I'll just point out that you can't change others or the world easily, so getting into politics will absolutely subject you to all that resistance. If it's worth it to you, by all means, go for it. I personally wouldn't want to deal with the drama, but I respect those that do and genuinely try to make things better.
That is certainly true, and like everything that makes the news, technology like ours means we can zoom in on literally everything in the world rather than just the local happenings. So much more potential to show all the negatives. All the media does just that.
if anything, I'd say people have become too closely associated with political parties, when really most people digress from political party views quite a bit on average
idk 2019 was way better than 2016 in terms of people getting triggered all the time
but it's funny thing about categorizing...despite this guy being a socialist, he was categorizing me as a centrist and unironically saying I should "get the rope"
his only penalty from all this was that his mod status was revoked
about a day later after everyone annoyed the hell out of the server owner
idk it only mildly made me nervous when all this was happening; it wasn't until the next morning when I saw nothing was done (on top of my friend not responding to my messages) when I actually started to get pissed off xD
@AlRey I censored your post there because someone flagged it and then it started getting a flag pile-on. We have looser guidelines in chat, but easy on the swears from now on, ok?
My understanding is the flags get seen first by high rep users. If enough users validate it, it gets deleted and the user who posted it gets muted for a bit... I figured I'd spare them the experience since it wasn't that bad and was not directed at anyone.
Well, the answer is actually pretty simple: there is no function begin() in std::queue and there isn't any overload of std::begin taking a std::queue either. You can have a look at the documentation.
The core problem is that std::queue is not meant to be iterated over. It exists to satisfy other...
@CaptainSquirrel well that's just going to happen. Reminds me of that Seinfeld episode where George got into the habit of calling this group of guys "bastards" until his boss hears him overdo it and sends him to talk to Steinbrenner, who makes him sit in a hot tub. If it's innocuous, and a flag pile-on validates, don't worry too much about it. If it's truly offensive, please flag. If you want to be able to invalidate the flags in real time - get some on-site rep.
We shouldn't call it "kicked" or "muted" - we should call it "hot-tubbed".
I can never type quick enough to answer questions before someone else manages to write a full blown answer with a breakdown of everything that's going on and a shit load of sources
it'll probably be like the ebola outbreak tbh...people will freak out for about a week, only about 25 people will catch it, only one will die, and then the entire thing will be quarantined before it becomes a huge problem
though with the way the program is actually made, it's almost impossible to have a second signature thrown in there for the same loan unless you royally screw up
I'm using a FileSystemWatcher_Created event to detect new files being created in a folder (images)
However, this seems to be running a bit too early and causes other operations on the new file in the body of this handler, to fail with File not Found and invalid data errors
Is there any way I could failproof this a bit and make sure I'm only running stuff when the file is actually fully there
@RandoHinn I dont think createdFully exists. However if you read the API, they tell you that certain operations (like copy/move) are complex and trigger multiple events
ConfigureAwait returns ConfiguredTaskAwaitable, not Task. You need to await explicitly for that with await keyword, and change that method to be async.
But, you can just return Task without ConfigureAwait(false) as well and in that case nothing needs to be done apart adding ConfigureAwait() to t...
@RandoHinn The way Plex handles it is using the Created and Updated event with a timeout. Basically, once the file has not been created/updated for a certain amount of time, it's considered 'completed' and is processed. Another simple way is trying to get an exclusive lock, and when you fail, try it again in a few seconds (until you got the lock and voila, you're good to go).
@מלךהמשיח this isnt a real answer to the question, but is there any reason that you're returning a Task? You could just as easily return the IQueryable to delay querying the database