@davidism All kindsa misunderstanding going on with that question. I'm putting money on he changed the form method in the server file, but then "tested" and the old page was still in the browser / cached.
For some or other reason, typing @ααΊαα in a chat room pings everyone who's been in that chat room for the last 7 days...
Seems to work in all chat rooms (I only tested 2 as I don't want to be a jerk)
How should we proceed?
You should make a carefully crafted answer that is wrong enough to receive precisely one downvote.
It's a tricky proposition; you have to rile up the most rilable person that reads your post, and no one else. But for all you know, he has an identical twin, and they'll both downvote you.
can anyone give me an idea on what this is for? mininet.org I mean i understand what it is ... maybe the why you would use it is a better question
I wish I could do {0:s.lc} and {0:s.uc} for lower and upper case formatting ... I was feeling pain the other day when everything needed to be lowercase but only when passing into these format strings ... outside of the format string they were mixed case (and the case was important)
I wanted to give him some general "stop thinking so much, you're going to throw your first project away anyway" advice, but I didn't know how to word it.
Exercise: write a program that accepts an input like {0:<70s}, and tells you character-by-character what each thing represents in the string formatting mini language.
"Eval() might seem a little pointless to you, but it is actually very helpful - it allows you to pass in any text string as PHP code and have it executed. This allows you to store your PHP code in a database, or to calculate it on the fly, which gives you a lot more flexibility." ~PHP. Evaling input from users on a website, what could possibly go wrong?
align seems to be the trickiest part of the exercise, since it has an optional fill that precedes it, so you can't look at one single index to find it.
But yeah. That paragraph shouldn't exist. Eval doesn't need evangelizing. By the time you are good enough to know when to use it, you're not reading tutorials anymore.
@Kevin Agreed. I remember learning to play Blood Bowl a year or two ago and was reading strategy guides that went over when it's a good idea to make a certain high-risk move and etc
then finally saw something that simply said: "Don't do this ever. There are times it's good, but if you're not experienced enough to see them intuitively, you're not experienced enough to tell."
@Air got me poking at Go. It's like learning to speak French when you know English and mostly know Spanish. I speak Python and have done a little bit in statically-typed languages, but combining them makes it all feel awful.
Like in a matchup against a hyperaggressive red burn deck, or when you're playing the "big graveyard" archetype in Innistrad block draft and you get passed a Gnaw To The Bone. Card is bonkers.
I tried to learn Go, but it just felt super wordy.
Maybe I was just using it for the wrong stuff, but I remember getting a couple hundred lines of code into a project, and then realizing I could solve it in python in ~150 lines.
@Kevin Yeah my example was throwing a block against someone stronger than you. When you throw a block, strengths are compared (with some modifiers based on game state). If you have the same strength, you roll one die. If one side has double the strength of the other, you roll three dice. Otherwise you roll two dice. The player with the higher strength value picks which dice "plays."
It's alright. My buddy and I had gotten really into Blood Bowl 1, and the sequel looks nicer but is actually LACKING some of the features of its predecessor which is disappointing
@DSM Because the op doesn't appear to consistently know what he's asking for, or at least can't express it in a way that other people understand and isn't a re-hash of previous discussions. So "unclear".
I stopped playing a ton of FPS after CoD became dull for me. I dipped back into RTS with SC2 then friends convinced me to try LoL and been addicted ever since.
Though the last week or so I've been playing with Docker, so most of my free time has been banging around in linux learning how to build a container and etc
@Programmer It is and it isn't. The objectives are used to force teamfights, mostly.
@AdamSmith I refuse to support Riot games anymore. I'm super glad that so many people enjoy LoL, but Riot has to be the biggest bunch of incompetents I've ever had the displeasure of dealing with.
@AdamSmith Haha, sure. I was hired by them to do some training for them on operational metrics - Six Sigma, Agile, Lean, etc.
So I sat down with a dozen of their management and did the basic 1-week with them on six sigma, standard stuff. Everyone got the concept, brought me back to train them for kanban and scrum. Great, all's going well.
@Programmer Wild guess: opening chrome for the first time causes a pop-up box to appear asking if you'll make it the default browser. If you click "no", rather than asking again next time, it will wait until the date specified by "No chrome offer until", so as not to pester you
after about a month, I follow up with them and ask if I can be of assistance on their six sigma projects (since you have to complete a project and get signoff to get your greenbelt)
Apparently they decided that "metrics-based operations occludes the artistic vision in place at Riot"
@JGrindal I don't know. I don't agree with their decision, but I don't think I could make a value judgment about it. Sounds like they wanted to explore a new idea, brought in an expert to teach them about it, made an even-keeled analysis and decided it wasn't for them