@CodyGray The thing I noticed was that they probably put it as they were nr. x.. which they are not anymore. But there's two camps on this. Make yourself look almost better than you really are.. or be humble enough to stand trial on it.
@Scratte well, I think I recall seeing it quite high recently - but yeah, sounds like there is a lot of users making first posts :) And we are blubbering something about what will they do if we all leave :)
@CodyGray I don't disagree at all. I just thought the're probably in the first bucket that I listed. Not in the second.. and now they've sold what they don't have.
The only thing that bothers me is having to write out 16777216, and then leave the comment, instead of just being able to write "16^6" like I would in my source code, because I can trust the compiler to do constant folding.
It's time for a new unnecessary rant on meta. "Why are my TinyVotes™ not made into stars when a comment thread is moved to chat?" .."I count them, every day. I can see some TinyVotes™ have gone missing and not replaced with stars. My granny gives me a penny for every one and I already told her that I had 15 today. I've send the pennies on candy already!"
@OlegValter How is that a magic number? It's not like a "where userid = 2564" in a query and no one has any idea who that might be. Instead of actually doing a join and put the name in.
OK. I don't agree that makes it a magic number. Using a number in code, is just that.. a number. It's when the number have some meaning that one can't determine what is by looking at it, it becomes "a magic number"
If you have something like searchDatabase('Scratte'), it shouldn't return a user ID, where -1 indicates that the user was not found. It should instead return a Boolean result indicating success or failure, and the user ID should be returned elsewhere.
(That is, if failure is expected and normal. Otherwise, if failure is exceptional, it should throw an exception.)
I've also changed it to something even worse. If the userid is less than 0 and if the userid is greater than 0.. and I use 0 for a special circumstance..