@Vickel the question is still missing vital portions of information. It should be closed as Needs Debugging Details or Needs Clarity. There is no model code and there is no debugging information.
@HovercraftFullOfEels is there a canonical for "that's not how the global keyword works"? It seems like a misunderstanding rather than a typo-esque mistake
If database table nama_cabang doesn't exist and that is the error and we can't see the table schema in the question, the question is Needs Debugging Details, right? stackoverflow.com/q/28402662/2943403 (NATO)
@mickmackusa there's quite some overlap between the different "needs more information" reasons; I don't think we can be very specific about which one to use
"needs debugging details" has a help text which includes what used to be "no MRE" so in those cases it's pretty cut and dried
but very often that specific detail is not the only one which is missing
@mickmackusa if what you claim is true then I don't understand the answer. Need clarity would be my call. Not familiar with the tech so can't/won't really judge.
@gnat Although the question body is poorly phrased, the question itself seems quite focused. "How to count the number of pairs where both elements are even?". The question is in the title.
Yep, as said this is from 7 years ago. Link only answers and recommendation questions were more common then. As said, this will probably get flushed along with the answers pretty soon
I've seen many homework questions. Now I've finally seen a homework answer.
SD should add the question's tag so if it's "Mostly punctuation marks in" an answer to a regex question we know it's an honest attempt at answering the question (and that there'll likely be a gold badger war raging). ;)
@cigien Because the only real reason to use bold in a request reason is to draw attention to the request. If people start doing it in order to draw attention to their request, then other people will start doing it too, just to maintain parity for their requests. No request is more important than others, particularly not just because one user is choosing to use bold.
@Machavity Was it that bad? I felt the formatting improvements were worthwhile but, just as I clicked "Approve," I noticed the "plz help..." So I sought redemption, in here.
@Dharman He has published in 2 the same link that has nothing to do with the problem only with the intention of promoting a service, the first post was already deleted for being spam, I hope the same happens with that other post
I know something similar has been proposed before, however, I think that, as it stands, it'd be appropriate to do one of the following:
Rename firefox-addon into a tag for questions that are explicitly and immutably about Add-Ons built on the XUL/XPCOM framework (ex: 240362, 724605, 877884), bec...
but honestly either one is acceptable grammatically. It's far, far less of a noticeable quirk than, say, someone saying "I have a doubt" instead of "I have a question".
@Dharman interesting point, that would be saying the root "dubia" derives from "duo". Or "du"+"bia" and "du"+"o", making "du" the original root. Intuitively it makes lots of sense (as in a doubt meaning split between two possibilities). I also think like that, but only rarely do linguistics venture there (usually the roots are taken "as is" unless they are clear composites.)
@Dharman in that case it wouldn't be a prefix but a root. That at times can also function like a prefix.
This is where the native speaker in me wants to say "it just sounds better," but I think that it's because it's a specific thing that you have. "I have a cup of coffee," rather than "I have cup of coffee."
It's countable
"I have gold badges" is correct; so is "I have a gold badge."
@RyanM "a" being an article in this case. Off course, if you hold a gold badge that was awarded one single time you could say: "proud holder of THE gold badge" lol :D