@DavidDV i have zero questions on my profile as well, google usually answers the ones i have (imho most questions on SO can be answered with the right "feeling lucky" question)
(insert long answer here, to be erased) ---!!/tell OctavianDamiean help get--- @OctavianDamiean https://github.com/Zirak/SO-ChatBot/wiki/Interacting-with-the-bot see the one for "get"
how to show list view in java script alert msg box and link all views with some html files
it is like when we tap on android it opens window in list view like that it has to show
http://www.mediacollege.com/internet/javascript/basic/alert.html
If people are ignorant (which is okay, we were and probably still are) and they aren't aware of it, then they need the slap on the face to realize that.
ok, fine, then let's say that questions that can be answered by google can be closed, but a comment should mention the google query that answers them. how does that sound?
@Zirak i've stopped looking up stuff in imdb while at the dinner table for that reason. it's more fun to get stuck for 10 minutes on an actor's name than to know the answer right away and have nothing to talk about
@Zirak [Alex](http://stackoverflow.com/users/376947/alex) has 2056 reputation, earned -2 rep today, asked 613 questions, gave 9 answers, for a q:a ratio of 613:9. avg. rep/post: 3.305466237942122, 5 gold badges, 38 silver badges and 124 bronze badges.
One does not simply put their hot pictures on nerd sites. There's a point on hotness/nerdness graph where you stop doing that. I call that "Zirak's Point", for obvious reasons.
According to the TV show Ancient Aliens (clip here), humans could not have designed or built the pyramids at Puma Punku.
The specific claims in the video are that:
The blocks used in construction were too large and heavy to be moved from quarries
Advanced tools were used for precise leveling ...
how's this for a vague area of knowledge: i have two days to prepare a presentation about secure web development to an incoming batch of web developers
Asking questions is fine, but you should first ask them to yourself. Do people really think "hey, I'm able to think about it without throwing up, therefore there's some truth to it", or maybe it's "hey, it's possible, so it must on some level have happened"
@tereško we've made an application of the OWASP ASVS 1B rules to our codebase (PHP + ExtJS), with a documented approach to how code has to be written, reviewed and how security issues must be reported and fixed
Something i have realized in the past 5 years of programming what i could do at 14 with Scratch , I could still do at 16 with C and now at 19 with JS but! there is a difference at 14 i was able to do it without any worries just the care free attitude and doing anything i want . full of creativity. Now if i try to do the same thing i think like gazillion times and confusing myself and figuring out the same thing i did at 14 was good ! fixing a lil bit bugs init writing better code but its 2 slow.
that basically means human brain is a very unefficient database
since it can figure things out but takes time to just redo things with minor changes just because there is a small data associated to it which may or may not be relevant it will parse it fully ..
At first, you just think "okay, I gotta do this thing" and you do it, because you don't know all that's connected to it. That (usually) leads to poor design and even poorer scalability.
Once you know stuff, you get all those connections you missed before, and if you let that effect you, then it's a huge load. If you're unmotivated, then you're just unwilling to take that load; but if you are, then you try to.
Once I realized a lot of things I want to do (making a non-shitty blog, making a NLP, building something which makes me tea, lasers, and so on) will take a significant amount of time, I don't wanna do them.
It's difficult to judge your own competence. In my only example of myself, people sometimes tell me I'm smart, but I've always thought I'm pretty stupid. And once that happened, I realize I can label other people as smart, but not explain that label, which is odd.
__NOTOC__
The impostor syndrome, sometimes called impostor phenomenon or fraud syndrome, is a psychological phenomenon in which people are unable to internalize their accomplishments. It is not an officially recognized psychological disorder, and is not among the conditions described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, but it has been the subject of numerous books and articles by psychologists and educators. The term was coined by clinical psychologists Pauline Clance and Suzanne Imes in 1978.
Despite external evidence of their competence, those with the syndro...
Functions are a weird example because their value (function object) gets assigned at the start of the function. Other var declarations don't get assigned until the line, but the variable exists as "null" from the start of the function
reminds me of how much fun it was giving a training about the difference between variable scope, execution scope (this) and prototype chains (this.property) <-- not fun
@RyanKinal Scoping is a hell of a headache, especially in languages like Perl or Elisp which have dynamic scopes. Basically, that means you have no clue where something comes from, unless you're reaalllyyy careful.
@FlorianMargaine Tired. I didn't sleep a lot. I get tatooed last week-end and it's healing right now. And because of the color it's not painfull but disturbing. Like if I had 1000 bug running all night long on my arm.
@FlorianMargaine But what if I have a middle name? Or a title? Or a sickeningly long German royalty name? Or more realistically, what if I just don't give a fuck and think it's weird that you're asking for my name anyway?
@Zirak not allowing for a middle name is a big issue in Scandinavian countries, we have customers there that have dozens of people with the same first and last name on their payroll