Why is it that my boss gets to make major screw-ups but still people hold him in high esteem yet when I make a minor mistake, it's all "Could we have avoided this somehow, Neil?"
Though he is often asked technical questions to which he doesn't know the answer, but rather than say he doesn't know (like you'd expect), he pulls an answer out of a hat
Then he'll tell me later that we have to do it like that, and often it's like, "Wait, you do know MS SQL Server can't be installed on a linux machine, right?"
To answer your main question: "Is it OK to edit the question to change the author's intention?"
Absolutely not.
Completely changing the intentions of the question is never a good idea.
Your linked example used to be a "What does code X do?" question, but the edit changed it to "Is the compiler...
@StephanMuller I've asked this before but um, could you link me to that github page so that I can download and set up the caprica bot for another room?
@rlemon oh, so, you wouldn't by chance be able to tell me how I could re-direct an instance of cleverbot to chat with all my facebook friends on my behalf would you?
is there any difference between in using <input type="hidden" ...> and <input type="text" style="display:none;" ...> ? , i am validating form and i need to get type of text
cracked my skull twice, broke my ankle, broke my wrist, broke my hand like ugh times, broke/cracked all of my ribs, broke my nose a handful of times, fingers and toes I'm not even counting... and none of these come with a good story even, just me doing dumb shit.
Normalization or normalisation may refer to:
== Mathematics and statistics ==
Normalization (statistics), adjustments of values or distributions in statistics
Quantile normalization, statistical technique for making two distributions identical in statistical properties
Normalizing (abstract rewriting), an abstract rewriting system in which every object has at least one normal form
Normalization property (abstract rewriting), a property of a rewrite system in mathematical logic and theoretical computer science
Normalizing constant, in probability theory a constant to make a non-negative function...
> Normalize.css makes browsers render all elements more consistently and in line with modern standards. It precisely targets only the styles that need normalizing.
@rlemon It says that browsers "designated (possibly as a user option) as supporting the suggested default rendering" MUST implement default rendering as outlined in section 10. Except what the hell does "designated as supporting the suggested ..." mean