I found a reasonable way to unwind everything and add the statements I needed, but I can't remember what i did
I think it simply involved making a local variable that contained the state of 32BIT_REGS, then used a normal if statement with FULL braces. It's a pet peeve
but it also depends on how complex someCondition is, and potentially how large some code block is. If either are long, I might use a variable to store the result then use it twice
For a while now I've been thinking about trying my hand at creating a game similar in spirit and execution to Baldur's Gate, Icewind Dale and offshoots. I'd rather not face the full bulk of work in implementing my own RPG system - I'd like to use D&D rules.
Now, reading about the subject it seem...
how do you normally do collision checking for lines of sight? do you just perform raycasts inside the cone or somehow use a conical shape for collisions?
I wonder if I can't use some sort of formula given the camera's FOV
yeah, I just spent like 30 seconds staring at it thinking "I suspect foo and bar are mutually exclusive" but it was impossible to tell in the original version
We have been investigating this issue and can see the slowness you are reporting.
There has been a service pack developed for our Control Panel which is currently going through testing. The new service pack should vastly speed up the control panel.
Should you wish to use IIS management directly this can be done.
My issue is not because I'm on the cheap plan and apparently there is direct IIS management that I can do. Double win.
We've got a server here at work and I was just curious if there was something people used for personal use. Would be nice to not have to carry a USB stick around with me :P
It's pretty neat too, that if someone gets access to your email, and manages to reset your lastpass password it drops any password changes that are recent (since your last change I think). has some nice stuff that warns you when you attempt to use a password that you have used before (assuming you don't use the generator)
Programming languages typically support a set of operators: operations which differ in the calling of syntax and/or the argument passing mode from the language's functions. Common examples that differ by syntax are mathematical arithmetic operations, e.g. ">" for "greater than", with names often outside the language's set of identifiers for functions, and called with a syntax different from the language's syntax for calling functions. Common examples that differ by argument passing mode are boolean operations, e.g. a short-circuiting conjunction that only evaluates later arguments if ear...
Ooo. I know I said I didn't want to carry around a USB stick but the premium account does have multifactor authentication with a "YubiKey" - this is interesting
Or it seems you can turn any USB drive into a form of multifactor authentication
Right now, my weak point is my phone. If I lose my phone, and someone breaks the lock on the phone, they have access to my Google authenticator, and from there have access to Gmail and therefore: my life
I suppose if I ever lose my phone, I should immediately fix that in Google
Due to suspicious activity, this account has been locked. A message has been sent to this account’s email address containing details on how to resolve this issue. Visit eu.battle.net/account/locked.html for more information.
Note: I could not already find a question on Meta answering this. If there is one, then please provide a link.
I've been looking through the tags recently, and have seen a few that I think deserve to be synonyms. Of course, I don't have enough rep to suggest synonyms myself, but some tags (e.g. ...
@ToddersLegrande I only log in to battle.net once per year lol, so I dismiss any email as spam. Apparently I did not register using my real name. I can't recover my account. Damn.
Didn't lose much, I've got those Diablos in retail packaging too but
You have made too many unsuccessful attempts. In order to continue the password reset process, please contact Customer Support.
@JohnMcDonald I guess to be clear, I hover over the link or copy the address, and see what it actually resolves to. I've never found one I actually wanted to click because they were all spam (MSN does for sure and I think gmail might too - mark Blizzard as verified anyway). I wouldn't ever click anything without determining the destination long before
Haha. I recently had a conversation with my parents that anything they see on Facebook that looks like a good thing to click on, they should think instead that it reads like "Click me if you want to download a virus!"
What I find interesting these days is that I am receiving spam email that appears to be from friends or relatives that are actually sent from obviously not their email addresses
@Jimmy I'm guessings its exactly that as some people I'm not even friends with. I'm sure someone clicks a link / allows an app and it looks up friends and friends of friends until someone was smart enough to secure their account down
@JohnMcDonald I propose are scenario to you that maybe you have the solution to since you use this.
You set up Gmail to use the two factor authentication
@Gajoo Yep, was very nice the first time I did it (WP 7). Felt right at home: Visual Studio, C#, .NET. The XAML thing took me some time to get used to (I never WPFed either).
JSON ( , ), or JavaScript Object Notation, is a text-based open standard designed for human-readable data interchange. It is derived from the JavaScript scripting language for representing simple data structures and associative arrays, called objects. Despite its relationship to JavaScript, it is language-independent, with parsers available for many languages.
The JSON format was originally specified by Douglas Crockford, and is described in RFC 4627. The official Internet media type for JSON is application/json. The JSON filename extension is .json.
The JSON format is often used for s...
"The official MIME type for JSON text is "application/json" "
But LINQ to SQL is at least the next best thing. :P
No dealing with anything. Just connect and treat the database as any other collection.
var db = new DataClassesDataContext(ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["database"].ConnectionString);
db.Users.InsertOnSubmit(new User() { Username = username, Salt = salt, Password = hash });
db.SubmitChanges();