Actually i just used xsl to html converting code sample and executed this, But in HTML i'm just getting plain text not like the style sheet which i defined
I developed a java based command line utility that transform an xml into another xml file and generate HTML. In this program I used SAX parser to read the content of source xml into my java object then use JAXB to generate the XML. Right now I'm creating the HTMl file by populating a string for H...
Results still aren't in, but we who voted for the left are having our regularly scheduled moment of hesitant hope that it won't turn out totally terribly. Of course, once the final results are in we'll have those hopes dashed, as usual.
Generally speaking there was no big winner. The two biggest parties are almost tied, probably. No smaller party got wiped out. No-one grew. There's no clear-cut majority or coalition.
In italy, you can't even vote for one freakin' party, because in theory more than 50% needs to rule, so you end up getting situations where like the left and right parties will side just to reach the >50% quota and then NOTHING GETS DONE ANYWAY
technically the results arent fast because some of the voters are in arab villages (correct me if I am wrong) and it takes time to gather the votes from there
The only good thing that can potentially come of it is that Netanyahu and his corrupt cronies will finally get kicked out. It won't happen, but a guy can hope.
@misha130 Nah, all the actual ballots were collected last night.
I can't see why anyone would ever push a no-deal brexit, since it's basically the political equivalent of accelerating when confronted with a brick wall up ahead
I would say nobody would win, I think it would (for the first time in a while) be a roughly even split between the 3 major parties, but labour and libdems would have historically got together, but thye're saying they absolutely won't this time
@Neil Not just short stocks. When the economy collapses, there will be people to pick up the pieces. See what happened when the USSR collapsed - oligarchs stepped in and took over things that were public before, became billionaires.
Sure, the country suffers. They don't. They have private planes and money to live anywhere they want.
You can see it in a lot of the rhetoric of the hardcore, rabid pro-Brexiter politicians. The Leave rhetoric is interleaved with "cancel worker protections, remove the minimum wage, stop environmental regulations". There's an underlying pro-business agenda there.
there was a party which is very very nationalist with a clear leader of this party that had grown in popularity this last election
He wants to leave the EU and full halt to immigration
He had to share the space with another party leader, but I think he saw an opportunity to get all >50% and be the genuine leading party in Italy, so he called for a vote of no confidence (forces re-election)
the president nipped that in the bud real fast, fortunately
he's still very popular, which scares me, but he's not in any position to be making all the decisions yet at least
Last time I was in Italy, about a year and a half ago in Venice, I saw that, like in Spain, there were a lot of voices calling for the dissolution of the Italian union and independence to the northern provinces. I gather that since the 70's the local-patriotic/nationalistic voices calling for independence were getting stronger in Veneto and Lombardy.
I mean, there was a referendum. Non-binding, and only 40% turnout, but the results were almost unanimous for more autonomy, if not outright secession.
This is because most of the PIL derives from the northern italy
the southern italy is a money pit and full of corruption
I don't think italy should divide, no, but there are some serious issues which need to be addressed, certainly
There's a sort of news show where they investigate scandalous news stories here, and in one episode, they investigated the typical work times of civil servants in the south
they come in at 10 o'clock and take a two hour lunch break, then leave at 3, all the while getting paid the full 8 hour work shift
nobody complains because everyone expects this
My wife deals with shipments, and often times, companies who purchase the product which come from the southern italy, they try to negotiate receiving the product and then paying at a later date
you'd think that would never be acceptable, but apparently it is quite a normal occurrence there, and often times companies are 3 months+ late in paying
@mr5 The construction is valid but that doesn't mean it's actually in use. It looks weird to me. I wouldn't use it in any documentation or official texts.
Actually, the construction is a bit unsure. timeout, single word, as a verb, is of course a natural construction in the "every noun can be verbed" school of thought. But would the past tense of that verb be "timedout" or "timeouted"? That depends on how much conventionalization that verb had undergone. "Not much", I would say.
they've done studies, and interestingly enough, people seem to be willing to dedicate at most 2 hours towards commuting to work, after which it falls of quickly
This is independent of the means of travel, so if it took you 2 hours by plane, you'd have just as much tolerance as 2 hours by bicycle in theory
That's why I stopped. I fought tooth and nail to not have to commute anymore, and they didn't want to see me leave, so they actually opened an office in my city for me and others like me :)
@Neil Sounds terrible, because I can't imagine a flight, even an internal flight, taking less than 2 hours each way, simply because of the security theater and bureaucratic logistics around flights.
@Neil My mother used to fly down to Eilat once a week for work - it's a city about 5 hours by car, or 45 minute by air, from Tel-Aviv. But those 45 minutes are net time in motion - it would take at least 1:30 hours each way, because airports.