C:\Documents and Settings\{guess}\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\WebsiteCache\websites.xml
WhyTF!! is there data stored in Local Settings App Data Website Cache that's preventing me from having a good build???????? GGGGGGGAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH
> As long as a user gets an answer they can understand to the specific question they asked, it doesn’t hurt to edit their question. It certainly doesn’t hurt to edit it for grammar and typos, and it doesn’t even hurt to remove unnecessary specifics (changing someone’s domain name to “example.com” for example). - Joel Spolsky
oh, if it's this kind of generalization Joel was talking about, then the post is not as earth-breaking as I originally read it.
@RebeccaChernoff I saw last time when I tried to be social and play
@Fosco I'll look into it tonight; it's hard to convince my coworkers I'm working when I'm really sitting on chat, I figure pulling out my phone and playing Scrabble will finally tip them off
@radp I'll be honest, I don't know anything about Symbian. But since you get to call yourself a user of something, I assumed you were better off than I am.
After I start a bounty, is it possible to award it to an answer that was posted before the bounty started?
Is there anything that prevents me from saying in the question, "I'll really appreciate if you help me with this, and if I like your answer, I'll start a bounty two days from now and I'll a...
@drachenstern Exactly. In RTS Scrabble, you just throw tiles at the other person to try and get them to say words. The more violent the words, the more points you get. But be sure to aim for their weak spots to inflict massive damage.
@TimStone heh. Well, it's creating the illusion of security... Some say the illusion is necessary for civilization to work (because civilization is so massively vulnerable people would go insane if they were aware of the potential dangers). I'm inclined to partly agree but what is being done under the banner of "security" in the western world is still horrible, and horrribly ineffective.
Actually, when I was sitting in the airport waiting for my flight, one of the ground crew left out those "emergency only" doors that go down to the tarmac from inside the terminal. He didn't close the door, so the alarm went off for about 15 minutes, and no wave of security people showed up or anything.
One of the people at the ticket desk called the office or something and they just shut off the alarm, heh.
Not to mention the 14-or-something year old that was able to get inside of the wheel well of that flight to Boston, and died on-route (and then fell out of the plane on some unsuspecting neighbourhood before landing...)
One of my college roommates used to love pointing out things that were dangerous but completely legal regarding travel. (Sorry for getting you on a watchlist, uh, "Albert.")
@PopularDemand I was going to make a joke, but I do fly too often that risking being put on a no-fly list is not high on my collection of things to do. :P
@Moshe I'm not sure, but as it stands, the system seems full of large holes that render the huge strain that is being put on the normal passenger completely useless. It's like buying a $50000 hardware firewall but then running a vulnerable web server on port 80. That is not a good thing, and must be changed, except if the goal is indeed to create the illusion of security in the face of a threat that can never be fully contained anyway. I don't know really
@TimStone Sucks to be you. I'm never going to fly again, unless it's, like, the only way I can make it to see [insert close friends or relatives here] before they die.
@PopularDemand Well, I was happy to find out that the body scanners aren't being nearly as much as they were advertised to be or were being used before.
And everything beyond that is relatively painless, especially if I can check in online.
@PopularDemand I didn't either, prior to my trip. But I didn't even see the machines in Philly, and in Atlanta they only had two in the center of the center of the checkpoint, and I didn't see anyone have to go through them.
> SWAT teams swarmed a Chicago-area school Monday evening after some hip-hop music and an accidental phone call led a woman to believe her husband was being held hostage, officials said. "...there were lyrics on the radio as he was driving home, and she listened to it and became concerned." ... leading her to believe he was being held hostage by a gunman in his office.
To do this over a non-solid bg, I don't think you can do it with CSS, but you could use canvas or SVG to the same effect - not exactly what you asked for, though.
However, there does appear to be a proposal for negative border radius that would solve the problem. Maybe some day, right.
Is this guy dense?
"I don't think you can do it with CSS" but the OP did and provided a working jsfiddle
and the answer came 4 hours after the OP posted his solution
ok, I had to see a bigger version of that face ...
Does anybody know why VS2010 would be force compiling my code to run on .net 4 libs when there's on code telling it to use .net 4 libs? the web.config etc all say 3.5, as do the various VS files (projects and the like) and I have manually moved it up then back down and can't seem to get it to respond "correctly" ... grrrrrrrrrrr
I know there was an issue with App_Browser being compiled to .net4 regardless of config settings, so I guess there's an additional when compiling .svc files ... but this is fracking annoying.
It is so hard to come up with remotely serious question titles when you have to talk about zombies, of all things...
The recent question zombie spawning asks about how zombies are spawned in Die2Nite... or however the capitalization goes.
An existing question from a month ago, Does killing zomb...
@radp well, yeah... I think there's a happy medium between the "Every word is sacred" crowd and, um, myself - but once a question has been satisfactorily answered, it's pretty clear which portions were superfluous.
Can jQuery perform an "if" function? As in, if a class exists in one menu item, apply that class to a different menu item? This is slightly different than the usual active page menu highlighting, as I'm dealing with active dropdown menus and child pages.
What I'd like to do is
(the usual suspec...
Is there any way in CSS to put a limit on how far something will cascade?
I'm running into a situation where my CSS is just going out of control because of how many classes I have to make, because of inheritence. For instance..
.menu a:hover {
background : #XXXXXX;
}
<div class="menu"&g...
AARG. I just thought I had found a serious bug in chat (dropping some messages) until I noticed I was still ignoring @PopularDemand from testing earlier
What is the best practice regarding Debug.Print statements?
Should I liter my class methods with Debug.Print statements or should I avoid Debug.Print altogether?
If Debug.Print statements are acceptable should I consider using Trace.Print or EventLog?
Are Debug.Print statements necessary with ...
Ok, we've been giving @marcGravell a hard time and we acknowledge it, so I had this bright idea to actually put in support ticket on it so SOIS can prioritize it.
When the notification creates its toast it the toast should go away and we do already have a bit of precedent for it and there is alr...
@RebeccaChernoff Now that you have weight to throw around, you should tell David that this question was only 1/3rd completed (the borders on the visited mod tags are still wrong, and the borders on the required meta tags are still light) :P
So did we have this discussion already? How does a 4.4k user on SO not know how to search / read wikipedia before asking a question about language mechanics ... and what in the hell, a conditional chainer?
Can jQuery perform an "if" function? As in, if a class exists in one menu item, apply that class to a different menu item? This is slightly different than the usual active page menu highlighting, as I'm dealing with active dropdown menus and child pages.
What I'd like to do is
(the usual suspec...
or you could feel free to leave it on the green path and save me the trouble :p
The front office secretary (who I realize does a lot more to keep the business going than I likely do, except it being my general labor that is one of the company's products, but still) keeps harping on me about did I move. I'm like "what part of across the street do you have a hard time with, I practically live here ffs" so I figured a graphic illustration would work best.
I did additionally give her the mailing address, but ya know, putting it on my desk saves a stamp and trouble
If i can arrange for a fly-over, I'll aim for one of the airhandlers on the roof - save you the trouble of walking around to annoy coworkers with the smell.
Is there any way in CSS to put a limit on how far something will cascade?
I'm running into a situation where my CSS is just going out of control because of how many classes I have to make, because of inheritence. For instance..
.menu a:hover {
background : #XXXXXX;
}
<div class="menu"&g...