Yesterday, I asked a question about why directories can appear to Subclipse to contain uncommitted changes when they actually don't. The answer was that setting svn:ignore status on the pseudo-directory . counted as a modification, but Subclipse didn't show anything because it doesn't deal with ....
@PopularDemand Hm, can you run svn proplist -v . and see if there's anything there? I'm unsure if that actually means it has to be a SVN property, or if it could just be anything.
@drachenstern It does. I answered a question, but think the question actually deserves some more visibility. I would offer a bounty, but if there's no better/other answer I want to be able to award it to myself (I know I won't gain rep, but I'm not after gaining rep)...
@PopularDemand Yeah, because . is presumably the parent of target, so you've stored repository-commitable ignore information in the step above what you want to ignore (because you can't set it on what you want to ignore, since by ignoring it you're preventing yourself from committing that information)
@PopularDemand If you were to do svn propdel svn:ignore ., the modification should go away, but you might need to tweak your local ignore settings to ignore target then.
can anyone recommend a free one-time fax service to send a test page to my dad's fax machine? Or can anyone spot me the services of faxing a page for me to a number?
At least for Eclipse, I presume it impacts Subversion commands run from the command line, but I can't be positive (I don't know where the ignore list is stored)
Makes me sad, 8 lines queued with a custom PHP program I wrote. Went really nice when it was used. Could send out about 15k faxes per day for $0.01 per page...
I was not aware that I knew that much about electronics. I just explained to my dad in detail why his fax machine needed to operate the way it does. It was rather like listening to two people having a conversation of which I was not a part ...
@Moshe the general rule of thumb is "use the CSS selector" ~ if there's a rule for selecting with CSS (ID's do #myID, classes .myClass, DOMElements div or span for instance, etc) then use that.
I've got a string with the following format:
City, State ZIP
I'd like to get City and State from this string.
How can I do that with jQuery/javascript?
BTW, if anyone cares, this one line of code (and a supporting library, to allow YQL cross-domain stuff) calls Google Maps for Zip-code to City/State conversion:
If you have a resulting string, it should look like either "lkajdlfkasdlkfka, ##" where ## is a state abreviation in a list of about 50 entries (I'm ignoring DC, PR, etc) or it should end with an actual state name, again, about 50 of those.
But washington dc could also be washington, dc so you can't parse at the comma or the space
@RebeccaChernoff I am very overwhelmed with work at the moment. I won't be able to set up anything for the English Town hall chat today, unfortunately. If anyone else wants to cover it, feel free! The Google Docs and Yi Jaing's script are all here. Otherwise, I will take care of the digest tomorrow
As with the other town hall chats, I will be creating a "digest" version for the English Language & Usage Town Hall Chat. This will be posted as one large Meta question. The digest will contain all the questions and their answers, with none of the other conversation from the room.
For more i...
If anyone wants to help contact me soon. I am too busy to do that digest tonight, and have to leave soon so I won't be available to assist
Yayyyy, I'm failing a PCIDSS scan because they're checking version numbers of services instead of vulnerabilities. Either I figure out how to convince someone the current versions are patched, or I have to compile and install a newer version than RHEL supports.