what if there was a bot that popped in every now and then on this site, and you didn't know it was a bot, and it started asking some questions about some new software you never heard of?
make the questions sound really good, just enough to make you wonder about it
I know highstocks gives the option to download the chart images via javascript, but I was wanting to have the images stored on the hosting server somehow. A php chart library would be ideal, but since this isn't the case, does anyone have any suggestions for how I should go about achieving this ...
Constraints:
It must deeply iterate through a tree, providing, for a callback function, the node value and it's path.
It must work for arrays and objects.
Arrays must be iterated by ascending numerical keys first and non-numerical keys last.
It must allow for early interruption by using "return...
@Tyrick The problem is that there are many answers that are equally valid. SO seeks to provide definitive answers to specific problems, rather than generic suggestions for generic problems.
@Tyrick It may have just been the wording of the question. The question does seem very generic, and even if it does have one specific solution, it looks like it could be any number of things.
not for a few superusers to peruse the forums and give down votes, close questions, and bully new members without offer insight into the actual problem
I hope @Loktar is in a meeting and he left his speakers on and has his sound up. Everyone will be like "Yo why is jasons pc beeping at us" (mixed up Incognitos name and yours my bad)
I'm not entirely sure about that. I mean, what happens if colleges in general don't make an actual investment in peoples' success? Sure, they ostensibly exist to educate, but they also exist to make money. If people don't succeed after (or during) their college careers, it's less likely people will want higher education, and they fail as a business.
Look at it from the perspective of "selling" a degree. You're not in it for the knowledge, but rather the connections/foot in door that a degree gives you.
@SomeKittens Right, but knowledge is the responsibility of the professors, not the administrators. If the degree doesn't get you those connections/foot-in-the-door, then the college has failed - thus, investing in the success (as opposed to knowledge) of the students.
It's kind of a disturbing trend, now that I think about it.
@RyanKinal I think that the college has less to do with it directly. Rather, the culture is that smart/driven people go to college, so if you want to hang out with that type of person, go to college. There's a slow change as smart people realize that college has no clothes, so to speak.
College: A facility that teaches you the information from $500 worth of books and charges you $5000 to do so. If you don't understand it in the first year you can pay another $5000 to read the same books again.
There are other advantages to college that aren't as obvious, such as hanging out with moderately smart/rich people, an opportunity to explore one's self image safely, etc.
@SomeKittens Oh, absolutely. I wouldn't be who I am today if I hadn't attended Geneseo. I just have to assume there are cheaper ways to go about getting that kind of life experience.