@SeanGallardy The logoff options have been removed from the user icon and are hidden behind three dots in an ugly UI for m365 features you have currently subscribed (on Win 11)
@JohnK.N. Once you realize that the MS UX "designers" get paid per click, the more all of their choices in all MS software makes sense. Otherwise, why would the most used options be behind the most clicks?
I assumed a certain amount of it is child-proofing. If it takes two clicks to accidentally log off it saves you from an “are you sure you want to log off?” prompt.
You should see our tools, the vague directions to do things are as such: "Open up DfM in a new browser window, click on advanced, click on get access, this will refresh the window, click on timeline, click on filter, click on emails, click on an individual email, click on the elipses and choose more->open. A new window will pop up with the email." All that to look at a single email.
The number of clicks to do mundane trivial items is abhorrent
Sadly that's what fuels a lot of the behavior, gotta metric the things that don't matter so that they can force a behavior which sounds good in theory but is utterly useless.
Yes, you should recompile the stored procedures (you can use sp_recompile). Changing the table structure forces a new execution plan, but just adding an index does not. When you restart Sql Server, that will have the same effect.
From MSDN:
As a database is changed by such
actions as ad...
I think an answer has to have a negative score for regular users to vote to delete. You also have to have high rep on the site. I think it's 20K but that may have changed.
I am using MySQL 5.7 and I have notice something which I cannot explain to myself with my current knowledge so here it goes.
Is an "invalid" date 0000-00-00 considered same as NULL for a date column type with no possibilities for nullables? See the following example:
create table if not exists e...