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It's actually the reply to the post I linked to, sorry.
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment
"Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst
"I don't drink any more... then again, I don't drink any less." - Mike Mullikins uncle
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Yes, I think it was deleted. After first posting it, I realized that I had misspelled "hexadecimal" as "hexidecimal". I did it in this post, too. D'oh!
So I edited the post to change the spelling of hexadecimal, and shortly thereafter the thread disappeared. Being new here, I assumed that the forum Gods did not approve of the post. That's fine; the forums belong to them, and they work hard to maintain them. I respect that.
The topic amuses me, and I'm curious how you guys would reply. I decided to approach it differently and post again. The worst that can happen is that the post is denied, right?
The other day, I saw a bumper sticker. It read "My AR-15 identifies as a Musket". I had to laugh when I read it. Previous to seeing that, I came across a cartoon depicting a man on a motorcycle riding ahead of a group of bicyclists. The caption below read "Motorcyclist who identifies as a cyclist wins the Tour De France". I couldn't help but laugh at that one, too.
The world is a ridiculous place. If you don't laugh, you're gonna cry.
BTW, what does the hex code you replied with mean? I assume it's code for "dude"?
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Steve Raw wrote: I assumed that the forum Gods did not approve of the post. Same. Although they've let other pollical posts though, so I'm starting to have less and less respect for some people.
Steve Raw wrote: The world is a ridiculous place. If you don't laugh, you're gonna cry. Real talk.
Steve Raw wrote: BTW, what does the hex code you replied with mean? I assume it's code for "dude"? Yup yup
Jeremy Falcon
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Learn how to spell hexadecimal.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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I know, right? WTF is wrong with me? I misspelled it twice now!
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Maybe his was the dark magic kind?
Jeremy Falcon
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I got an astrology book in Russian and interested to convert it into English to take a look.
Somehow google can not convert PDF file as a whole.
any recommendation?
diligent hands rule....
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Use one of the conversion tools to change the PDF to something that Google can handle. There's got to be something out there that can do PDF text extraction and conversion to UTF-8 if needed.
It might take a couple steps: extraction to simple text, then character set translation (a Russian code page for example to UTF-8).
Software Zen: delete this;
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Maybe take an account for 'Pay ChatGPT'?
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Getting the text is the trick. The PDF may just be images (of text); then you need OCR.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Just make it up. It's astrology, not astronomy. Since it's all mumbo-jumbo BS, who'll be able to tell the difference?
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Oh, you're bad.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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I used it as my astronomy and mainly check aspects of the planets etc..
diligent hands rule....
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If you want a planetary ephemeris, they are available for a small sum on Amazon and presumably other sites. I use a 10-year ephemeris good till 2030.
If you want specifically astrological references, I'm certain that you can find them in English.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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thank you!
diligent hands rule....
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why would you wish to do such a thing . it is after all astrology . how can Russian astrology not be just as stupid as English astrology . no doubt there are more interesting / productive ways to spend your time .
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Well, people translate the bible all the time
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1st i presume the Bible has already been translated into every known language .
2nd i presume the Bible is not astrology .
3rd i presume the original poster one Southmountain does not believe for one second the non-sense of astrology .
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You grossly underestimate the number of languages in the world.
For those languages where a translation exists, there are new translations made regularly, alt least for the "big" languages. How many different English translations exist? On the net, I can access four different "official" (that is, from the Norwegian Bible Society) translations; I've got at least two other translations of the New Testament and the Psalms in my bookshelf.
Astrology is a quite specific concept. There are tales in the bible involving astrologers, but lots of tales about other ideas of strange powers and structures that cannot be verified any more than the astrology tales.
There is no principal difference between turning down a wish for a translation of an astrology text and a similar wish for translation of a bible. Then both describe claims of unprovable supernatural forces. I drew the parallel between the two.
In other cultures, in other times, astrology has had a comparable position in society as Christian beliefs have in ours. In other times, turning down astrology as nonsense, would be like turning down Christianity as nonsense in the American society today.
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at least part of the Bible spoke of Jesus . a real person who seemed a decent chap . i presume there are no similar decent chaps in astrology . it is not surprising to me people would be interested in him .
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If you look in the old testament, there are quite a few far from decent chaps.
And for this Jesus fellow: Yes, there were a couple of him. The Jesus that Matthew tells about being born under Herod (died 4 BCE) can't possibly be the same as Luke's Jesus, born when when Quirinius was governor of Syria (from 6 CE).
Matthew-Jesus' family was living in Bethlehem, in a house. There is no reference to neither enrollment, stable or shepards. No indication of a return home, or a travel to Bethlehem - they were living there. But they had to flee to Egypt for a few years. They wanted to return to Bethlehem, but found it too risky - that is when they settled in Nazaret.
Luke-Jesus came traveling from Nazareth where the family lived, up to Bethlehem (for the enrollment) and was born in a stable. There is no reference to star or wise men or flight to Egypt. After having gone through the necessary rituals, they returned home to Nazareth.
The two Jesuses have distinctly differing genealogy.
So there were at least two Jesus chaps. Now, 'Jesus' was a common name (and still is in a lot of countries). Claiming that Jesus never lived is just silly. Lots of Jesuses have lived. Also, for preachers of both judaism (like the bible Jesuses) and other religions, around that time it certainly was common to present yourself as a 'son of god'. The bible Jesuses were not alone in that claim.
For the things that one or another of these Jesuses are said to have done: A good share of the stories are found in a lot older religions. Other holy persons pulled the same tricks hundreds and thousands of years before one of those bible Jesuses copied them. If they did. Maybe the scribes just copied the stories.
For the reliability of such stories: One Norwegian reporter told of his experience in Oslo downtown, at Karl Johan street - a pedestrian street where you see a lot of strange fellows. Preachers are common, there are most of them on Saturdays. One of them told claimed that he could heal this guy with a crippled foot by prayer and touching the foot with his hands. So he started an intense session of prayer and shouting, and stroked the crippled foot again and again. But he had to conclude that a man cannot demand anything from God, God shows his healing power when He thinks it appropriate. Maybe next time, God will heal the crippled foot.
That is not the major point, it comes now: This reporter was out on Karl Johan street the following Saturday. There was a young girl who he recognized from a week back. The girl was up on a stand, witnessing the wonder she had seen Saturday a week ago, where a man with a crippled foot had been healed by prayer and laying of hands, right before her eyes! Hallelujah! Praise God who can do such wonders!
If it happens in our time, a sunny Saturday in downtown Oslo, it sure could have happened 2000 years ago. I am not talking about a crippled foot being healed. I am talking about believers so convinced that the healing will take place that they see it before their eyes even though all the non-believers witnessing the same event see that there was no healing.
With so many of the Jesus-stories being well known tales of holy persons long before the time of Jesus, I am not one to take all the tales of the bible scribes at face value.
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BernardIE5317 wrote: 1st i presume the Bible has already been translated into every known language
Probably but you should also note that there are different versions of the 'Bible'.
And that is just the standard one as well. There are, for example, picture book bibles.
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