> OK, so if having [feminist extremist] women in the industry means getting fired for having fun, I don't want [feminist extremist] women in the industry.
@ssube OK, so if having [ extremist] women in the industry means getting fired for having fun, I don't want [feminist extremist] women in the industry. (source)
I don't like feminism, because of the extremists. I don't even like that it's called feminism. It should be about equality, not raising women above men to get "justice"
With any cause that doesn't have a clear definition, there are people who use it to forward their own agenda of bitching and moaning. Those people ruin it for everyone else, especially the people who actually want to accomplish something good.
I keep trying to get to the bottom of why people are so against including minorities but I guess since some questions are never answered I'll just choose to assume ignorance.
@ivarni The attitude I see a lot is "If the problem existed, then I'd have be morally compelled to do something, but if I put a blindfold on and go NYAH NYAH NYAH, I'll never have to acknowledge there's a problem"
@ivarni thanks. That's why folks in the middle will never be nagged into admitting there's a problem. (Which is why all the "equality" versions of this annoy me)
The original link is huge: https://docs.angularjs.org/error/ngRepeat/badident?p0=partialCsvs%20%7C%22%3C!--%20ngRepeat:%20csv%20in%20oldCsvs%20%7C%20filter:%20%7B%20sharedData:%20%7B%20status%20:%20%27partial%27%20%7D%7D%20as%20partialCsvs%20%7C%20orderBy:%20%27-timestamp%27%20track%20by%20$index%20--%3E%22rderBy:%20%27-timestamp%27
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/09/17/meanwhile-in-a-parallel-universe-2/ CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers Meanwhile, in a parallel universe… CommitStrip 1442513343
The Bailey–Borwein–Plouffe formula (BBP formula) is a spigot algorithm for computing the nth binary digit of pi (symbol: π) using base 16 math. The formula can directly calculate the value of any given digit of π without calculating the preceding digits. The BBP is a summation-style formula that was discovered in 1995 by Simon Plouffe and was named after the authors of the paper in which the formula was published, David H. Bailey, Peter Borwein, and Simon Plouffe. Before that paper, it had been published by Plouffe on his own site. The formula is
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The discovery of this formula came as a surprise...
The Banach–Tarski paradox is a theorem in set-theoretic geometry, which states the following: Given a solid ball in 3‑dimensional space, there exists a decomposition of the ball into a finite number of disjoint subsets, which can then be put back together in a different way to yield two identical copies of the original ball. Indeed, the reassembly process involves only moving the pieces around and rotating them, without changing their shape. However, the pieces themselves are not "solids" in the usual sense, but infinite scatterings of points. The reconstruction can work with as few as five pieces...
The hairy ball theorem of algebraic topology states that there is no nonvanishing continuous tangent vector field on even-dimensional n-spheres. For the ordinary sphere, or 2‑sphere, if f is a continuous function that assigns a vector in R3 to every point p on a sphere such that f(p) is always tangent to the sphere at p, then there is at least one p such that f(p) = 0. In other words, whenever one attempts to comb a hairy ball flat, there will always be at least one tuft of hair at one point on the ball. The theorem was first stated by Henri Poincaré in the late 19th century.
This is famously stated...
In mathematical measure theory, the sandwich theorem states that given n measurable "objects" in n-dimensional space, it is possible to divide all of them in half (with respect to their measure, i.e. volume) with a single (n − 1)-dimensional hyperplane.
It was proposed by Hugo Steinhaus and proved by Stefan Banach (explicitly in dimension 3, without bothering to automatically state the theorem in the n-dimensional case), and also years later called the Stone–Tukey theorem after Arthur H. Stone and John Tukey,
== Naming ==
The ham sandwich theorem takes its name from the case when n = 3 and the...
When you click on the submit button, it does not display the alert message. While I want to do it the same when I add and handle a few objects, I want it to do the same. However, it works only when you remove the objects and defined search variable, it alerts with the message.
<--!DOCTYPE html>
...
@Claies Yes. The question lacks a clear problem statement.
> While I want to do it the same when I add and handle a few objects, I want it to do the same. However, it works only when you remove the objects and defined search variable, it alerts with the message.
ok, well I can correct the text, but it's mostly just a translation issue, it's clear that English isn't their first language, but it's still not hard to work out what they are trying to do and what's wrong in the code.