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Most of the stuff should already work with it. The only things I don't code to .NET Standard 2.0 are things that are windows specific.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I hear ya Sista.
I had the recent pleasure of writing a transfer filter to copy the days sales from my little shop to the parent companies QBO system. With their adorable API.
Then when my wife was caught red handed hand entering sales from woo commerce to the same company's qbo and wrote a filter for that. The WooCommerce API makes so much more sense.
Then, my dear wife bought two of those tuya smart sockets which are foreign to the installed (hand rolled) home automation system so I hacked them into the litter.
As of today, I'm done with nothing else to do. After 3 months of hobby coding and learning new technologies and languages by default, entertaining myself at home while the rest of the extroverted world goes bat Sh#t. Now it's my turn. Thankfully, tomorrow we all get let off the leash and so yeah. Back to "normal".
But I do love coding. Especially when my successes and failures aren't directly tied to my income.
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Seem to remember that members who met a certain criteria (ie regulars) were given the trust to post pic uploads somewhere on here(f*** knows why as us lot are probably more likely to post depraved stuff)
Can someone point me to where/how please.
Disclaimer: pictures won’t be depraved, sorry. But they will accompany a great story that happened to me last weekend that includes intruders in my house and a gruesome murder with an unlikely object. An air freshener can. Pretty sure that wasn’t in cluedo(clue).
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"Member photo's"; simply copy and paste your picture into the textbox
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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It is only allowed in the Site Bugs & Suggestions forum when reporting problems. Or the "Where I work" forum for general views of your workspace. For the rest you need to post the pictures on Instagram or similar and add a link in the message.
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Nice video! But could you provide a link to it in the form of a kitten? Possibly perpendicular?
"Five fruits and vegetables a day? What a joke!
Personally, after the third watermelon, I'm full."
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When I was teaching at a tech college, I always structured the final exam problems according to the Bloom taxonomy:
The a) question asked for pure reproduction; it was usually quite simple, and could be looked up in the textbook material. (I always insisted on open book exams!)
The b) question required the student to show that he had, at a basic level, comprehended the information in the textbook, e.g. by explaining concepts is his own words or related to other concepts.
The c) question asked for how to apply this knowledge to a specified problem.
The d) question was pointed at analysis: How well the candidate could decompose a situation into constituent parts, isolate subproblems, create a reasonable modularization.
The e) question was aimed at putting together pieces as a whole, "synthesis" in Bloom terms.
The f) question asked for critical evaluation of what was put together in question e), or in most cases: Describing how to evauluate it.
Usually, a full exam had three areas structured this way, so that if a candidate was weak in one area, he could demonstrate his excellence in another on.
Up until the c) question, you could usually find reasonably good answers in the textbooks (as long as you knew them well). I always spent some time at the end of the course describing this plan to the students, handing out the problems from exams of earlier years, telling them that they would pass if they could provide a reasonable answer to the three c) questions, but if they wanted something more than just a passing grade, climbing up the ladder of understanding was required.
This was a great frustration to some of our guest students from Asia: They couldn't understand that if they copied everything correctly from the textbook, why wouldn't that give them a top grade? I explained to them that copying the textbook never got them beyond the c) question (illustrating it by earlier exam's d, e and f questions), and they were really worried...
Generally speaking, you could get a top grade by handling the e) question reasonably well. The f) question essentiall gave the candidate an opportunity to show excellence in one area that coud compensate for a weakness in another area.
Open book exams and online exams are quite similar. You get only so far without thinking yuorself, it the exam is properly structured. I gusess some tightening up might be needed for an online exam, but if I were made resposible for one, I would go by the same basic plan.
I certainly learned a lot by forcing myself to structure final exams according to this schedule!
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We got a call for Herself to go for her COVID-19 test and had to run, only just got back.
My word, but the roads are empty. 70 mile round trip, all "A" and "B" roads - not dual carriageway, much less motorway - and obeying speed limits: 52mph average - I've had a hard time maintaining that on a 3 lane motorway! As Herself said: "It's like 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon in the 70's out here"
Got there well early - half an hour - but there was no queue so we sailed through and came home.
Results will be 48 ~ 72 hours, so at least we will know one way or the other early next week.
Right, I'm going to collapse - that was exhausting!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Hope everything comes back clear.
A 70-mile round trip?! Did you retire to a sheep farm? 🐑
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52mph average over that long a stretch of A and B roads is amazing.
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I know! But the car has an drive time / distance, average MPG / MPH display, and I've never seen it that high before ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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of all the places to go these testing centres / places (i.e. apart from those like you requested to go for precautionary tests they're also places where people with symptoms are supposed to go) worry me
- and of course feeling sheepish about both catching & spreading the wotsit
driving these days sure is like the old days, less jams, faster flowing, people thinking no one's around so no need to stop at the intersection, hoons seeing they've got so much empty road it's time to see how fast she'll go...(and not forgetting the surge in amateur philosopher chickens)
pestilence [ pes-tl-uh ns ] noun
1. a deadly or virulent epidemic disease. especially bubonic plague.
2. something that is considered harmful, destructive, or evil.
Synonyms: pest, plague, CCP
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Good luck to y'all hope everything works out! Nasty stuff from what I've heard!
When you talk, you are only repeating what you already know.
But if you listen, you may learn something new.
--Dalai Lama
JaxCoder.com
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If what she's given me is COVID, it's like the worse Flu I've ever had, doubled. Really nasty, and that's before it's started in with breathing problems.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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and now there's Heart Damage in COVID-19 Patients Puzzles Doctors - Scientific American[^] this. I've been scared because I'm old for one and I smoked and did construction for so many years without a mask so I've had breathing problems. I quit smoking about 9-10 years ago and that helped but I still have problems.
Hope for you a speedy recovery!
When you talk, you are only repeating what you already know.
But if you listen, you may learn something new.
--Dalai Lama
JaxCoder.com
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hmm, interesting.
But I'm not going to start again, it's to damned hard to quit.
When you talk, you are only repeating what you already know.
But if you listen, you may learn something new.
--Dalai Lama
JaxCoder.com
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Mate - look after yourself, please. (and keep us updated)
cheers
Chris Maunder
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I hope for some good news in a few days; I can imagine the amount of stress this must be causing.
"Five fruits and vegetables a day? What a joke!
Personally, after the third watermelon, I'm full."
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