Pretty sure they’re referring to class names describing the visual style being applied, rather than what that class represents semantically.
E.g. .red-bold
vs. .error-text
Pretty sure they’re referring to class names describing the visual style being applied, rather than what that class represents semantically.
E.g. .red-bold
vs. .error-text
I’m in this no-experience-to-apprenticeship program and everyone in my class thinks type coercion is the greatest thing ever.
Think of your closest friend or family member. Do you “believe in” them?
It’s very rare that you find anyone on Lemmy/Reddit that actually takes more than eight seconds to critically think about the significance of “religion,” and not just immediately monkey brain into “religion is for idiots.” Alas, I hoped that this particular group think would’ve stayed behind.
A belief is not a religion, and a religion is not a belief. Any one person can be varying degrees of “religious,” and any one person can hold varying levels of belief in a higher power.
I don’t have much else to add because your comment was pretty well thought-out.
^This guy dates.
“Misuse of the Oxford comma, bad speling and taking jokes too far.”
The elephant and rope parable rings its bell of sound morals!
Not so much the realizing what NaN means; that’s more relevant to that XKCD which I probably don’t need to describe here.
Marked as solution.
Const goo =
backspace backspace
const Foo
backspace
const foo = obj. Val;.
*deep breaths
Pointing at physical characteristics? Not as amazing.
Worse? Or better?
I politely disrespect your opinion
https://thedailywtf.com/articles/gotta-catch-em-all
Dear God.
try
{
/* ... some important code ... */
}
catch (OutOfMemoryException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (OverflowException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (InvalidCastException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (NullReferenceException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (IndexOutOfRangeException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (ArgumentException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (InvalidOperationException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (XmlException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (IOException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (NotSupportedException exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
Global.Insert("App.GetSettings;", exception.Message);
}
No, I mean I say the entire thing to myself. “Bless me, thank me, I’m welcome.”
Middle school me started doing it and I’ve put in no effort to stop.
Ever since middle school, my “bless you” interaction has always been:
And whenever I sneeze, it’s “bless me, thank me, I’m welcome.”
Thank you for attending my TEDtalk.
Yes. I call it my “birthtime,” even though that name technically shadows another data point.
It says it right there. He’s 4+ years old.
Floating points included for thoroughness!