I know what that ^^ is, but with the waffle it didn't make sense, so I figured it was a typo, and while I had no context, it at least made sense as a question.
Hey! I'm 16 and have been teaching myself PHP. Over the past couple of days I've made this. I've tried to fix all the bugs I could think of, but enjoy hacking it!
Will the guys over at the PHP so room incinerate me if I post this?
@Rahul2001 TBH I'm in left-field on that. Recommend holding off until minds with more exposure to the idea can add their thoughts. Either that, or create a shell script to handle just the tricky part and get that reviewed. The catch for CR is that, as posted, the code must be functional. It can be just a function, and supporting dummy code.
Check out their meta site and review questions about the amount of code to post, and maybe about the exposure issue to. Maybe even ask a question on their meta about your concerns. They just might have an answer that helps.
@RogUE Nope. Same functions directly in the toolbar
It's a long-standing add-on and removes cleanly if you choose. Give it a try. It can also be disabled without removing it, so you can keep it installed, but not interfering if you only want it sometimes.
When last I experimented with them, the fantasy was most often rendered in a system chosen cursive or handwriting font. Commonly 'Script' or, in IE, sometimes Comic. Users can select the default font for base families, but seldom do. Some browsers only recognize Proportional, Serif, Sans-serif, and Monospace familes
@Rahul2001 A common method it to provide graceful fallback to less preferred fonts, down to the generic font family. pre#r { font: 11px 'consolas',terminal,courier,monospace; color: silver; }
@Rahul2001 I wouldn't really consider selling it. Like, it's not that complicated and people might get mad for trying to sell it. Maybe free + ads might work tbh.
> Catnic’s latest innovation is the biggest shake up in steel lintel design for a generation. An elegant, simplistic design derived from extensive research and rigorous development testing, offering a sophisticated, practical solution to the latest changes in Building Regulations. TBL is a patent pending range providing the most thermally efficient steel lintel solution on the market.
@JourneymanGeek It's a load bearing beam (wood/steel/whatever) above a door/window to take the load of the bricks/whatever and stop the door/window being crushed.
Some people in the UK are building eco houses that have zero energy cost. Super insulated and the energy is provided by solar panels and/or ground source heat pumps
They do special tests to make sure there are only very very small air leaks from the building.
The head is the top of the window frame. The lintel is over above the head and is wider. It is supported by the bricks/whatever that are either side of the window.
@DavidPostill Are we looking at actual windows support?
@Bob You fill in the rest. I barely know what a kernel is beyond my operating systems course where they told me it's the fundamental atomic unit of the OS.
@Nick No. The lintel supports the load of the wall that is above the window. Wood and glass windows are not very good a supporting compression loads. They tend to break into lots of tiny pieces.
@DavidPostill Ass..k me no more questions. I'll tell you no more lies. The boys are in the girls dressing room, zipping down their... flies are in the meadow, bees are in the park. I can show my ass to you, when we're in the dark :D
@JourneymanGeek I can maybe VBox Ubuntu in windows.... or I can but into my ubuntu rather than using this unactivated win10 I keep booting into because it's the damn default boot.
@DavidPostill Nope. Tried. The wall doesn't break as easy. Concrete is too hard for my blow to do any kind of damage. I can do cracks and dents but I can't totally uninstall it.
> In a recent meeting held with the new FBI Director concerning debt reconciliation, this is to inform you that we have agreed to release your fund worth ($2.8Million) which will come via Global Automatic Teller Machine debit master Card as instructed from our headquarter by JAMES B. COMEY, Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). However, the below information is needed as to enable the profiling of your ATM card and its delivery to you:
I had thought we were, at least about the harder ones, but I haven't heard anything about the War on Drugs for quite some time.
Pretty sure there's a lot of support for legalising the softer drugs like cannabis, but I think that might be noise coming from over the pond more than home grown.
...gave the new Optane Memory some thought: $44 for 16 GB and $77 for 32 GB means that the cost for the underlying 3D XPoint is probably in the ballpark of $2/GB.
A 256 GB Optane SSD for consumers would probably cost as much as $600.
Compare this to about $90-130 for a normal NAND-based SSD of the same capacity class.
@Mokubai Optane is what IT pros call storage-class memory. It's fast enough to be used as if it were working memory, but is nonvolatile.
Optane could be used this way, but right now, it's not cost-effective in this role. It probably won't be for the next several years, even in the midst of this NAND shortage causing high SSD prices.
The way I see it, the mainstream market will be on 3D TLC NAND for years to come, while premium consumer systems may have varying amounts of 3D XPoint memory.
Better write endurance, which is something that NAND has been getting worse at for years, coupled with the more sensible byte-addressable mode means it is more likely to be able to be used as NVM which NAND sucks at.
I love the way that marketting NAND has gotten fuzzier over the years
> We can do 100,000 writes!
> We can manage 10,000 writes.
> We can just about do cough 1,000 cough writes...
@Mokubai 3D NAND is reversing this a bit, but yeah, 2000 PE cycles (typical 3D TLC endurance) isn't great for workloads that need to do lots of I/O for extended periods of time.
Planar TLC is only good for about 750-1000 cycles.
Samsung's 3D MLC can do 6000 cycles (850 PRO), but that's a premium drive.
I'm having some trouble with my Lenovo Thinkstation C30. It's not booting up, even though the RAM, HDD, etc. are all operational. (Full link here: superuser.com/questions/1208909/…) Can anyone give me a hand?
(not sure if this is the right chatroom but it was worth a try)
How can I replace the dead moderators for the usenet newsgroup
sci.physics.foundations?
What are your question quality standards?
Boy you sure want wordy questions.
While browzing through my Windows directory, I found the Panther subdirectory, which had this icon:
Does anyone know what this signifies? I was able to open it normally, and it was, to all appearances, a normal directory.
It's a good question and a nice answer. However, I wonder about how wise it was for the accepted answer's author to edit his question and remove the link to the source article at How-To Geek.
@Run5k It looks mostly OK to me. Only the last paragraph is copied from the original link. The rest has been written in his own words. And he's used his own images as far as I can tell.