« first day (3603 days earlier)      last day (499 days later) » 

7:38 AM
-3
Q: What are the tools used in copper and fiber cabling and testing?

user3194672I am studying about structured cabling and have 3 questions regarding with it. 1) What are the tools used in copper and fiber cabling and testing? 2) What are techniques used with copper cabling? 3) What are techniques used with fiber cabling? Can somebody help me?

 
 
1 hour later…
8:44 AM
-2
Q: why does this return true, any explanations?

BlackPanther4592if 9266 > 9204 and 9271 and 9052 and 299: print("true") The biggest number is 9271 still it prints true, I have tried wrapping each value in round brackets too, did not help

 
 
2 hours later…
 
3 hours later…
3:20 PM
-1
Q: Creating as many files as the number of arguments to bash script

Cjmeta0667Two arguments will be entered. One of these arguments will be the name of the file and the other will be the number to be generated. $./Project1.sh ./One.dic 4 -- Created: One-1.dic One-2.dic One-3.dic One-4.dic #!/bin/bash echo "name": $1"; echo "number: $2"; for ((i=1;i<=number;i=i+1)) do...

 
 
1 hour later…
 
2 hours later…
 
1 hour later…
7:56 PM
Hi. I'm trying to understand how a string.split works in javascript and would like some help.
I have this code
const ss =`1000
2000
3000

4000

5000`;

let a = ss.split('\n')

Splitting on a new line once gives me this result
[
'1000', '2000',
'3000', '',
'4000', '',
'5000'
]

I'm trying to find out why splitting on a new line twice introduces new lines into the final result
[ '1000\n2000\n3000', '4000', '5000' ]
From the result above, a magical newline has appeared between 1000 and 2000 and I can't seem to figure out why
 
1 message moved from JavaScript
 
Hi. I'm trying to understand how a string.split works in javascript and would like some help.
I have this code
const ss =`1000
2000
3000

4000

5000`;

let a = ss.split('\n')

Splitting on a new line once gives me this result
[
'1000', '2000',
'3000', '',
'4000', '',
'5000'
]

I'm trying to find out why splitting on a new line twice introduces new lines into the final result

[ '1000\n2000\n3000', '4000', '5000' ]
 
1 message moved from JavaScript
 
 
2 hours later…
9:46 PM
Mega-dupe not worth keeping stackoverflow.com/q/74708273/2943403
 
 
1 hour later…
var type = Person.constructor.name;
var properties = [];
var intellisenseInfo:
for (var property in Person) {
properties.push(property);
}
intellisenseInfo.type = type
 
1 message moved from JavaScript
 

« first day (3603 days earlier)      last day (499 days later) »