@10Rep Yes. But I took the image of the hat and used it to create a image that became what I made my avatar :)
I'm finding the "Social Distancing" aren't working for me. But then it's probably not going to look good over my dots anyway ;) "aren't working" means not being updated into my list of hats.
@Scratte It looks like it's asking too much, and needs focus. If you think all those questions are in fact the same, I'll take your word for it. I'm not convinced enough either way to cast a vote.
@cigien Ah. I see. I see it as the same question. As in "Is is possible to use integers for blah? It not what can I use instead?" that doesn't read like two separate questions to me. But questions that are naturally connected.
I suppose one could rephrase it to "Is there a workaround to a blocked access to gitHub using Laravel and Composer and what differences to the normal process will it have?"
@Scratte No, I'm not concerned with the appearance of multiple ? per se, if it's indeed the same question. It's unfortunate that the answer appears to be "you can't fix this. Talk to your IT dept.". I suppose the fact that it might be impossible to solve doesn't mean it's not a programming question.
@cigien But this Question is a perfect example of what I was referring to when I mentioned that sometimes one is asked to perform a task that is made almost impossible by the very people that are asking for it to be done.
Lots of Americans don't even know there is a British version of English, so they correct it assuming it is a misspelling. I was tragically unaware of the world until I first left America. For the longest time, I couldn't figure out why the boss of Men In Black was called Zed, but everyone else had a letter for a name!
If Zed was a letter, it would be in the alphabet song, right?!?
Americans are raised to believe everything that they can ever dream of is already inside of America. Blindly, I thought America was the best ...until I got out and discovered that it is simply isn't by all metrics.
@rene Honestly? Yes. Deletion should be a higher bar than closure, and we have all put a lot of effort into ensuring transparency behind our closure process. I do not think it's too much to ask to require people requesting expedited deletion in here to give a legitimate rationale.
Do variables all have memory addresses? I thought the Java object model didn't allow that, since the JVM is free to implement objects and move them around as it sees fit.
It's a variable, that holds the reference to the object. If it had been a primitive, like an int, it would have had the value of the variable. But since it's an array, which is an object it will have the reference. That's basically a pointer.
Not entirely sure how it's implemented in the various JVM's though. It may not be a direct pointer to the location. It may have a intermediate of some kind.
@Scratte The differences between pointers and references in a C++ sense are essentially: (1) references cannot be reassigned; pointers can, (2) references cannot be null; pointers can. I do not know what the difference would be in a Java sense. My guess is that the concept of pointers just doesn't exist, so this instructor is using the language sloppily.
@CodyGray Since java doesn't have pointers, but only references, they can be reassigned in a sense that any variable can be set to reference another object. They can also reference the null object. Which isn't the same as them being null. But they can still be unassigned, which is effectively null.
Right, so doesn't that make them pointers, not references?
Maybe they're called references because they're actually indirect pointers, that layer of indirection being necessary to enable garbage collection. They are what a C or C++ programmer would call handles.
Not entirely in my book, since you cannot manipulate them into referencing any arbitrary bit of memory. You also cannot set them to an offset of what they are.
@CodyGray Yes, that's what I meant with an intermediate before.
It's either an intermediate or the garbage collector has to go and update the references every time it moves objects around. I'd be surprised if anyone thought that was a good idea.
Correct :) The memory model doesn't allow for manipulating the objects directly. You can only do that through a reference. So there's no having only half an object in heap.
Except for when a constructor throws an error, which does leave half an object that will be garbage collected, but that's not entirely the same.
It doesn't actually leave half an object, though, does it? It just leaves an incompletely-initialized object, which is an invalid object, but not a partial one.
Well, you act like that's ridiculous, but it's possible. Say the object had members that were themselves references. If the object was incompletely constructed, then it's conceivable that those members haven't been constructed yet. That would make the object's memory footprint only a partial one.
Lots of objects have members that are themselves objects. Having them non-initialized is just having a null-reference for them. But assuming they were to be constructed in the constructor that throws an error, then I suppose some may have been constructor while others not.
@CodyGray Yes, but since it met with an error during construction, it's not really an issue, unless your application can be accessed by others. Then the entire thing can leave an opening for a hack where your application thinks there's no object, but the object can escape garbage collection through a finalizer.
Garbage collection is itself such a huge hack. How about if you just didn't throw your garbage on the floor for some other process to pick up in the first place?
But.. I was under the impression that one needed the discussion "Ask a question with the [discussion] tag on a meta site that gets a score of 2 or more and receives 2 or more answers."
As usual, Warm Welcome is the hardest hat to earn on SO.
I've been monitoring the list of new questions for the past several minutes, looking for something worth an upvote. Nothing. Closed about 20 of them, though.
I am still frustrated that Stack Exchange is feeding the incorrect narrative that upvotes are somehow "warm" or "welcoming".
That might actually be warm and welcoming. (And requiring an upvote would help to ensure that it was useful advice, rather than just, "Hi, welcome!", since that noise doesn't usually get upvoted.)
I just tiny-voted on your comment. For science ;) But it may not count as you also closed voted the post. And also.. just because a comments on a closed post gets a tiny-vote doesn't mean it's kind..
@CodyGray I got a declined NLN flag on this question. There's no comments on it other than my own. Do you mind checking and letting me know what the comment I flagged said?
@cigien Uh, there's a deleted comment that says, "what is life? That's what all the people questionn. You're riding high in April, shot down in May". I can't tell if that's the one you flagged. Two people did flag it, one as NLN and one as unfriendly. I suspect that what happened is the mod wanted to decline the unfriendly flag, but declining comment flags is an all-or-nothing affair, so your NLN flag ended up being declined. Mod probably didn't even realize it happened.
@Scratte Better upvote some more of my comments, just to be extra sure. :-)
If someone really wants the soapbox, they could post a meta Questions about the "Warm Welcome" hat instead of bugs about Stack on mobile :) "Upvote any user's first post." Is that any user or just a new user? Is it a good idea to just go and upvote new user's firsts posts? Is it unwelcoming not to upvote user's posts? :) (btw.. the idea is mostly Cody's. I just stole it)
@CodyGray I've been watching the incoming questions firehose. Half of everything I see is images of code. The other half is blatantly off-topic. I think there were a few long, rambly code-dumps of "debug my code" somewhere in there, but those are hardly worth an upvote.
Am I going to have to be The Fastest Hammerer In The West for the next 3 weeks to combat the hat-gathering FGITWs? stackoverflow.com/q/65318902/2943403 could have closed this one with at least 10 different pages.
@Nick There is a big difference between badges and hats. As there is between badgers (odd-looking mammals that steal food from campers) and hatters (people who went mad through mercury poisoning).
My impression of this answer is that it's gibberish (R/A) ... but have I missed something? Is it a failed attempt at some kind of answer? (I'm feeling atypically generous to such posters since the hats came along.)
This wasn't a forced Meta question for a hat. I just didn't manage to ask it for a month. meta.stackoverflow.com/q/403724/2943403 (now I can close that tab on my browser)
what do you think about this question? When I clicked on that link it downloaded zoom. I don't think the website it opened was the official website... (sd report)
@AdrianMole You don't need to win a mod election to get a diamond. It is just that we didn't exhausted all our legal possibilities to get you one. Recount and appeal on its way ....
@Scratte there is no commitment from just signing up. If a post of yours was migrated to a different site it might even come with a modestly pleasant surprise in the form of rep
when I first signed up for Charcoal I tried to limit the number of sites I had accounts on but I have long since given up on that, and will frequently sign up for a new site just so I can flag spam on it. I don't think I have ever had any other activity of any kind on most of them, and always then something I actively involved myself in, not the other way around
@tripleee That's how I ended up with a profile on dba :( I even got reputation on it. I answered the post while it was on Stack. I've considered disassociating from it and deleting the profile.
@Scratte You can quite easily remove your account on another stack, if you don't have any posts (and comments?) posted. I joined a bunch of sites few years back. But never really used the sites, so I just deleted my accounts there.
@Scratte dunno. If you've posted stuff it takes longer. And if you re-create an account it's actually a new one. I guess it's not really that much of an issue if you don't interact with the site. If you vote, it might be a problem.
"There are two schools of thought regarding how the brain learns to code, she says. One holds that in order to be good at programming, you must be good at math. The other suggests that because of the parallels between coding and language, language skills might be more relevant." -- Hahaha, ok, reasonable hypothesis but doubtful. For instance, I am fairly good at programming but garbage at both math and language. Completely different skills.
I have a real problem with the FP queue. There are so many poor, laconic, code only answers. I have to skip them all. If I downvoted I'd be out of rep in a day!
@code11 I believe that rather than math is logic. But formal logic is colloquially equated to math, and that's the press article for plebs consumption, so...
@Braiam agreed. I was thinking complex problem solving, like tricky test questions. Also, evaluative math, ie up until high school is completely different from proof based math college+.
@AdrianMole No clue. We discussed it yesterday in here. It's not voting nor reviewing nor posting Answers or Questions.
Perhaps try to find a closed post and make a suggestion of how the author can improve their post in a comment.
That's all I remember I had done when I got it. But Cody had also commented on a closed post, but didn't get the hat. Though Cody was a close voter on the posts.
If you try it, let me know what happens. If it doesn't work I may have another guess.
@10Rep Not getting why you think it's sad. Would you like a community manager to reset your review count back to 0, so you can better feel a progress? :)