@Thaillie Once you posted the questions, they stopped being "yours", and were gifted to "the community". I'd recommend letting the community decide whether they are useful or on-topic. If they've been voted closed already, that's an indication that they are off-topic. If not, then leave them. (That's my opinion, anyway!)
as you can see, I answered it with "use pppd" which IMHO is still the sane way to go, even if there are alternatives which involve more or less of reinvention of the square wheel shed paint, slow-drying
I wasn't aware of the history for the "MS Access Repair tool" (or at least if I was - I'd forgotten about it), so I declined the flag as the first paragraph:
If you are facing corruption issue in your access file then you can try using the Compact and Repair feature of MS Access. It repairs c...
I think it's the first time I've seen spam become an actual answer
Oh, Brad Larson says : The first few paragraphs will be reasonable-sounding text (sometimes plagiarized from other answers or sites), followed by an ad for their tools. They're one of our more tricky spammers to deal with.
Okay so : msrepairstools or whatever is spam, burn it down
I think it would be fitting to edit the answer to remove the ad, but of course, the on-topicness of the question is probably the first issue to resolve
If the answer is long enough that we need a room to discuss it, it's probably too complicated for me to understand with the limited js knowlegdge I have :P
@TimCastelijns Reason's behind it is that hoisting means that your multiple in-body vars declarations make no sense when it is interpreted, as var declarations are moved to the beginning of their scope - the function. function() { if(cond) {var foo = 'hello ground'} } is computed as function() { var foo; if(cong) {foo = 'hello ground'} }
@TimCastelijns And that is because in JS variables declared with var are scoped to the function, not the expression block.
@TimCastelijns If one day you want to learn more about it, feel free to come to me for help... JavaScript is very interesting but has so much crap lying around that you will need a guide not to fall head first in it =D
@Kyll I noticed :P I have this link bookmarked for learning about node, but there are like 500 links in there so it's not easy to find a solid starting point
But I think OP didn't tried anything, the code is just made up runtime after seeing my comment, as the code is in no position to at-least get the first step towards answer
@TimCastelijns The book actually explains prototypes in a sane way. Most explanations out there are plain crazy and really complicated for something so simple
@TimCastelijns Basically, say you have objects foo and bar, and there is a prototype relationship between them: foo is the prototype of bar. All it means is that when you try to access a field of the bar object with bar.someField, if someField is not found on bar (it just doesn't exist on the object), it will be looked for on bar's prototype : foo. If you have done foo.someField = 'some value' then bar.someField will spew out 'some value'. That's all.
It's called Pagedown, and you're totally free to use it :) It's a great editor for markdown with restricted HTML support.
Google code is shutting down so the repo is read-only, however we have plans to migrate it the next time that we have something to commit. Balpha maintains it; when it moves,...
I started building this javascript based data visualization web application some years ago (2-3 years). I cannot finish it alone, the whole project has basically just been a struggle. This stuff is difficult to do in javascript, so most of the time i have used to make things more efficient.
I've...
Ahhh no - it was because I wasn't 100% sure on the spam flags on it either way... I didn't want to decline them, but didn't think they were approve worthy... so I cleared them to mark them as disputed (it's just annoying a side effect is that it undeletes deleted posts) - so I had to re-delete it
Diwali (or Deepavali, the "festival of lights") is an ancient Hindu festival celebrated in autumn (northern hemisphere) or Spring (southern hemisphere) every year. Diwali is one of the largest and brightest festivals in India. The festival spiritually signifies the victory of good over evil. The preparations and rituals typically extend over a five-day period, but the main festival night of Diwali coincides with the darkest, new moon night of the Hindu Lunisolar month Kartika. In the Gregorian calendar, Diwali falls between mid-October and mid-November.
Before Diwali night, people clean, renovate...
@JonClements, PHP is dying on SO when it comes to useful questions :p. So I was thinking it was time for me to learn a second programming language. And python looks like alot of fun/usefulness for some web based stuff :)
What would you guys recommend me to learn for web based programming? I just like programming and the language doesn't matter to me :p (it may also be an order like python > .NET and so on)
There is, technically, PHP in his code -- but it's completely unrelated to the JavaScript validation problem he's having. Might as well add a tag about the <br />s.
Now that Android 4.1.1 is out there on some phones I noticed that issues start to pop out using default browser and this OS.
In my case I have an application that uses web views (meaning default browser) and a lot of canvas.
I want by having this topic that everyone to post found issues and sol...
@TimCastelijns Those problems can all be auto-fixed! Version 1.5.2.38 of the Stack-Exchange-Editor-Toolkit has improved handling of spaces around punctuation.
But yes, having one of those comments I think is a really good idea. While I don't expect ninja edits to happen often, when it does happen it's nessissary to keep the original edit
@Siguza It seems that the only reactions to post that are considered by the system are the ones which require you to type something. Because. I asked for it: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/307402/4174897
Many questions already ask about this topic (What is the correct possessive for nouns ending in s? , Adding apostrophe-s to a singular noun already ending in “s”, etc.) and their answers vary, but they always give exceptions to the apostrophe-s rule, for example:
6.24 The general rule for t...