@QPaysTaxes : The way you are supposed to say that is something like: I'm so awesome at programming that when I fix one bug, other bugs in nearby code run away to hide in other programs, just because they are scared of me seeing them.
@Makyen IIRC there was a meta post when a mod flagged a post similar to that and the owner of the answer was confused and asked a q on meta. I won't red flag it either, I'll raise a mod flag now..
@TigerhawkT3 why care about that? understanding how an answer resolves a problem requires a minimal understanding of the problem being solved, and lacking that minimal understanding is forbidden by norm not only on so but also in the whole software industry
@dorukayhan I care about it because it causes people to insist that the linked duplicate isn't correct, when it actually is and they simply can't see it.
@TigerhawkT3 If it isn't clear why a linked duplicate solves the problem, then one of the two questions should be edited to clarify.
And I don't mean that the answer on the linked duplicate is too detailed or long, I'm talking about cases when the answer to the duplicate can be somehow inferred from the linked original, in that case, the original needs to be clarified. Don't assume that OP can infer the solution to his problem from a similar but not exactly the same problem.
@MadaraUchiha I'm referring to the situations where the duplicate would be a clear answer for anyone who'd read a tutorial or their textbook before asking the question.
@TigerhawkT3 No, that's not a good case. We don't assume people reading tutorials or textbooks before asking on Stack Overflow. In many cases, we are the tutorial.
@rene I screwed up part of the transfer process. So we're currently waiting for gunr's host to allow a re-submission of the transfer (which'll be a week).
Since that's deleted, I'd guess the OP eventually understood it, but their initial reaction was along the lines of "different variable names, must be wrong."
A dictionary is his idea of a solution.
The function's name would just be items.get instead of getItem.
Or you could rebind it with getItem = items.get and it would literally be exactly what they want, with the right variable name.
The vibe I'm getting here is that they don't know what a dictionary is, and are looking for a way to get the functionality of one. The answer would be "Use a dictionary"
It's not the same as the answer to "How do I add a key to a dictionary"
Even though you could infer from the duplicate that a dictionary is preferable.
I'm seeing this very confusion between arrays and objects in JS, especially for people who come from languages where the two are the same (PHP calls both "dictionaries" and "lists" as "array").
No, I mean the answer would literally be the same - a copy-pasted dump of that example of creating a dictionary and adding keys to it.
When someone says "it allows you to look up a key to produce the corresponding object" and I hammer as "what is a dictionary," I expect to win the Daily Double. =S
//The day is listed without year, so we assume the year in the panel title. If that fails, it's the previous year.
//and, of course, some rows don't have that column present at all - then the previous row applies.
The range I'm trying to scrape stores the day in one cell (without the year, ofc), and the hours in the other, separated with a dash. Except when the range spans a midnight, in which case the second cell also includes a day (but only for the range end).
@JanDvorak apparently, because any string that has numbers is not a nan
wait, no
string that have at least 4 numbers and not a letter
ok, I yield, I have no idea how new Date() works
new Date("2017").getDay()
6
new Date("2017-03").getDay()
2
new Date("2017-03-12").getDay()
6
new Date("2017/03/12").getDay()
0
new Date("2017-03-12").getDay()
6
new Date("a").getDay()
NaN
new Date("1a").getDay()
NaN
new Date("11").getDay()
NaN
new Date("111").getDay()
NaN
new Date("1111").getDay()
6
new Date("a1111").getDay()
NaN
new Date("1111Z").getDay()
NaN
> Date.parse() returns a timestamp, an integer representing the number of milliseconds since 01/Jan/1970. It will return NaN if it cannot parse the supplied date string.
Well, new Date supports at least RFC 2822 and ISO 8601. Browsers may recognize other formats as well but aren't required to. Except that RFC 2822 support isn't mandated by standards but browsers do that anyways, and ISO8601 is always treated as UTC. It's a ... mess.
Luckily the strings I get are RFC 2822. Unluckily they omit the year. Luckily they don't omit the weekday - so I can make a guess, and if I'm wrong, take a second one.
@JanDvorak To be fair, for anything other than the simplest of things, it's usually cheaper to include moment or some other such library and be done with it.
@JanDvorak Depends on the requirements, if none were given, I'd default to this year if the date already happened this year, or last year if it hadn't.
One element holds the range of dates (less than a year; the start is elided to various levels but the end is always in full), and one element holds a specific date within that range, but it doesn't show the year.
I'm playing the guessing game right now. The next fun bit will be parsing the hours range: most of the time it's hh:mm - hh:mm, but sometimes it's hh:mm - ddd d MMM hh:mm
row.lastChild.querySelector("progress").remove() except it would throw is there's no node and we don't have the nice C# ?. operator (null access, IIRC. Something like that)
> Gecko provides the ::-moz-progress-bar pseudo-element, which lets you style the part of the interior of the progress bar representing the amount of work completed so far.
@QPaysTaxes The poster is here since 4 months and has nothing in his history. As that is unlikely, he should know how to delete a question. And vandalism is not a good attitude either.
@QPaysTaxes Not really. Typically people register to ask a question or answer. There is no need to register for simply reading Q&As. An empty history is often a signal of deleted entries.
@QPaysTaxes Ok, the latter is a point. For the first, I'd need some statistics to follow that line of argumentation. Anyway, maybe a mod can know about this particular user.
@QPaysTaxes The former. I well understand your point, just don't find it plausible that this occurs that often.
@gunr2171 Given that sam stated that it is going to be about a week until the domain transfer is complete (possibly an optimistic estimate): While socvr.org is unavailable, it would be helpful if we could have link(s) to at least the basics of the content (e.g. the FAQ, as it is directly mentioned in the SOCVR room blurb).
Another time, it would be a good idea to create an archive at archive.org. Obviously, hindsight is 20/20.
@Makyen well, I would point you to SO-Close-Vote-Reviewers.github.io, however that is also broken, so crap. Yeah, we made sure to move over the namespace servers before the transfer (which should be going now, it's just a waiting game on the service provider) but it seems that was a bad move.
oh well. We'll only need to do this once then we'll be good for many years
@gunr2171 Thanks. I looked there, but did not dig enough. I would suggest, for the time while socvr.org is down, that the room blurb include the link to the FAQ on GitHub and maybe the tour. That way conscientious new users can get at least the basic information.
It's not the best solution, but it's better than pointing people at a dead link.