> The common-law elements of a valid marriage are that the couples (1) are free to contract a valid ceremonial marriage, i.e., they are not already married to someone else; (2) hold themselves out as husband and wife; (3) consent to the marriage; (4) live together; and (5) have the reputation in the community as being married.
> The definition of what is common law in Ontario depends on what legal right is at issue. Each Ontario statute defines common law differently, so you could be considered common law for one purpose and not for another.
With javascript array sorting can u do 13-1-1 and 13-1-2 would it sort the first element being first and the second second? or does it not matter b/c they are both 13-
@Shmiddty take for example, I was living with a woman for over 2 years and she took some of my stuff when she left. Because we were considered common law to those courts it was to be held in a Family Court and not a Criminal Court
which just isn't worth it after the time / money
@NoahHuppert you can define your own sorting
array.sort(function(a,b) {
// sort however you wish.
});
I'm trying to find a clean and consistent approach for downloading the contents of a canvas as an image file.
For Chrome or Firefox, I can do the following
// Convert the canvas to a base64 string
var image = canvas.toDataURL();
image = image.replace(/^data:[a-z]*;/, 'data:application/octet-str...
@jAndy I heard they started teaching that in debate in order to investigate all the different fallacies. Apparently every single fallacy possible is in there so it's a very good example.
I don't get the gaps in JSFiddle edit, only on high res.
@jAndy I also like how he's selectively quoting the Bible. Sure 'Thou shall not kill' but also 'Gen 9:3 Everything that lives and moves about will be food for you.'
@SomeKittens jsfiddle.net/rlemon/dbg8V/9 with the off screen segments now doubled (so a full screen is generated in two segments offscreen) do you still get the right side blips?
@jAndy Pretty much every logical fallacy. Not that I don't think he's a great speaker but the lecture is full of fallacies. I heard they even use the funny images from yourlogicalfallacyis.com
@SomeKittens well I don't blame the guy for rhethorical things, its about the points he makes. I think nobody who is eating meat can sleep very well after listening open-minded, unless he is completely brainwashed and ignorant
@jAndy I eat meat, I'm not brainwashed, I don't think I'm ignorant I watched it and I slept like a baby. I think some people just like lying to themselves about the harsh realities of life.
@joshstrike Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@jAndy Again, I wasn't there when they did it but apparently it's a very good example of a speech that sounds very convincing but is very easy to break apart.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I guess you truly believe all those animals have a wonderful life in their slaughter houses and transports or.. meat is growing on trees then