Bloop was an ultra-low-frequency and extremely powerful underwater sound detected by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in 1997. The sound was consistent with the noises generated by icequakes in large icebergs, or large icebergs scraping the ocean floor, but in 2002 was said to also be consistent with large marine animals. NOAA believes it has now analyzed it conclusively and the noise was ice-related.
== Analysis ==
The sound's source was roughly triangulated to 50°S 100°W (a remote point in the south Pacific Ocean west of the southern tip of South America), and the...
While browsing I came across a weird proof which says 2 + 2 = 5. The proof is like this:
After going through this for almost 30 minutes, I was not able to figure out the mistake in this. What is wrong in this?
Java
Reflection is indeed the right way to go with abusing Java... but you need to go deeper than just tweaking some values.
import java.lang.reflect.Field;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
Class cache = Integer.class.getDeclaredClasses...
Eta (uppercase Η, lowercase η; Ancient Greek: ἦτα Greek pronunciation: [êːtaː] or Modern Greek: ήτα Greek pronunciation: [ˈita]) is the seventh letter of the Greek alphabet. Originally denoting a consonant /h/, its sound value in the classical Attic dialect of Ancient Greek was a long vowel [ɛː], raised to [i] in hellenistic Greek, a process known as iotacism.
In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 8. It was derived from the Phoenician letter heth . Letters that arose from eta include the Latin H and the Cyrillic letter И.
== History ==
=== Consonant h ===
The letter shape '...
To do what? WebAPI/MVC doesn't know or care where you're storing your users. EF doesn't know or care that your requesting user ID is coming in over a RequestContext.
Punycode is a way to represent Unicode within the limited character subset of ASCII used for Internet host names. For example, "München" (German name for the city of Munich) would be encoded as "Mnchen-3ya". Using Punycode, host names containing Unicode characters are transcoded to a subset of ASCII consisting of letters, digits, and hyphen (the Letter-Digit-Hyphen (LDH) subset, as it is called).
While in theory the Domain Name System (DNS) supports arbitrary sequences of octets in domain name labels, the DNS standards strongly recommend the use of the LDH subset of ASCII conventionally used for...
My Controller base class has this RequestingUser property, a LogControllerException method that does standard handling of exceptions that weren't handled anywhere more specific, and a couple of shared services.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Most of the code was already built-in from the template. Identity stuff like a controller and ApplicationOAuthProvider and such. I'm not saying it actually is there or should be in there. But IF it is there, I don't wanna do it myself =)
But I'm gonna create a property in the base class. Thanks for waking me up :p
Also. in unrelated news, anyone worked with WMI queries? Do you know of a good library that's a bit easier to work with than System.Management.ManagementObject?
@MadaraUchiha IMO & IME, Microsoft have created a whole slew of great things recently. Visual Studio Code, Azure, TypeScript, UI Fabric, plus their investment in Xamarin - I use these daily, and really enjoy it.
@Nerdintraining commas are bad for seperating numerical values, ever tried to import comma seperated values in different cultures? no? i hope you'll never need to do that ^^
@SebastianL although generally CSV is a strict standard with rules, so it should not be a problem. In practice though, I've seen some horrendous things.
One of my favorites is one from a producer I work with. They have a CSV file on a server, which name consists of : 'stocks' + some ~10 numbers. At first, I thought that the numbers mean something and allow for downloading the exact one you want. How wrong was I. The numbers were obviously random, so that there is a low chance of those files overlapping names....
const cloneObject (obj: any, includeProps: ...string[]) = {...}
const a = new MyClass();
cloneObject(a, "x", "y", "z")
Now when I rename z, I must remember to fix the call to cloneObject.
keyof can work in this particular case, but it's still not automatic.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan You just helped me with my CurrentUser property in asp.net. When I get the User, I create a DatabaseContext. But when I want to change it, it seems impossible, probably because it's a different DatabaseContext. How can I handle that? Make it a method that accepts a DatabaseContext? Because keeping the Databasecontext open for long isn't a good idea.
I've added custom fields to the ApplicationUser class
I've also created a form through which the user can enter/edit the fields.
However for some reason I'm not able to update the fields in the database.
[HttpPost]
[ActionName("Edit")]
[ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
public async Task<ActionResult> M...
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan i knew that, at our shool we exchangethe "bildschirmlupe" (the lense for the screen) with a admin version of the command tools. We baisically had admin rights on that computer since then
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan in win7 for example, on lockscreen there is a little icon in bottom left. It links to an exe. replace that exe with admin rights cmd, and you have a fun little backdoor
>Be surgeon and an IT fanatic >open up your own stomach >put an LCD inside your belly >you know have an internal life monitor >Or, you are a teletubbie.
This may sound weird: but is there a way to search the nunit 3 wiki?
Google keeps giving links to nunit2.5, refusing to index nunit 3's wiki which is hosted at github. - and on github itself there doesn't seem to be a search the wiki button?
github is a bad example in UI/UX, Buttons should look like buttons
user7442629
What would be more performant? private bool GetExistsCheckedIsFavourite() { //this return Array.IndexOf(Playlist.Select(song => song.IsFavourite).ToArray(), true) != -1;
//or this return Playlist.FirstOrDefault(song => song.IsFavourite) != null; }