How exactly does the power switch on a PSU work? I was under the impression that if it was off, the PSU would output no power. Yet my computer started the reboot sequence while the switch was off (my case fans turned on, including the LEDs).
Like, if someone says "it's my birthday" you say "happy birthday", but if someone says "X date was my birthday"? Like, there's no social protocol for that.
Just make sure you know exactly how the this keyword works because it's 99% of the language even if you know how to use lambda expressions, the difference between == and === and the entire functional array and object libraries. This is all that matters lol
Occasionally. Look at my crucifixion earlier over a question I didn't answer with a 0 or 1 level of precision earlier. I was taught it a long time ago, but a lot of stuff gets fuzzy when it's part of your working memory. You know it so well it's hard to be precise with q and a. That's why top scientists let TAs do that part of the work.
@ShrekOverflow It's a pretty bad move. It's essentially broadcasting that they're going to respond to any claims of non-inclusivity with massive knee-jerk reactions...
It's just going to encourage more people to come looking for things to be offended by so they can complain on twitter
it delegitimises actual complaints that have substance
$('.date-time-picker').datetimepicker(options).on("changeDate", function (e) {
var TimeZoned = new Date(e.date.setTime(e.date.getTime() +
(e.date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)));
$(this).datetimepicker('setDate', TimeZoned);
});
How can I set my specific time zone?
that I want to use?
FWIW I don't think 0.0000002 is really such an interesting precision problem - the problem is more with scientific calculations that cascade and numerical stability issues
That is, if you're actually comparing fractions for anything useful - you'd typically want to check if numbers are close and not equal since in real life things are rarely exactly equal
@MadaraUchiha let's say you have a robot and the robot has a distance sensor that's pointed somewhere, you get 1.10001 in the first reading and 1.10002 in the second - did the robot move?
Which is why === for doubles (or decimals) without a way to specify an epsilon threshold doesn't make sense
If you had types to represent actual measurements === could work, a RobotDistanceSensorMeasurement type could well be aware of how === works on it - though the problem with that is units "cancel out", distance / distance is "untyped"
@MadaraUchiha you're right, strict greater than is a problem and it's not great in general - I'm just saying === working isn't really an important use case (precise numbers are)