@RMartinhoFernandes It's different here in winter. Either we have cold or (XOR) we have precipitation. So it's either -5°C and no snow, or 5°C and rainy. I much prefer -5°C dry cold, to 5°C and rain. (Snow is better yet, but precipitation and cold rarely meet each other here.)
@DeadMG Yes, but I stopped watching after 2 or 3 episodes of Season 6. I noticed that I simply cannot watch one episode and then wait another week until I can see the next, so I'm saving them up for Christmas. I think the last episode airs in one week, then I'll start the (last?) Dexter marathon :)
@Fred there are always tradeoffs in life. Show me a woman who's good-looking and doesn't have some other critical flaw and I'll show you a complex algorithm that's O(1) in time and space. Actually, I think the algorithm would be easier.
@robjb You must have been in a different room. Or the meta police stormed this room and harried you over it. (And then forget-flashed everyone except you.)
here's the problem: I didn't properly deal with the expression lookup set, so I can't write code that adequately distinguishes expressions from anything else
@RMartinhoFernandes I have already tried to turn my monitor 180°, but I still can't make head nor tail of that. It's totally alien to me. So I suppose it is about some TV thing?
@FredOverflow Um. I don't make pancakes after any recipe. I just add eggs, flour, and milk in some amounts, correcting if the consistency feels wrong. Sheepish grin.
Great. We got a freak roaming our christmas fairs in Brlin who hands out small alcoholic drinks with poison in them. Now he even wears a santa costume.
@keithlayne I'm sorry, I didn't know that one in English, and @Fred is a fellow German. I looked it up now, it's called "spelt" in English. It's an old kind of wheat. If you use whole-grain flour, spelt makes for finer pastries.
> Eltern sollten gegebenenfalls ihre Kinder daraufhinweisen, dass Minderjährige keinen Alkohol trinken dürfen, auch nicht, wenn er vom Weihnachtsmann kommt.
As google tells me, "Parents should point out if their children that minors can not drink alcohol, even if he's from Santa Claus." More funny that way. Oh wait, not funny.
@FredOverflow As will all things kids have to learn while growing up (dressing themselves, deciding when to go to bed, handling their own money), it's one step at a time. If my 15yo would want a sip of wine for dinner when I have one, I wouldn't refuse, but I'd be careful what she drinks and how much.
@keithlayne I remember buying a bottle of especially bitter (hoppy) beer when one of my sons, at the age of 1, kept wanting some beer when I had some. He spit it into my face, and it took a decade until he was ready to try again.
I know I never had a drink until I was of age (21 here) but that is not the norm. However, I think that it's less common for parents to allow kids to drink with them for example at dinner here in the states.