usually you go onto windows forums to go through a standard checklist with a MS employee only to get the brush off when all the standard stuff fails - and hope some other windows dev sees your plight and answers with a solution
or start messing with powershell and the registry and pray you don't burn the whole system
my wife actually wants to visit Canada, definitely in the works after a year (just getting adjunct and other teaching positions from Masters and dealing with PhD applications makes travel hard to plan atm)
not sure exactly as I have friends (3 Marine buddies who married Canadian women and moved up there) in Ontario - Toronto, Petersburg, and Kingston...or wait the last one just moved but that basic area
But she has quite a few Canadian friends and I completely forget where they live
Your people love to Summer in good ol'Florida after all ;)
stuck at 99 %, tried everything, then windows said updates installed so rebooted :D
now windows 7 update works but no windows 10 and
windows 10 update doesn't work any logner
can't understand wtf people are smoking if they think this is easier than linux
ah "windows update works" in a sense that for the first time in 2 years it actually stopped looking for new updates and said what updates it is going to install.
@Ralf17 Dude, please don't ping random people with your question. It's rude and unnecessary. If you're going to ask an (off-topic) question then just ask, and if someone reads it and chooses to answer then they can do.
@Ralf17 stackoverflow.com/help/badges click on the badge, it is using a technology called "hyperlink" that will redirect you to another page that contains more information. You can use "back"-button on your browser to return back to that list.
or alternatively you can click on the other "hyperlink" that says "Badges"
@Ralf17 most notably, each help text for a badge explicitly says if it can be awarded multiple times.
@Ralf17 if not, then assume it is not awarded multiple times
@AnttiHaapala The basic idea of my situation is I have a bunch of files with data about persons, and I want to upload them into mongodb. So I'm inclined to use a Person class, with either person['name'] or person.name, birthdate...
who'd make your shitty games only run on windows if no one used it.
this system doesn't give any diagnostics at all
I just go online and read things like "run these 70000 regsvr32 commands to register some DLLs, cross fingers, jump around the room with pogo stick and drink sour milk, and it should work"
@ByteCommander that CrapAfee bloatware took 5 hours away from me trying to install windows 10.
Well, I totally agree with you there, that's why I'm on Ubuntu. But there are as you say those two or three games I play that run on Windows which is its only reason to survive on my notebook anyway.
Thanks, Antti. It's a bit intimidating to CV all by yourself, but at least that one was a pretty clear dupe. And I left the OP a comment about mmap, so hopefully they won't be too pissed off that I closed their question. :)
@MartijnPieters in short, I'm reading several data files to get data about each of many Persons, then running db.update() on the person - what i'm not thinking clearly on is on which factors does it depend
@PM2Ring to be fair - they did make an attempt at taking on the comment about validation and having a stab at implementing it... so they're not the usual standard of student often encountered...
@JonClements Agreed. The kid is obviously trying to do the right thing. He doesn't want to be spoon-fed. But it's a bit painful watching him flail around like that.
@JonClements NRIC guy has gone quiet. Perhaps he's trying to understand our suggestions. Or he's given up because it's too hard. Maybe I will post my code... I won't post a one-liner, but I guess using a gen exp with zip will make it pretty obvious if he's tempted to hand it in as his own work.
Because map() runs the loop in C. List comp and for run the loop in bytecode. for then looses because it has to do a append attribute lookup each iteration, plus a method call.
@PM2Ring I was contemplating the same but you go for it... it might help them to have something they can run and check against, but blatantly not their level enough to be acceptable to hand in :)
@MartijnPieters But doesn't assigning it in the function body mean that the method lookup is performed on each test_comprehension2 function call? Or is it just treated as a constant?
def test_for():
newlist = []
for word in oldlist:
newlist.append(word.lower())
def test_for2():
newlist = []
lower = str.lower
for word in oldlist:
newlist.append(lower(word))
rather interesting result, 2.4049949646 vs 3.18321299553
python 2, oldlist = ['ABC', 'DEF', 'GHI'] * 4
@MartijnPieters I guess it is an empty list :d
yep, the one that uses lower = str.lower is 40 % slower on Python 2, without closure.
that is really strange, I didn't quite expect that.
My youngest sister's new house has a central vacuum system. She loves it. But it will be interesting to see how long it takes before it starts leaking. Several of the tech components of the house weren't installed correctly, eg data cabling.
@AnttiHaapala I'm not sure actually. I would have to check the history of work done on the place. Gladly the previous owners kept a record of everything they did on the house.
@JonClements Those cockatiels just spontaneously decided to mate on my head, they weren't invited. Maybe they like the smell of my shampoo, or something. :)
Sous-vide (/suːˈviːd/; French for "under vacuum") is a method of cooking in which food is sealed in airtight plastic bags then placed in a water bath or in a temperature-controlled steam environment for longer than normal cooking times (usually 1 to 6 hours, up to 48 or more in some select cases) at an accurately regulated temperature much lower than normally used for cooking, typically around 55 to 60 °C (131 to 140 °F) for meat and higher for vegetables. The intent is to cook the item evenly, ensuring that the inside is properly cooked without overcooking the outside, and retain moisture.
�...
(As per Masterchef Jon :D)
Can do a poor man's job using a steamer probably, but would be nice to have the proper temperature controlled version.
One of my friend's larger parrots is named Halley, after the comet; sorry, I forget his species. Halley is rather talkative, and he asks for various foodstuffs by name. Of course, what he wants isn't necessarily what he gets. :) His previous owner (now deceased) gave him icecream as a treat. Unfortunately, parrots are lactose intolerant, and it took Kate quite a while to break Halley's icecream addiction by giving him healthier substitutes.
I did that for xmas lunch a few years back, and I spent the whole night failing to sleep because my whole house was full of the smell of roasting venison.
@idjaw yup... I used to love putting a stew on in the morning, getting home to the warmth of the house in the evening (winter time), and the smell of the food... then just make a few dumplings or something and chill out
@Ffisegydd the game? i'm a lot disappointed after seeing a gameplay and some reviews. It seems too repetitive, unrealistic. :( i was hoping a different game from how they proclaimed it in the beginning.. :(
@JonClements heya Jon! :) everything good here. :) How's there?
@Ffisegydd well the fact planets are so near it's a bit disturbing for me. creatures looks all the same with some variations. and what you have to do on each planet is... always the same thing. But i don't want to spoiler you. :)