So far for pregnancy I have tried a fetal carrier that I put on the minifig's back but this limits her movements. Specifically she can't bend too far in either direction and also she can't lay down the way she normally would(she would have to like bend her legs when she lays down or something to ...
> So far for pregnancy I have tried a fetal carrier that I put on the minifig's back but this limits her movements. Specifically she can't bend too far in either direction and also she can't lay down the way she normally would
@Cerberus People have made models of Lego minifigs kneeling, crouching, curled up in balls, dancing, kicking, having sex, and many other things. Some of these involve brick-built legs, some involve disassembling the legs from the hips, some a combination.
"I take the base off to show birth" sounds to me like brick-built legs.
@JonHanna It's arguable if those are really part of SQL itself. I guess it depends on what you consider "SQL" to be. I consider it to be, basically, SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE. Everything else is extra.
If you include stored procs in any language as part of "sql", as most databases do, then yeah, "sql" is a programming language, on the basis that it's a superset of one or more languages.
Also, if your definition of "programming language" is broad enough, then basic SQL might qualify on its own.
@KitFox I'd say them referring to SQL as a programming language wouldn't really be enough reason, in my book, as long as they're not muddling up the distinction between querying data and running procedures on a database.
@Robusto Can you work from home? Can you work from Tahiti?
@JonHanna What I mean is, the "sql standard" is a large standard covering many topics. Clearly one of those topics is a programming language, but when people say they're using "sql" to do something they are usually not referring to most of what's in the standard
@JohanLarsson Good point, I haven't changed. It's every one else.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 some kind of infinity is necessary (I say that because I don't know what windowing is, and I want to say something semi-intelligent).
I'm probably going to be giving a presentation to my company (mainly management, but also senior developers) on the benefits of moving to Git from a centralized TFS setup. I know that I massively prefer Git because of its speed and IMHO the improved workflow of the easy branching model, but what...
There's a meta link explaining why at least some people voted to close that question. Maybe you need to reformulate the question so that you better fit the pattern of an acceptable question. Such as "Please list all the advantages GIT has over TFS"... but then it's a list question.
@Cerberus The Lego company builds products out of parts. Some of those parts are bricks, some are other things. There are dozens of possible connections: studs in anti-studs, bars in clips, bars in holes, various hinges, pegs and axles, ropes, elastics, magnets, ball-in-socket (at least two sizes), pneumatics, etc.
Sometimes, people discover new ways of attaching old parts.
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 "Loneliness, as the researchers note, is a greater risk for morbidity and mortality than cigarette smoking. So if you can’t talk with the ones you love, talk to the ones you’re with."
@tchrist Oh. uh.. still fluids but substitute in steam bath and maybe even a little extra exercise (adrenalin can reduce congestion, at least while you're exercising).
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 This rings the most true to me: "I bet it's just about Stephen Stills wanting to get into someones pants whose lover was fighting in the War"
My dreams are always weird. Otherwise they wouldn't be dreams, right? I mean, if you can't differentiate between sleeping and waking states, what's the point?