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According to the Book of Joshua, the Battle of Jericho was the first battle of the Israelites in their conquest of Canaan. According to Joshua 6:1-27, the walls of Jericho fell after Joshua's Israelite army marched around the city blowing their trumpets. Excavations at Tell es-Sultan, the biblical Jericho, have failed to produce data to substantiate the biblical story, and scholars are virtually unanimous that the Book of Joshua holds little historical value.
== Joshua 6:1-27 ==
The story of Jericho is told in Joshua 6:1-27.
The first five books of the Hebrew Bible tell how Noah cursed Canaan to...
> On the seventh day they marched seven times around the walls, then the priests blew their ram's horns, the Israelites raised a great shout, and the walls of the city fell.
So anything involving doing same action seven times reminds me of this.... ;)
@ShadowWizard haha...trust me, you won't be able to induce a bug that easily. There is a permission structure for android, and every app has to ask permissions for doing certain things, also, potential bug inducing things are even out of reach of user...so you don't need to worry about it ;)
@ShadowWizard yup, though android studio will close eventually (or you can just start task manager and bam!). But, once you start gradle, there's no stopping it. The red close button that they show next to progress of gradle, does absolutely nothing in my experience :/
btw, judging from the project you are developing, what PC specs do you have? Since gradle doesn't take 10 minutes on a small project.
@ShadowWizard umm...I don't think so. Gradle checks all the dependencies you've added (external libraries etc), cleans the project, builds it according to specs again. That's it. Not related to alterations in views
@ShadowWizard hmm...I only do it since I started when it was norm. I grew into it actually
although, I think the above text is what you see on scree. Don't have a clue about the second one. Maybe copying the text written there will give some insight
Gone: it will remove the space the view occupies on screen, as well as hiding it Invisible: The view won't be visible on screen, but it will still occupy the space it had
@DroidDev yup. Applying "display: none;" is the common thing, and as you wrote will "remove the space the element occupies on screen, as well as hiding it". Setting "visibility: hidden;" will cause it "won't be visible on screen, but it will still occupy the space it had"
@rene of course, less work for them... though the wording is weird. ;)
@DroidDev well that's the common use... actually used visibility CSS rule very rarely, remember it exists only because it stuck for some reason while I learned CSS. :)
@ShadowWizard I do, she is actually my first girlfriend, and we are almost 6 months in relationship, so when we broke up i found new gf same day, and she was really jelly, so i back to start :D