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12:34 AM
https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/122976
so, VonC kept visiting daily while suspended.. ?
seemed strange to me
12:56 AM
If one has done something the past 5000-some days, that doesn't seem like much of a reason to stop
Particularly because one could still note questions they might want to answer, for example.
presumably they would have come across significantly better reasons sometime in the last decade-plus to take at least a single day off, and didn't
 
5 hours later…
6:01 AM
why
@KarlKnechtel Hard to maintain a habit you've had for literal years. Also, daily logins are a powerful motivator.
Also, VonC was suspended for a short-ish time - about a week, I think. It's not THAT much time.
Honestly, probably the worst thing in tracking the daily visits is that not just any page counts towards that tracker. I tried to get the Fanatic badge a few times and got tripped up multiple times because even though I did go to the site, that didn't count some days.
In hindsight, the Fanatic badge is bad and isn't worth getting. But I did focus on trying to get it. Getting it on the WB meta site was a huge pain. I got 2 streaks interrupted. One of those on day 97 or 98.
6:19 AM
Continuing the daily visit streak isn't difficult, I didn't do anything on the site on Saturday but it says I visited the site. I'm logged in to SO on my phone so I just open up some random posts and it counts as a visit :P
@AbdulAzizBarkat it's automatable too. I vaguely recall reading a blog post about it a few years back. probably something like put your fkey in a script to request a page, and schedule the script to run every new UTC day.
though that might choke on downtimes / scheduled maintenances
@starball yes it's NAA, they are just stating that the solution in the other answer didn't work for them and then a personal opinion on how things should ideally work
-1
A: Using Javascript to add a page break in some cases

Yallavva BattiClinical Information: Technique: Post IV and oral contrast fine slice imaging was obtained from the lung bases to the symphysis pubis in portal venous phase. Comparison: Findings: The liver, spleen, pancreas, adrenals and kidneys have a normal appearance. The bowel is well opacified with oral co...

@AbdulAzizBarkat thanks
@starball Don't use page breaks, if your liver or spleen appears abnormal afterwards.
6:48 AM
@VLAZ instructions unclear. collating liver.
youtube is literally changing the UI it gives me in between videos of a playlist
7:10 AM
0
Q: An utterly unremarkable question that got 47k views in a month (without being interacted with)?

CharonXI just ran across a question that gave me a big headscratcher. The question itself is - to be honest - not very remarkable, on the vague side, no answers, zero votes, lingering and collecting dust like many of its siblings. But for some reason it garnered 47k views over the last month or so. Whe...

 
4 hours later…
10:57 AM
@NewPosts wow, seven "x"s has that effect, even (though there's a group of four in the body)
x_x
In other news, the award for "most upvotes I've seen on a wrong answer" goes to this +3000/-5 answer.
(I have added a note explaining how it's wrong)
in The Ministry of Silly Hats, 35 mins ago, by Ryan M
In fact, the question body has, since revision 1, specified "decimal numbers", which, fun fact, clearly does not include hexadecimal numbers. (a later revision added "decimal" to the title as well, just to make the accepted answer more wrong, I guess)
(more ranting about JavaScript questions regarding whether values are numbers in the messages surrounding that)
It'd be great if we could move answers between questions, because then we could fix this sort of thing.
(we can't just edit the question, because there's an answer that does answer the question asked...)
11:33 AM
@NewPosts Famous question any% speedrun when?
@RyanM Annoyingly, it's also a bit hard to pin down what a valid number is. 10e3 is also a valid JS numeric that describes 10000. But is it a valid number for an application? Some users might be used to exponential notation. Scientists or maybe accountants. And that might be natural for them to use. But for the average user maybe "three" is also a valid number.
Honestly, it's not even that big of a deal, though. You just use any validation and it's no longer a problem. There is an amazingly bad (IMO) NPM package that checks if something is a number. By having one line of code. Also two dependencies. Each of those also having two dependencies. And IIRC, half the dependencies were deprecated.
The package was written and published by a SO member who has a gold badge in JS.
> IsNumeric(-1) == false;
Wat?
It's not what that answer produces: jsbin.com/zaziral/1/edit?js,console
(also, the rest of the numeric literals)
0
Q: Renaming vaticle-typedb and vaticle-typeql to typedb and typeql

haikalpribadiCan we get vaticle-typedb and vaticle-typeql to typedb and typeql, please? The organization has been renamed from Vaticle to TypeDB, which you can see in TypeDB LinkedIn and TypeDB GitHub org, and the company domain is fully renamed to typedb.com (and typeql.com redirects to it). So the brand "Va...

It's not possible to differentiate numeric literals. 8e5 and 800000 are exactly the same number. They only look different in the source code. But are never treated any differently. It's not possible for a function to claim a certain numeric literal is valid but another is. Not except extremely hacky solutions of the program trying to read its own source code.
*facepalm* I see. It's from an older revision. Where the function apparently checks strings, so - yes, it won't work with numbers. This also matches the question where all the tests are for strings.
Looking through the answers - so much useless code. People trying hard to make sure valid numbers are rejected... Because they convert the string to a number and see if the string and the numeric representation are the same. That will catch stuff like exponential notation but is a false positive for 0.400 which converts to 0.4 and is thus "not the same". Although totally being the same.
var isValid = /^([0-9]){1,2}(\.){1}([0-9]){2}$/.test(inputField.value); - this one doesn't even check numbers. Just dates in some random format. Moreover, it seems to believe 00.99 is a valid date
Bah, I'd have to spend few days worth of votes on this question...
12:10 PM
@VLAZ I ... what. That's gone now...
"validate a special set of decimals" lmao
they never said it was a date!
@VLAZ I see what happened, initially when the accepted answer was posted there was no trimming logic and logic to force the input into a string in Joel's answer, that was added in later
Just a special set of decimals. They didn't say which special set.
@AbdulAzizBarkat But since version 1 of the question, it has always asked for validating strings. Saying that it doesn't validate numbers is, you know, technically correct. Also completely irrelevant. The solution also doesn't check if the number rhymes when pronounced backwards in Enochian. That is a true statement. Also of no value.
But even if we disregard that - why would you validate if a number is...a valid number?
Probably because JavaScript is dynamically typed and people might throw all sorts of stuff at your function?
Anyways, I removed that part from the answer since it was currently incorrect (along with unnecessary)
12:49 PM
yeah, like strings containing checks comments numeric letters
Unfortunately, this is kinda STRICT numeric checker that will fail for any string containing numeric letters only, like "0" etc... — Arman May 20, 2013 at 16:36
 
2 hours later…
2:37 PM
@VLAZ i earned that badge 12 years ago
2:52 PM
2
Q: Bringing clarity to status tag usage

SlateLet’s talk about the status tags. Every single user who visits a Meta believes status tags mean something. They’re not wrong, of course. But what, really, do the status tags mean? Do users’ beliefs about status tags match how they’re used? What steps do we need to take to ensure status tags are r...

what dose this mean:
> Do not use this tag if the post as described cannot be handled by existing processes
3:24 PM
@KevinB considering that it's written from the employee's perspective, probably something related to integration to their project management tool
> While posts that have never had the status-review tag might still be seen and reviewed by staff, you can only expect posts with status-review to occupy a place in our planning processes or backlog.
oh, you have posted the answer there, derp.
Flagged as NAA because it's asking a question! /s
 
2 hours later…
5:10 PM
Another community sprint, it seems
5:54 PM
Another 2 (?) weeks to recharge until the next volley of bad news you mean?
6:10 PM
Can't wait for the notifications to be made even worse.
maybe they'll bring in an intern to "fix" it
Their first big project. The blog will boast how great the result is.
or a microsoft PM who designed a certain universally hated but widely successful feature
> I'm trying to do X, here's code that does Y, but it doesn't do X, how do i do X?
why did you show us Y?
6:35 PM
@KevinB which one, lol
this question has thousands of variations
and yet every one of them is different in a way unrelated to hiding the add to cart button
6:56 PM
the code they provided has the logic they need to decide when to hide the add to cart button, they just aren't using a hook that is relevant to hiding the add to cart button
@NewPosts i couldn't get past their introduction on github that was dripping with marketing garbage terms to get to the part where they actually state what they are
I meant which time a Microsoft PM introduced a universally hated feature
oh, i purposely decided not to answer that one, :p
7:35 PM
> Discover the powerful unification of paradigms backed by modern type-theoretic mathematics, laying a novel foundation for modern database applications.
translation: We created a new problem
8:18 PM
From an article published this year on the EaseUS website: "The easiest way to distinguish CMR vs. SMR is to check their capacity. With SMR hard drive, the density will increase by 25%. If the capacity of a 3.5-inch hard drive is larger than 1TB, or a 2.5-inch hard drive is larger than 500GB, it likely to be SMR hard drive. While for CMR hard drives, the capacity is usually below 500GB." That seems, er, very out of date
 
1 hour later…
9:32 PM
probably AI
9:53 PM
@KevinB Basically, if the post as-is is a discussion, or otherwise not a clear bug report/feature request/etc. Adding the tag creates a Jira issue for staff, with the title of the post as the title of the Jira issue and the body text of the post (plus a link to the post) as the description of the Jira issue. So if the original post is just a general discussion. Slate commented (on what I see is your answer) with an explanation:
Most of these are requests for something other than a software change to the platform. For example, support requests typically shouldn't be brought in via [status-review] if the correct course of action is for the user to send in a Contact Us ticket. (Don't take this as a general rule. Exceptions exist.) However there are some really odd posts, like requests to build a whole product (!), that just don't fit within what the [status-review] process is for. Those shouldn't be sent in via [status-review], either. — Slate ♦ 7 hours ago
@RyanM Considering a sight reword to something like: "Do not use this tag if the post as described cannot be successfully handled by the status-review process," but it's a bit too circular for my tastes. I'll give it some thought. — Slate ♦ 6 hours ago
Would it be so hard to let discussions be duplicates?
https://stackoverflow.com/beta/discussions/78845173/php-relevance-this-year https://stackoverflow.com/beta/discussions/77383225/why-do-people-keep-shouting-php-is-dead-always https://stackoverflow.com/beta/discussions/78261500/is-php-falling-out-of-fashion
Yes, that would mean less discussing.
Huh, Stack Overflow is hosting Reddit threads.
10:09 PM
does this count as an answer? stackoverflow.com/a/78867500/11107541
"Has anyone found what was the problem" doesn't seem like an answer. I guess the person might've posted it as a comment if they could, but it still wouldn't be helpful either way.
Look on the right side. The only badge you can see on Meta is Yearling. meta.stackoverflow.com/help/badges
Does this count as an answer? stackoverflow.com/a/77743532/23531883

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