Why not roll your own file logging? It's pretty easy to do
Make the file name the current date in the format of dd-mm-yyyy. Each line content would have a timestamp for easy tracking in the format of hh:mm:ss -> {0} where {0} is the message.
Meh. The response "everything is chemicals" is equivalent to "but tomatoes are fruit!" when making the distinction between fruits and vegetables. Saying "X is chemicals while Y isn't" is a clear and obvious distinction between lab-engineered vs. non-lab-engineered, and it's disingenuous to pretend that the original meaning isn't clear.
Sure, you can make the claim that lab-engineered isn't inherently any different than non-lab-engineered (it's a valid case, and I agree with it in many cases), but telling someone on the "chemicals are bad!" side of the argument "but everything is chemicals!" isn't disproving their claim, simply using semantic tricks to avoid the actual discussion.
Because communication can't be boiled down to the bare semantic dictionary definitions. When people say "no chemicals", most people will understand it as "no added ingredients that aren't generally accepted as produce/traditionally manufactured material". Of course that statement can be interpreted in other ways, but that's language for you.
but that's not legally binding because it's not even specifying which chemicals, and then it doesn't even suggest that the said chemicals weren't already present in some form or another
the classic example is the types of puzzles where you gain information based on the fact that some people in the puzzle themselves reveal to not know certain things
but if we're not looking at it from a "everything conveys information" perspective, ultimately what facts can you say you know now that you didn't know prior to reading the text on the box of a product labeled "No chemicals!"
it's brilliant in its simplicity, because you want to trust that, but it's not even guaranteeing something
If I take, say, a box of dried fruit. And it says "no chemicals!". I can reasonably assume that it contains fruit, maybe sugar, but it won't contain any common preservatives like sulfur dioxide, which is often used in fruit preservation. That's knowledge directly gained from that statement.
You can make the claim that sugar, C12H22O11, is every bit a chemical as SO2 (commonly refered to as E220), and it is, but the label would probably allow for the former, not the latter.
But in most cases, it won't, because when the company writes "no chemicals", it's because they want to convey the information that it doesn't contain sulfur dioxide.
the irony being that you weren't given that information because that's technically not what "No chemicals!" means in that context
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan admittedly, it means an effort was put into keeping it as bio as possible, but the extent of that can be as much or as little as they desire
It'd be as if I told you that I'm giving you 0 or more gold coins today
Maybe it makes you happy, because you prospect positive results from this, but it's not promising anything
and I didn't even convey any information by telling you this
@Neil You're off on an entirely different track, which is "when people lie, they can use words to hide it", which is true. But I'm saying that when people don't lie, their words carry a lot of conveyed meaning, more than the bare minimum.
Going back to pragmatics 101 - if you asked me how well I did on an exam, and I said "I passed" - what grade would you assume I got? Closer to 51, the minimum passing grade, or closer to 100?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan If you were telling the truth, it still is meaningless. Again, if I tell you you can trust me when I tell you I'm giving you 0 or more gold coins today, at best, I've demonstrated intent
You're focusing on advertising again. I'm talking about communications in general.
@Neil Exactly, even though, in the legally binding sense of "not lying", could have gotten 100 too. But communications is more than that bare minimum version.
So back to the original topic, when someone says "I don't want chemicals in my food because chemicals are bad", answering "Ha! water is a chemical! Turns out you do want chemicals in your food" isn't a shattering rebuttal, it's deliberately misunderstanding.
The original claim could be wrong or right - the "chemicals" they're afraid of might be benign or might be carcinogenic. But the rebuttal? That's what I was talking about. That deliberate and disingenous rejection of information that was communicated - by pragmatical inference, by shared understanding of the world - but ignored for the sake of smug so-called "logical victory".
I don't remember #1053 by heart like I do #386, but I do love the "today's 10k" concept and try to stick to it whenever I learn that someone doesn't know something I consider well-known.
@Wietlol Basically there's a class PackableSku, (often shortened to sku), which contains a SKU (type), which contains a field called Sku which is the actual sku
@Neil There was an interesting podcast episode I listened to a while back about air conditioning and how we've gotten used to having interior temperature be 100% controlled, regardless of what's happening outside.
it has an inbuild temperature controll feature, whenever it is loading something it heats the room and whenever you need something real quick it is cool af
How do I invert this query to return all the types that 'don't implement that interface
types.Where(x => (typeof(IPostProcessor)).IsAssignableFrom(x));
@MikeTheLiar You mentioned you almost worked for a water quality facility, if I built a velocity and level sensor would you be interested in helping me calibrate to calculate flow?
Which is also not native to the northwest, the current that comes down our coast from Alaska is too cold for them to survive in the wild. They prefer moderate to warm waters.
Thus the reason I saw that species in an aquarium.