There are five projects inside CommonLibraries, and four of them are updating normally. The last one only arrived with @Tim's method, and doesn't show up under CommonLibraries; it looks like its own project.
I want to build a QA-Site like StackOverflow (for a certain topic).
I already looked for good clones.
The best one I found was Shapado.
This one requires Ruby and a few more modules.
Is there a PHP-based clone which is nearly as good as Shapado?
Can you try to check out a new copy of the parent directory?
Edit: To be bit more specific, I meant to suggest going up one level and deleting the containing directory. Then do a
svn update --set-depth infinity
to replace the directory.
@PopularDemand Well, I think no one has ever been a GridBagLayout ninja for more than a couple of weeks at a time. Human brains just aren't meant to hold such quantities of knowledge.
It's probably somewhat crash-prone, but it's game-time-limited anyhow. (You can play it as many times as you like, just for 30 in-game years with no saving.)
And of course it's really easy to find cracked versions because we don't use DRM.
I recall hearing of an indie developer that did a pay-what-you-want sale, where you could pay as little as one cent for their game (I'm pretty sure it was a game).
@radp "Rosen also stated that for about ten users that emailed Wolfire about being unable to pay for the software, he personally donated on their behalf."
Question for anyone who's listening: today I had a phone call with a little publishing company which wants to 'go digital' and start doing eBooks. They wanted to advice on which approach was best for converting their back catalogue, and how to minimize the work of publishing both paper and e-books.
About which I know nothing.
They have Google, but I have stackoverflow. Not sure where I'd ask a question about that though, it's top-notch "subjective, not a real question, not programming related"
Oh, they ended up with my phone number because they'd told someone they wanted to learn xml :)
@PopularDemand :) I was highly suspicious when I received a mail saying "we are looking for training in xml and other tools". Sounded like they'd read an article somewhere saying xml would solve all their problems...
> The old Macintosh operating system used Pascal strings everywhere. Many C programmers on other platforms used Pascal strings for speed. Excel uses Pascal strings internally which is why strings in many places in Excel are limited to 255 bytes, and it's also one reason Excel is blazingly fast
I knew that about MacOS. I did not know that about Excel