erAck
- Karma
- 65
- Created
- August 18, 2017 (8y ago)
- Submissions
- 0
[ my public key: https://keybase.io/erack; my proof: https://keybase.io/erack/sigs/JNk5c_az3JZgnO415r5sHrShCj64eZ5oiYCKgfDv0jM ]
This is an OpenPGP proof that connects my OpenPGP key to this Hackernews account. For details check out https://keyoxide.org/guides/openpgp-proofs
[Verifying my OpenPGP key: openpgp4fpr:2265D7F3A7B095CC3918630B6A6CD5B765632D3A]
> The link is just about a move from one part of Munich to another (MS German HQ has always been in Munich). Nope. They moved from Unterschleißheim (administrative district of Munich in Upper Bavaria) to Schwabing…
And actually it depends on the locale you work in whether SEPT is a valid month abbreviation or not.
SEPT-2 is changed to date (that is how all major spreadsheet software works if an input is accepted as date), SEPT2 is kept as text as entered.
> if they had a "scientific mode" to not be smart with your data That "scientific mode" is called text. Assign the column type Text during CSV import and nothing is converted to numeric or date.
LibreOffice Calc: "SEPT-2" is a date, "SEPT2" is not.
So we need 4400 persons falling off a roof to be par with nuclear power plants. I still consider this ratio a much better outcome than a power plant going off anywhere near (radius to be defined in Mm depending on wind…
With the difference that one person dropping dead from a roof hurts one family, a nuclear plant going off spoils a huge area for generations.
Whether solar and wind power are major energy sources depends on where in what region you live.
They did not include any numbers on wind, solar, hydro, tide, ... renewable energy; limiting the comparison to "the dominant" energy sources what they call "all major energy sources" shows how narrow the researchers'…
Lovely. Thanks!
Try to "simply follow" when it's nested twelve levels deep. Anyhow, with both approaches, nested or early return, the reader has to read the function from the beginning (or read back until the relevant part) to grasp…
Regarding your fraction example there: =RAWSUBTRACT(0.1,-0.2,1/3) => -0.033333333333333 =RAWSUBTRACT(0.1,-0.2,2/7) => 0.014285714285714 So which one is closer to 0.3?
As you referenced that bug and there also gave an example involving fractions and =0.1+0.2 you would certainly also agree that the binary floating point representation of =0.1+0.2-0.3 is not 0.0, still Excel displays 0…
Exactly. You don't want documentation editors having to learn git and all cumbersome processes first. They may not even want to learn that. They want to edit and get their changes in.
If it's Electron it's the reason to not use it.
Everyone please stop copy-posting .../amp/ links. Here's without: https://ragpickinghistory.co.uk/2013/03/30/into-the-forbidde...
No, never.
Jerks do jerk moves to move as jerks.
This is fun, but (at least for me) there's awful scratch noise when each note's sound starts playing, which unfortunately doesn't make it enjoyable at all.
Understanding how to use any word processor is a job skill. LibreOffice supports Akan, an official language spoken in Ghana. Projects could translate the UI to Akan so even more people would be able to use it.
So you prefer to throw them into the MS mono culture pit.
He should teach LibreOffice Writer instead so when actually some laptops arrive at the school they wouldn't have to waste money on MS product licenses.
The other passgen also can use a wordlist.
https://defuse.ca/passgen.htm uses /dev/(u)random on Linux and CryptGenRandom() on Windows, with source code on GitHub for Linux https://github.com/defuse/passgen and https://github.com/defuse/WinPassGen Without a pile…
a) after the document is loaded such use triggers the "links to other documents" warning and linked content is updated only after confirmation b) the URL is shown under menu Edit -> Links...