I've been getting a slow trickle of upvotes for this over the past 10 years. Please stop it. I am not that proud of this answer for it to have such a legacy. Look at my profile and upvote something else if you must. Kindly, <3 — Samie BencherifJun 23 at 7:25
To bad you rig juries, otherwise I would give an answer. I thought Canadians were suppose to be nice. — Guy CoderJun 22 at 3:51
I take it that was a joke in your profile. If so and you acknowledge that it is a joke I will give an answer. However if you really do work on rigging juries or such then sorry, no answer. — Guy CoderJun 23 at 13:11
I...seriously?!
@GuyCoder It was a joke and a confusion from my part between Jerry-rigging and Jury-rigging :) — James McGrathJun 23 at 18:03
@OlegValteriswithUkraine It refers to the original meaning at the time a given piece of text was written. So the Constitution and Bill of Rights would be all the same time, and then each amendment at the time it was passed. Same with a law: look at what the words meant when it was passed.
Personally, I have at least mixed feelings on any methodology that prescribes The One Correct Way that solves all interpretation issues. But I sympathize with the desire for consistency, and looking at the original meaning is certainly at least useful, though I don't think it can solve everything.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Well, not anything - anything that the words, as interpreted in the original context, would forbid would be unconstitutional.
> But as I recall my esteemed former colleague, Thurgood Marshall, remarking on numerous occasions: “The Constitution does not prohibit legislatures from enacting stupid laws.”
Basically, a given law being a totally awful idea is not at odds with that law being constitutional.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Ah, I think I understand the issue. Constitutional amendments are not (with one very specific exception, that amendments cannot change certain things about the Senate) subject to constitutionality analysis. They change the Constitution, so they change what is and is not constitutional. Laws do not have that power, so they can be unconstitutional.
(sorry if people have said all this already, y'all talked a lot and I'm reading in order)
@HenryEcker ...wow, that was a verbatim quote.
@manro There are plenty of gay bars that aren't clubs.
@manro Very much so, yes. Attendance seems to have rebounded pretty much entirely here.
@VLAZ "My code is perfect" is one I see sometimes. e.g., "my code is perfect but idont now why i found problems" (numerous typos), "How do I resolve this? My code is perfect" (no code posted in the question), "My code is perfect and compile perfectly but when i run it, it gives [exception here]" (code only in comments that were deleted a minute after posting them).
Mostly those sorts of things are "my code has no compilation errors" but it's still annoying...especially the idea that if there weren't compilation errors, it's not a problem with your code.
@VLAZ resets the "days since high-contrast mode reduced the contrast of a piece of UI" counter
@KevinB Honestly, same. I wish they'd also make the accept button look more like a button, too. Making the voting buttons look more like buttons is a good thing...and they're testing it.
@VLAZ IMHO: being more apparent is good, because it increases the amount of signal from people voting on posts.
This was one of the worst posts I've seen in SO. Delete it. Open a new post. Supply data sample + required results, in text format. Narrow the data sample such that it will contain only the relevant columns. To avoid confusion, use different names for the data sample columns, e.g., myrows & mycolumns instead of rows & columns. Describe your logic. Give a positive example (a row that you want to include) and negative example (a row you want to exclude) + detailed explanation. Good luck — David דודו Markovitzyesterday
yeesh. It wasn't even that bad.
@Bravo this answer is not finalized yet, so answering your question before the answer is completed makes no sense. — Lajos Arpadyesterday
ooof okay its just on my other account it said I have my questions limit reached thats why i want to shove my questions all in 1. — Epix EpocJun 24 at 8:53
> when we adopt cloud do we not lose our own ability to deploy? This is what happened to India when british provided military to take away local rulers ability to defend. It looks great at first but when costs become prohibitive , there is no way run or hide or deploy.
Also, today in "Unfriendly robot flags glowing praise":
@camickr It's awesome that you stay updated on (recent) problems with old code of yours. 14 years. Thanx for being such stellar member of the programming community. I really appreciate it. — JayC667yesterday
> I have to make an NEW ARRAY (generated from a previous array). > In this NEW ARRAY each element has it's value doubled. > Then the result of NEW ARRAY, filter out the ones that are even.
Uh, isn't that guaranteed to be an empty array?
Unless the values are floating point numbers, I guess.
Thank you!! Although I feel like an absolute donut - I should have seen that - I checked all the documentation and everything... Life saver — Jack WrightApr 5 at 13:59
^ a reply to this: "pray to the spaghetti monster"
what has been bugging me for the past few minutes, though, what is it like to feel like an absolute donut? Can donuts be relative? Does one feel empty in the middle? Tasty? Deep fried?