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12:03 AM
28
Q: Is there a goto statement in java?

VenkateshI'm confused about this. Most of us have been told that there is no goto statement in Java. But I found that it is one of the keyword in Java. Where can it be used? If it can not be used, then why was it included in Java as a keyword?

0
A: Is there a goto statement in java?

Chris TindellThe grand slam that you put on the goto keyword is incorrect. It is useful for debugging and can be removed before final compilation to avoid confusing those who read the code later. It is a real pain not to have the goto keyword during development. It causes the programmer to have to concentrate...

That guy’s answer is hilarious.
 
@tchrist For his purposes I find the COMEFROM statement to be much more effective.
 
smells like setjmp
 
It's better. Because it's worse.
 
 
1 hour later…
1:22 AM
18
A: Phenomenon of overused and popular words

JLGWhat you describe is actually the definition of cliché. From the Wikipedia article: A cliché or cliche* (UK /ˈkliːʃeɪ/ or US /klɪˈʃeɪ/) is an expression, idea, or element of an artistic work which has been overused to the point of losing its original meaning or effect, especially when at s...

This is what is wrong with crowd-sourcing. The OP is not asking for a definition of the term, but the process that brings them about. Yet people don't know anything about that, they only recognize what they dimly perceive as a word that is somehow related to the question.
 
@Robusto That’s a bit subtle, at least for me, at least this late at night.
Sorry.
So you think he wants to know the name of the process by which this occurs?
So some sort of -ation or -ment type of word, you mean?
 
@Robusto Did you copy-paste your answer from a different answer that you gave before? It sounds really familiar and reminds me of Ham and Bacon for some reason.
 
It must have been collided; it has an aggregate 57 votes all told, which is really rare for so young a question on ELU.
@Robusto Do you think that, with what your take is on what he is saying, that you might be able to edit it into a form that @RegDwighт would then deem a RQ again?
@KitFox Why do you imagine that Reg both closed and protected it? What good does protection do on a closed question? Insurance?
 
 
1 hour later…
2:47 AM
@KitFox Let's not say things we can't take back.
2
 
 
2 hours later…
5:14 AM
I would just like to announce that we're at 1000 questions on our Meta.
 
5:44 AM
hi, Good Morning every one
I would like to why I can't post a question
 
hello everyone :D
When did "Sir" change from a name for knights to a name for anyone of higher rank?
*(respect)*
 
6:09 AM
@HiteshDhamshaniya You mean you're question-banned?
If so, see
128
Q: What can I do when getting "Sorry, we are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account"?

ArjanIMPORTANT: CLICK HERE AND READ CAREFULLY! While trying to ask a question, one could get: Oops! Your question couldn't be submitted because: Sorry, we are no longer accepting questions from this account. See http://goo.gl/C1Kwu to learn more. Likewise, for answers: Oops! Yo...

@MohamedAhmedNabil That sort of change, reverential -> honorific (-> plain) is extremely common cross-linguistically.
@MohamedAhmedNabil That sort of change, honorific -> respectful (-> plain) is extremely common cross-linguistically.
 
 
1 hour later…
7:26 AM
Morningen.
 
7:40 AM
@Gigili Здравствуйтеen.
@Gigili おはよー円.
 
Exactly.
@Mechanicalsnail समझ में आता है.
 
7:57 AM
@Gigili really?
 
Umm, not really.
 
8:47 AM
@tchrist because look at the timestamps, that's why.
I protected it first, closed later.
 
 
2 hours later…
10:39 AM
Good hours-before-cockcrow.
 
10:50 AM
Just saw a question on SO get downvoted to -11, closed, and deleted (no mods, either), all in under 15 minutes. And people still think ELU is tough on folks?
-3
A: get child from parent in Qtreeview

Jacklin Anduspostpartum depression . Postpartum Depression Treatment - In Many cases we have noticed that the new mothers undergo severe symptoms of postnatal depression or baby blues. Learn how to overcome and face these situations of postpartum depression. postpartum depression .

 
11:07 AM
Just got my first Steward badge.
 
Really? On what? Good for you!
First posts?
 
Close votes. SO.
 
No shortage of those, that's for sure.
5
Q: Is there a word like "sides" that means "top or bottom"?

LucasTizma"Sides" can be used to describe positioning relative to the left or right of an object. Is there a corresponding word that has the same meaning for the top or bottom of an object? For example, if I say "side padding," it's pretty clear that I'm talking about padding from the left and right edge....

The constant hunt for the One True Word That Replaces All Others.
Don't know why people hate spaces so much.
 
11:28 AM
> C/2012 S1 won't just be bright; it'll be large enough to see without the need for binoculars or a telescope Late next year, there will be a new object in the night sky nearly 10 times brighter than the full moon.
I’ll believe that when I see it. Which I hope to do.
 
11:41 AM
wiggles with excitement
 
wonders who’s tickling her toes
Ug. It’s 46 degrees here. Had to shut the windows. What happened to summer?
 
It ended last week.
 
Last week?
How about four weeks ago?
 
I just don’t like to let it end at Labor Day; September can be so pleasant. But it too passes.
 
@RegDwighт If you're European, sure.
If you're normal, it ends on the equinox.
 
11:55 AM
The general populace thinks of summer as unofficially spanning the gap between Memorial Day and Labor Day. We aren’t talking about astronomy here.
In which case, Reg is Wright.
 
Summer ( ) is the warmest of the four temperate seasons, between spring and autumn. At the summer solstice, the days are longest and the nights are shortest, with day-length decreasing as the season progresses after the solstice. The date of the beginning of summer varies according to climate, culture, and tradition, but when it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere it is winter in the Southern Hemisphere, and vice versa. Timing From an astronomical view, the equinoxes and solstices would be the middle of the respective seasons, but a variable seasonal lag means that the meteorologic...
> From an astronomical view, the equinoxes and solstices would be the middle of the respective seasons
 
rolls eyes
 
I would be right if we were talking about astronomy, too.
 
That’s why they call it Midsummer’s Day.
Reg, are you far enough north to be from a two-season culture?
 
Look, people. I'm just right™. You go out on a limb, I will saw it off.
 
11:59 AM
> The ancient Germanic/Norse year was divided into two seasons: Summer and Winter.
I often think we in Colorado have only two seasons, with the things that people call spring and fall just being tug-of-war games between winter and summer until one or another gives up.
 
For all intents and purposes, I live in a maritime climate. Summer: 17 degrees and rain. Winter: 17 degrees and rain.
Though last February we had 24 degrees with people sunbathing.
 
Yes, but the first number is in Fahrenheit and the second one in Centigrade.
Or vice versa.
 
Sep 24 at 15:27, by RegDwighт
@tchrist in my house we use Réaumur, as is well documented in this very room.
 
What is this, an echo chamber?
 
Apr 13 '11 at 13:19, by RegDwight
Lots of echo in here.
Anyway. Nobody has so much as heard of "Fahrenheit" here except a couple people who saw that Michael Moore movie, but they've long forgotten, too.
I sometimes miss the continental climate, too. Except when I am actually reminded of how frigging hot and how frigging cold it was.
 
12:06 PM
Where the hell are you?
I thought you were inland.
 
I am inland.
The next coast is some 800 km away, methinks.
 
Arctic Sea?
Baltic?
 
Actually, I think all three coasts are 800 km away. And the fourth is right underneath me.
Hm. Now I have to look it up.
 
Under. Hm.
Black Sea?
If you’ve retired to San Diego, I’m going to hate you.
 
Wiki sez.
But I was looking for coasts.
 
12:10 PM
Are those highs and lows? You have no fluctuation!
 
What did I just tell you?
Someone pay attention already.
 
But that is not an inland pattern.
 
Compared to Moscow, it's an equator pattern.
 
Hence what I said about hating your early retirement to San Diego.
Did they shuffle you off to Timbuktutustan?
 
This is Moscow. Allegedly.
 
12:13 PM
I thought you lived in Farmville.
 
Except the last three winters killed a gazillion people because they never got above -9000 Fahrenheit.
 
I thought it was the summers that burnt people out.
 
No, no people was left. Them burnt birds out instead.
True story, btw.
All those swamp fires produced toxic gases that killed millions of birds in Moscow.
They were literally falling from the skies.
 
Hm.
 
More evidence of snotty Brits and their disdain for everything. Cheeky bastards!
 
12:15 PM
@Robusto Here I thought you were reading ELU again.
 
ELU, BBC ... what's the dif?
 
We didn’t get birds falling from our skies this summer of megaburning.
 
What about canaries? Or parrots?
 
Just crispy kine.
 
Those were dying off like, well, canaries.
 
12:16 PM
> But some British terms can be useful, says Sheidlower, and fill in a gap where there is no direct equivalent in American English - he cites one-off (something which is done, or made, or which happens only once) as an example.
 
Keep them out of the mines.
"One-off" is what we always called "one-shot".
 
Hmm, I've been using "one-off" for decades. It's American enough for me.
 
I was just going to say that.
 
We don’t have wild canaries.
 
Who said anything about wild?
 
12:17 PM
Well, we do. But they’re Carduelis.
As do you.
 
Moscow doesn't have wild anything. Except moose.
If you check out the cinema in which I saw Captain America as a child, you will notice it's not far away from one area named Moose Island.
 
For work, I was the other day talking to a programmer from somewhere in urban India. He has never seen a wild animal. Ever.
 
Hi, what is the second party when I share something? Sharee?
 
Recipient.
 
receiver?
 
12:20 PM
A receiver is an apparatus. A recipient is a being.
 
thanks
 
Compartitioner, but don’t tell I told you.
 
No compatriotism in this chat.
 
Whatever you say, comrade.
 
That's summa comrade to you.
Xblast time.
Whatever happened to my plan to find out where the coast is.
 
12:23 PM
Yes, what of it?
I grew up near the coast of Lake Michigan, but now all such water is far far from me.
@Rob Almost none of those terms they’ve highlighted seem especially un-American to me.
A few, ok. But most, no.
I’ve finally figured out Reg’s accent.
Moose Island is an island in Maine located at the entrance to Cobscook Bay from Passamaquoddy Bay in the Bay of Fundy. Connected to the mainland portion of Washington County at Passamaquoddy Pleasant Point Reservation by a causeway, the city of Eastport occupies several islands, including its major land mass, Moose Island. Other islands comprising the city include Carlow Island, Spectacle Island, Goose Island, and Treat Island, along with other islets. Quoddy Village lies at the northwestern end of Moose Island, while the city's downtown lies at the eastern end of the island. The Eastpor...
He must be an escapee from Passamaquoddy Pleasant Point Reservation.
Say that one fast.
Is that that one that Garrison Keillor always talks about?
I can’t find it. I hate that.
> A girl in a bikini is like having a loaded pistol on your coffee table - There's nothing wrong with them, but it's hard to stop thinking about it.
> I think the most un-American thing you can say is, 'You can't say that.'
> It was luxuries like air conditioning that brought down the Roman Empire. With air conditioning their windows were shut, they couldn't hear the barbarians coming.
> Vodka is tasteless going down, but it is memorable coming up.
> People will miss that it once meant something to be Southern or Midwestern. It doesn't mean much now, except for the climate. The question, 'Where are you from?' doesn't lead to anything odd or interesting. They live somewhere near a Gap store, and what else do you need to know?
I like the un-American bit.
@Reg Because you have never been here, it is difficult to convey to you the ubiquity of the measurement system used here. 300 million people all using the same set of common benchmarks all the days of their lives, even if nobody else does, really does change things. The non-scientist has virtually no trek with using SI units for everyday things — ever.
I remember European friends’ first visits stateside, how it really opened up their eyes.
Before the visit, they thought we were all stupid and assholish for not using metric.
@Reg But after being here a while, they realized that such value judgements do not apply. It is simply how things are done, and so if you wish to understand what people are saying, or wish to make yourself understood to them, you simply must speak their language. That’s all it is.
That said, science and medicine really is only in SI in any environment I’ve ever been in.
It makes for a strange separation of contexts.
But they all got over their sense of umbrage pretty quickly. Before they came here, they could never do that.
15
Q: Phenomenon of overused and popular words

Michael FreyCertain words or phrases become really popular. These words are picked up by many people, are overused, and sometimes misused to such an extent that the whole meaning of the word changes, or is even lost. I would describe these words as fads, because they become popular, but then (usually) disapp...

Well, he has edited to try to make it better, @Reg.
But I don’t really know about reopening it. I think you might still be right.
@Rob I have never seen any signs of a d/m/y trend intruding on m/d/y. I have only seen YYYY-MM-DD, and that usually only in a computer-related/heavy environment.
 
12:48 PM
@tchrist Don't get me started!!
 
Bit late for that, eh now?
 
Who ever thought it made sense or was helpful to use m/d/y??
clenches fists
 
It’s the natural form mimicking speech.
Today is September 28, 2012.
Hence 9/28/12.
 
Well, the older form is "the 28th of September", I believe.
 
It sounds mildly-to-super–old-fashioned to say that today is the 28th day of September.
 
12:51 PM
But when did people start using m/d in America?
 
When did people start saying month-day in America?
 
And why not base the order on the most official-sounding version?
 
Because it is unnatural.
 
How?
 
Writing mirrors speech.
Given that people say month-day, it would be perverse to write day-month.
 
12:52 PM
Writing mirrors writing, and dates are used in very formal contexts too...
 
As might write well with everything other every pair word around swapped.
 
And I think "the 28th of September" was much more common when people started writing short dates for the first time.
 
That is rather hard to substantiate. Not impossible, perhaps.
 
Remember, remember the fifth of November.
And the Fourth of July.
 
I haven't heard your substantiating your claims yet...
 
12:54 PM
And el Cinco de Mayo.
 
Yes, not to mention all other languages...
"September 5" is impossible in Dutch. I rest my case.
 
No hablábamos del castellano, de ahí que no tiene puta que ver con lo nuestro.
Then speak Dutch.
But in English, it doesn’t work that way anymore.
Tough noogies.
 
@tchrist I am aware of all that. Not sure what that was in reply to in the first place.
 
People just are quick to hate anything that seems foreign to their own experience.
 
@tchrist I repeat, this convention was not created now, so the current situation is not very relevant.
 
12:56 PM
@RegDwighт You've never been to the States?
 
Your asshole government won't let me in.
And that's the politest I can be.
 
Oh right.
 
@RegDwighт It was replying to this.
 
@tchrist I fail to see how it was even related.
 
What's the difference between share, stock and listing?
 
12:58 PM
I mean, where does it say that Fahrenheit is stupid? Where does it say that I need an eye-opener?
 
@RegDwighт I really don’t understand that. You have my genuine sympathies. On a lighter note, your past activities with the IRA probably don’t help you.
 
Are all financial terms synonymous?
 
@tchrist they won't let me into UK, either. So much for the IRA.
Boring Friday meeting.
 
Don’t be an asshole, @Cerb.
 
12:58 PM
Lators.
 
@Gigili No, I don't think so. But I don't know the differences.
 
Bai.
 
@tchrist See, that wasn't my point at all.
 
@tchrist Excuse me?
 
I could have understood that picture triggering your tirade.
 
12:59 PM
@Gigili I think you need to talk to people who work in the financial industries.
 
AFK
 
@RegDwighт That was not a tirade. I was trying to explain.
 
As you can see, all other English-speaking countries have some form of d/m, so there could not have been a "forcing" reason in the USA.
 

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