In mathematics, especially in set theory, a set A is a subset of a set B, or equivalently B is a superset of A, if A is "contained" inside B, that is, all elements of A are also elements of B. A and B may coincide. The relationship of one set being a subset of another is called inclusion or sometimes containment.
Definitions
If A and B are sets and every element of A is also an element of B, then:
:* A is a subset of (or is included in) B, denoted by A \subseteq B,
:or equivalently
:* B is a superset of (or includes) A, denoted by B \supseteq A.
If A is a subset of B, but A is not eq...
I have a "whenever I get around to doing it" Newsletter of Wonderful Things. Why a newsletter? I dunno. It seems more personal somehow. Fight me. Still, it's one more site to check and it's a hassle for some of you Dear Readers. Therefore, I will still do the newsletter, but I'll post each newsletter to the blog a week or so later. Here's 2012's Archive of Wonderful Things' …
This is a list of symbols found within all branches of mathematics to express a formula or to replace a constant.
When reading the list, it is important to recognize that a mathematical concept is independent of the symbol chosen to represent it. For many of the symbols below, the symbol is usually synonymous with the corresponding concept (ultimately an arbitrary choice made as a result of the cumulative history of mathematics), but in some situations a different convention may be used. For example, depending on context, "≡" may represent congruence or a definition. Further, in mathema...
maybe not... This conundrum led Italian mathematician Gerolamo Cardano to conceive of complex numbers in around 1545, though his understanding was rudimentary.
@Billdr I went to school for computer engineering... I know most things that EEs know, just not high voltage/power stuff
this was my program: http://catalog.wmich.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=3702&returnto=629
this is the EE program: http://catalog.wmich.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=3727&returnto=629
@Billdr something you have to understand about math: it's not real. It doesn't represent anything physical, necessarily. It's just a system invented by people to model and understand the world around us
yea, again, I can make a db join, which is a subset of database a and b, and I can pull all records from table a that have a fk that exists on table b, but I don't know how to prove that.
There was no endpoint listening at http://localhost:51313/TestWebService.asmx that could accept the message. This is often caused by an incorrect address or SOAP action. See InnerException, if present, for more details.
Server stack trace: at System.ServiceModel.Channels.HttpOutput.WebRequestHttpOutput.GetOutputStream() at System.ServiceModel.Channels.HttpOutput.Send(TimeSpan timeout) at System.ServiceModel.Channels.HttpChannelFactory.HttpRequestChannel.HttpChannelRequest.SendRequest(Message message, TimeSpan timeout) at System.ServiceModel.Channels.RequestChannel.Request(Message message, TimeSpan timeout) at System.ServiceModel.Dispatcher.RequestChannelBinder.Request(Message message, TimeSpan timeout)
can anyone pls try help me with my question over here? stackoverflow.com/questions/14209065/… - i need to save Dictionary to settings, you can in WinForms apps, but im having trouble doing it in Windows 8 metro apps?
jQuery is not necessary, and window.location.replace(...) will best simulate an HTTP redirect.
It is better than using window.location.href =, because replace() does not put the originating page in the session history, meaning the user won't get stuck in a never-ending back-button fiasco. If ...
but actually i can make it a really really simple question
i have a crazy ass long formula in excel, that looks through a range of data and returns the value specified by the formula in the vlookup, my problem is that if there's an unpopulated set of data (doesnt go the full range) it returns a zero,
what if() formula can i put around this entire thing to make it go blank if there's a zero
@musefan Seeing Status.Success or Status.Failure is generic, while DownloadSuccess and DownloadFail are specific. It makes more sense to use the generic status for everything, or be specific for not everything. Not a bit of both.
So, me and some other devs are having a debate. My suggestion is I want to split the enum into two. One for RecordType i.e. Upload, Download etc. and one for Status i.e. Success, Fail... surely spliting them makes more sense?
also keep in mind the naming I used above was just to try and illustrate a point
Think of it from another angle... if I wanted to get all records for download regarded of status. I would have to do something like if(DownloadSuccess || DownloadFail) which I think is not ideal
@musefan Well if you have 10 types and 4 statuses then it's obviously bad as one enum. Way too much duplication going on when you can solve it in a more neat way.