> W3.CSS is a modern CSS framework with built-in responsiveness: Smaller and faster than other CSS frameworks. Easier to learn, and easier to use than other CSS frameworks.
Working on this web app. That has a table for projects, want to be able to have a task to that project, that has the same properties as the project. Should I create another table with the same properties or just add a (type_of_project) field to existing table.
i thought the storyline was terrible in the show, but it's like that in the books too. she doesn't follow a path, she doesn't take decisions... stuff just happens to her
@Wes watching an episode of Sherlock, and this rich family has a hedge maze on their property, so far, all it's served is the wife running around in it trying to find her husband, who's deep in it and staring at a dead woman who's supposedly going to kill him
lol, I have a tab open for an audio that I want to listen to... and I can't close the tab because it's officially expired already... if the tab is refreshed, I"ll lose access to it
I should just probably listen to it now before I fuck something up and lose the tab
You can always tell your browser to restart session (won't work for the expired session case though).
I think a recent windows update made it possible to resume apps after a restart... It's a stupid feature. It doesn't restore "session", just acts like you double-clicked the apps.
So, VS reopens without loading the solution you were working on... If you had 3 VS windows open, after restart it'll look like you just double-clicked VS 3 times!
@FlorianMargaine well you might have some useful thoughts anyway tbh, think about $xpath = new DOMXPath($doc); $xpath->evaluate('//foo'); - would you imagine that will traverse the entire document tree looking for <foo> elements in an O(scary) way, or do you think there is a sane way that could be avoided? Bearing in mind the complexity of xpath, it is presumably not building huge indices during creation of the tree because it would use masses of memory for an operation that may never happen
otoh xpath is generally very fast, to the extent that I feel like it must have some sort of shortcut to avoid walking the entire tree all the time