@MwBakker To me you kind of sounded like you're German and switching between a British an American accent. lol
(Which is a compliment)
I don't think I'd ever guess dutch based on your accent.
What's the methhead situation like in the NL?
Running into other people is the thing that would freak me out. Even though it would probably be far more likely to run into teenagers smoking weed than anything else.
I have a feeling that probably has more to do with culture and such. Cartels are crazy. They wouldn't let an ocean stop them.
Either way, in the US I'm pretty sure most amphetamine abuse is with prescription drugs.
It's also legal to go into Mexico and bring back outrageous amounts of any prescription drugs.
Border towns in Mexico basically exist for this sole purpose, because for a lot of people it's cheaper to go the whole way to Mexico and buy your meds than to buy them in the US. lol
@Mehdi I assume it's more or less something like based on all the random data they have collected on you, they place you in the same category as other people who clicked on the video and watched the entire thing.
It doesn't matter why. You're going to watch a video on pliers, and you're going to like it.
It's kind of like the "Doctors hate this person who cured cancer for $5. You'll never guess their weird trick." nonsense. People don't like to be left hanging, even if they know it's complete garbage.
I'm just glad that when you listen to music on youtube, it's smart enough to know to only play music and not random videos about pliers.
did you guys ever see in a test that "this" has changed?
I'm spying with mockito one object and I'm setting a property which I read out in a lambda which reads the property on the hosting object. That property is on one part of the stacktrace set, but not on the other while this is the same lambda (based on its hash value)
@Test fun strangeLambda() { open class Foo { var bar: String? = null val lambda = { bar } fun magic() = lambda() }
Foo().apply { bar = "jo" assertEquals(magic(), "jo") } spy(Foo()).apply { bar = "no" assertEquals(magic(), "no") } }
maybe the notation of the header is wrong. curl gave me &username=XXX&password=XXX but i am sending them as formdata parameters. wheres the difference?
@user17283167 you need more rep to chat here go on the main site and get reputation by answering questions or editing posts^^
however not sure if editing still gains reputation
@McMidas there are multiple "encodings" for posting data to a server... foo=bar&aaa=bbb is form encoding you could also use json if the server supports that, but in both cases you should set a content-type header to make it clear
So i debugged with wireshark and it says the content-length is 0. stackoverflow.com/a/27091088/4859057 is saying JSONRequest does not make use of params. What?!
I'm testing my code with mokito-kotlin and I run into a situation where a executed lambda has wrong data. I found out that the "scope" as I know it from JavaScript is different then expected. The this of the lambda is a different one when I use spy().
Here is my simplified test:
@Test
fun strange...