@CodingGorilla I highly doubt that even an Amish person would find that offensive, but I'm offended at the thought that you might be offended by such a thing :p :p :p
I have bad allergies, and in the spring and fall I sometimes need 2 12-hour doses a day. Which is stupid because it means sleepless nights for me since I can only buy enough for 1 12-hr dose per day
And the anti-pseudoephedrine laws have actually made meth production worse and created a new class of criminals who buy up pseudoephedrine products and sell them on the new black market for 700%+ markups
@GeorgeMarian wish I could help but Seattle is out of my ability there
@mootinator oh that sucks
mine has decided to shit about a half a regular load during the night while I sleep, even tho we walk about six times a day ... still goes during the day tho
@TimStone We normally do, we get paid upfront. This one client asked for a payment plan and our CEO asked the partners (myself included) if we could give her one, something we never do
@drachenstern I know, that's why I figure I have the leg up here. ;) Also, our particular client base is slave to different monopolies, and tends to shy away from .NET, heh :P
Procedures in PL/SQL can have default values for parameters, but the caller can pass values that are identical to the default values. Is there a way from within the PL/SQL to determine whether a parameter is passed? As implied this cannot be done by comparing the value with the default value.
I have a textbox on a page for searching details on that page. It on load says "Search" and on focus I want to remove "Search" but only if they didn't type in the literal word "Search". Because otherwise, how would they search for the word "Search".
I didn't want to put yet another element on the page (it's already busy enough) and I figure a self documenting textbox is sufficient with a modicum of training
@TimStone but it does relate ... there are cases where you may need to know if the value being used in a query is the stagnant default or the actual passed value
Does anyone know if there is a way to confirm if any my.cnf file is being read by MySQL?
I only have the one my.cnf on the machine (and there are no my.ini files) which I have in /etc/my.cnf.
When I run ./mysqld --help --versbose it doesn't give me the variable I have set in the file, so my ass...
Yeah, so I just attached a second class to the field and left it alone. (Literally called .leftAlone) so if it has that field they didn't type anything
she's running out of work!! Somebody /assign rchern! :p
What is the difference between “tits” and “boobs”?
P.S. I'm not sure if this question is appropriate but as English is not my native language I really would love to know the difference.