!
@TylerH My (our) 2011 Sienna just had the battery die, and we live in a moderate climate and it wasn't setting for a long time or anything. Stuff happens
@Tyler There's a lot of facilities between battery and engine. The mentioned fuel pump is one of them. Also the ignition needs to be synched, I know that from my old Yamaha Motorcycle.
Track down the place you bought the battery from (if you did) and march in there. Places around here usually replace for free if the battery is under x years old
How long had it been since you started it? Wondering if it's possible that they alternator was already dead, and you just chewed through the remaining juice in your battery to run the instruments and such.
If the alternator was already dead, then when maybe staring the car on his way home from lunch drained most of the power and the battery finally died on the way back
@TylerH Two reasons a battery dies: 1. The battery lost too much charge and fell below cranking amps 2. The battery cannot support a cranking amps charge. In case #1, if you jump it off and run it, it charges above the cranking amps and you're fine
So I tried to start it again, in 1st key turn position the radio works, then 2nd key turn position the instrument panel lights up and air starts, but the radio doesn't work, and trying to crank at 3rd position gets that machine-gun sound
I wonder if it's belt related. Had a pulley come off my belt once. No power steering and just barely made it to somewhere safe to stop before overheating
@πάνταῥεῖ I think it was a typo (the one with WARNING in the title)
And the second one I sent with a cv-pls tag, OP is asking someone to write the code for him (typical assignment when the professor provides the base code and students need to write the function definitions)
@undo Well, the OP seemed to be insightful. I know that's misuse to some degree, but as mentioned before the answers are in the Guides and Books. We nuge the OP to get back to read the essentials.
I agree with Undo. Sure, the asker needs to learn the basics, but that question is NOT a duplicate of the C++ book list and shouldn't be closed as such.
The question can be closed as typo (or no MCVE, since the questioner didn't include the actual errors), and the book list can be linked to in a comment.
Once, someone in this room (I don't remember who) said something like "Before you do anything, ask yourself 'How will this look in the meta argument?'"
I feel there should be some sort of badge or status indicator for those who contribute to the SE moderation tools like Smokey... might prevent questions like these. — Ian Kemp9 hours ago
My life right now: I wake up: Review and write algorithms at work. I take my lunch break: Review and write algorithms on SO. Then I finish my shift: Review and write algorithms in class. I finish and go home: I review and write algorithms on SO.
Why is there even a classification for comments? If a comment would be removed for being too chatty, and a comment would be removed for being rude...why even have users classify it? If it should be removed, just say "Should be removed"
@FrankerZ sure, but the rude/offensive ones indicate a behavioral problem while the others are more a content issue. Bad behavior needs correcting based on easy found evidence. Bad content, specially comments, is meh
@rene But if it's ending up in the mod queue as "Should be deleted", then they can simply classify it and handle the necessary additional steps to address the problem. (They have to read it anyway)
Meh, punishing users just because they don't get a classification right: Discourages users from even reporting comments in the first place. That's why I pretty much stopped.
@FrankerZ Rude flags are significantly different, irrespective of what mods may eventually do. Some keywords in a comment (like the f-word) make it so that a single rude flag will result in immediate deletion. If there's no keyword, auto-deletion can still happen but it takes more flags (6?).
@FrankerZ I don't know what happens if there's a term deemed offensive but you decide to use a flag other than "rude". I would expect that the system would not treat it the same as if you had selected the "rude" flag but I've never tried.
It is still not logical though. If I can edit and apply the changes immediately, I should be able to approve someone's edit and apply their changes immediately.