A quick question, if we (using javascript) remove an element from the DOM, it's very likely that the web page will reorganize itself. EG, if we have numerous DIV's which float, use the 'removeChild()' to remove one of them then the page layout will likely update. Is there a way to turn this off?
I used Sublime for about a year for free, and then decided to buy a license since I used it that often. Haven’t regretted it at all. And it’s a per-user license, so I have this on multiple machines, even at work.
also @JanDvorak, ubuntu comes with libre-office (which is somewhat better than ms office, IMO), can play more file formats than windows out of the box etc...
Man, isn't there any alternative to cherry-picking in git?
Doing a pick with 30 commits, andthey all have tons of conflicts with existing code. Isn't there a way to do them all at once, rather than one at a time?
You could cherry-pick the range onto a new branch that starts off a commit which won’t conflict. And then merge that new branch into your target branch.
In logic and related fields such as mathematics and philosophy, if and only if (shortened iff) is a biconditional logical connective between statements.
In that it is biconditional, the connective can be likened to the standard material conditional ("only if", equal to "if ... then") combined with its reverse ("if"); hence the name. The result is that the truth of either one of the connected statements requires the truth of the other, i.e., either both statements are true, or both are false. It is controversial whether the connective thus defined is properly rendered by the English "if and only...
like i bought a brand new lenovo laptop with the dumb windows 8 pre installed. i was so frustated having installed ubuntu. i couldn't reinstall, because of the new boot UEFI. i couldnot load any other OS from usb. and everyday i had new problems
i.e. "using ubuntu is always comfortable if you know what you're doing" doesn't necessarily mean "you always know what you're doing if ubuntu is comfortable for you"
But when you use iff, then it is implied that both statements are true ^
Diamagnetic materials create an induced magnetic field in a direction opposite to an externally applied magnetic field, and are repelled by the applied magnetic field. In contrast, the opposite behavior is exhibited by paramagnetic materials. Diamagnetism is a quantum mechanical effect that occurs in all materials; where it is the only contribution to the magnetism the material is called a diamagnet. Unlike a ferromagnet, a diamagnet is not a permanent magnet. Its magnetic permeability is less than μ0 (the permeability of free space). In most materials diamagnetism is a weak effect, but a s...
@KendallFrey The idea of levitating is to induce an opposite direction electric current and thus magnetic field in the surface you want to levitate over
That works great with superconductors, and fine with normal conductors, but you can't levitate over concrete.
you are all idiots... two balls of same mass (and exact spheres) but made of different materials are dropped from same height on towards Earth's surface. Which will reach Earth's surface faster?
http://www.animatedphysics.com/axioms.htm If there were anti-mass, it would attract itself and repel mass. then planets would move away from galaxy. since it no happen. -ve gravity no exists