Windows XP Mode using Windows Virtual PC. Convenient download if you ever need it for testing or whatevers. "Windows XP End of Support on April 8th, 2014." #nostalgia http://bit.ly/2e4AtD1
by Joe PC
October 14, 2016 at 01:24PM
from Facebook
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Friday, October 14, 2016
Windows XP Mode using Windows Virtual PC. Convenient download if you ever need it for testing or whatevers. "Windows XP End of Support on April 8th, 2014." #nostalgia http://bit.ly/2e4AtD1
Windows XP Mode using Windows Virtual PC. Convenient download if you ever need it for testing or whatevers. "Windows XP End of Support on April 8th, 2014." #nostalgia http://bit.ly/2e4AtD1
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
Friday, September 30, 2016
Interesting spinner effect animating an clock. No images or JavaScript, just text symbol characters using 100% CSS. http://bit.ly/2dgAYuJ http://bit.ly/2dGhlKI Cycles through a set of characters divided by \A (this character creates line breaks). "[A] stepped keyframe animation shifts the pseudo-element up one line-height per step."
Interesting spinner effect animating an clock. No images or JavaScript, just text symbol characters using 100% CSS. http://bit.ly/2dgAYuJ http://bit.ly/2dGhlKI Cycles through a set of characters divided by \A (this character creates line breaks). "[A] stepped keyframe animation shifts the pseudo-element up one line-height per step."
Interesting spinner effect animating an clock. No images or JavaScript, just text symbol characters using 100% CSS. http://bit.ly/2dgAYuJ http://bit.ly/2dGhlKI Cycles through a set of characters divided by \A (this character creates line breaks). "[A] stepped keyframe animation shifts the pseudo-element up one line-height per step."
Interesting spinner effect animating an clock. No images or JavaScript, just text symbol characters using 100% CSS. http://bit.ly/2dgAYuJ http://bit.ly/2dGhlKI Cycles through a set of characters divided by \A (this character creates line breaks). "[A] stepped keyframe animation shifts the pseudo-element up one line-height per step."
by Joe PC
September 30, 2016 at 04:34PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
September 30, 2016 at 04:34PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Is there anything VLC can't do? I didn't know you could do screen recordings with VLC! http://bit.ly/2bChb9I
Is there anything VLC can't do? I didn't know you could do screen recordings with VLC! http://bit.ly/2bChb9I
Is there anything VLC can't do? I didn't know you could do screen recordings with VLC! http://bit.ly/2bChb9I
Windows 98 or Linux in JavaScript in your browser (Node.js)?? http://bit.ly/2bJy6o1 http://bit.ly/2bSaNLI
Windows 98 or Linux in JavaScript in your browser (Node.js)?? http://bit.ly/2bJy6o1 http://bit.ly/2bSaNLI
Windows 98 or Linux in JavaScript in your browser (Node.js)?? http://bit.ly/2bJy6o1 http://bit.ly/2bSaNLI
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.
When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.
by Joe PC
August 30, 2016 at 02:53PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
August 30, 2016 at 02:53PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.
When your Extensions get out of hand... http://bit.ly/2bQpi1h I know something's wrong when a site is behaving badly, but works fine in Incognito Mode or switching to a different user. That tells me an extension or two is causing the issue. Rather than having to Uninstall or Disable in chrome://extensions/, I can quickly enable/disable groups of extensions at once.
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."
http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."
by Joe PC
August 23, 2016 at 01:49PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
August 23, 2016 at 01:49PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."
http://bit.ly/2btJhm6 "Utilizing a Client Side Rendering (CSR) model, the SharePoint Framework is a big step in modern Web Development for SharePoint. CSR allows SharePoint Developers to insert solutions directly into SharePoint without resorting to server-side integration methods. A CSR model allows us to decouple the back-end of SharePoint from the front-end presentation of information to the client (browser). With new possibilities for customizing the front-end interface of SharePoint, I assume that we will start to see incredibly innovative branding and other front-end solutions for SharePoint."
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."
Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."
Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."
Aurelia, another one for me to try sometime (aurelia.io). Very clean looking. http://bit.ly/2b0dCuV Aurelia developer, Rob Eisenberg, "was also part of the team behind Angular 2 before certain decisions made on the project made him jump ship. ... Something you'll notice immediately is that the syntax is much simpler and more explicit (i.e. self-explanatory) than Angular 2 and looks a lot like standard JS syntax. ... Aurelia also uses conventions instead of its own syntax and boilerplate code. No special characters like the ones in Angular 2 (*, (), [] en #) here."
by Joe PC
August 17, 2016 at 01:19PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
August 17, 2016 at 01:19PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
Monday, August 15, 2016
My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).
My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).
by Joe PC
August 15, 2016 at 12:24PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
August 15, 2016 at 12:24PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).
My brain was spinning with possibilities as I researched solutions and all the pieces of a new project. So, I put together a Kanban board with 3 "states" to help me count the cost: "To Do", "Doing", and "Done." Basically, a fancy to-do list that need not be technical (works for any task).
Monday, August 8, 2016
Full Stack Developer
Friday, August 5, 2016
Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.
Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.
Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.
Spent a lot of yesterday trying to "scrape" a link from a search page on the same server using jQuery.load(). Ended up using .ajax() to make this tiny bit of code. Even a few properties are redundant & defaults. I should use that more. Kinda fun and a nice result. One less click (no point in two clicks). Also, I need to be able to do this in plain JavaScript using XMLHttpRequest. JavaScript has come a long way. I used to hate it, but jQuery has helped ease me into it. I imagine jQuery also influenced the evolution of JavaScript (ES6), as well as influence from object-oriented developers.
by Joe PC
August 05, 2016 at 10:30AM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
August 05, 2016 at 10:30AM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
by Joe PC
August 05, 2016 at 10:02AM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
August 05, 2016 at 10:02AM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
by Joe PC
August 05, 2016 at 09:57AM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
August 05, 2016 at 09:57AM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
"JQuery Selectors" Chrome Extension - simple example. Allows you to do a JQuery select on the page and manipulate the object somehow. I just did a highlight for demo: .show("highlight"). You could also simply right click on the html element and click "Copy" > "Copy selector". This will usually get you what you want if you're just looking for a way to get to the element in JQuery.
Monday, August 1, 2016
TL;DR. Looks like a nice summary.
Thursday, July 28, 2016
Thank you, Jesus! Thank you, Stack Overflow! This made me LOL.
Thank you, Jesus! Thank you, Stack Overflow! This made me LOL.
Thank you, Jesus! Thank you, Stack Overflow! This made me LOL.
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Good site for interactively developing, testing, and learning about Regular expressions!
Good site for interactively developing, testing, and learning about Regular expressions!
Good site for interactively developing, testing, and learning about Regular expressions!
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Generics in Typescript. Thought it was funny for some reason that this transpiles down to normal, typeless JavaScript! :D
Generics in Typescript. Thought it was funny for some reason that this transpiles down to normal, typeless JavaScript! :D
Generics in Typescript. Thought it was funny for some reason that this transpiles down to normal, typeless JavaScript! :D
Highly rated free class about Angularjs2.0 on Microsoft Virtual Academy. http://bit.ly/2aupO5Y
Highly rated free class about Angularjs2.0 on Microsoft Virtual Academy. http://bit.ly/2aupO5Y
Highly rated free class about Angularjs2.0 on Microsoft Virtual Academy. http://bit.ly/2aupO5Y
Trying to update my skillset with AngularJS. And I was just getting somewhat good at jQuery... http://bit.ly/29XcWVd
Trying to update my skillset with AngularJS. And I was just getting somewhat good at jQuery... http://bit.ly/29XcWVd
Trying to update my skillset with AngularJS. And I was just getting somewhat good at jQuery... http://bit.ly/29XcWVd
Thursday, July 14, 2016
Haven't play it yet.. but I would play Pokemon this way, or any augmented reality game for that matter! They should market a drone pre-made for augmented reality games. Pretty awesome. https://youtu.be/-bpEgmUkr7w
Haven't play it yet.. but I would play Pokemon this way, or any augmented reality game for that matter! They should market a drone pre-made for augmented reality games. Pretty awesome. https://youtu.be/-bpEgmUkr7w
Haven't play it yet.. but I would play Pokemon this way, or any augmented reality game for that matter! They should market a drone pre-made for augmented reality games. Pretty awesome. https://youtu.be/-bpEgmUkr7w
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
Friday, July 8, 2016
Very useful! Getting there is not very necessarily obvious. You can visualize fairly sophisticated queries in the "Query Designer" in SQL Server Management Studio. It has been in Windows as "Microsoft Query" for years (accessible from Access & Excel). Other than right-clicking on a Table name for "Edit Top 200 Rows", you can right click a selected query in an open *.sql file and click "Design Query in Editor".
Very useful! Getting there is not very necessarily obvious. You can visualize fairly sophisticated queries in the "Query Designer" in SQL Server Management Studio. It has been in Windows as "Microsoft Query" for years (accessible from Access & Excel). Other than right-clicking on a Table name for "Edit Top 200 Rows", you can right click a selected query in an open *.sql file and click "Design Query in Editor".
by Joe PC
July 08, 2016 at 12:23PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
July 08, 2016 at 12:23PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
Very useful! Getting there is not very necessarily obvious. You can visualize fairly sophisticated queries in the "Query Designer" in SQL Server Management Studio. It has been in Windows as "Microsoft Query" for years (accessible from Access & Excel). Other than right-clicking on a Table name for "Edit Top 200 Rows", you can right click a selected query in an open *.sql file and click "Design Query in Editor".
Very useful! Getting there is not very necessarily obvious. You can visualize fairly sophisticated queries in the "Query Designer" in SQL Server Management Studio. It has been in Windows as "Microsoft Query" for years (accessible from Access & Excel). Other than right-clicking on a Table name for "Edit Top 200 Rows", you can right click a selected query in an open *.sql file and click "Design Query in Editor".
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
"Weird's all I've got. That and my sweet style!"
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Haha! They forgot 3.1 and ME
Wednesday, May 4, 2016
(At 1:09): Two brothers created an IFTTT recipe to lock a door behind when leaving the network. Obviously not perfect, but an interesting concept. I'm sure it doesn't have to be limited to Google OnHub. One YouTube commenter said they could achieve this with Tasker. https://youtu.be/JPH74ZHDuCI?t=1m9s
(At 1:09): Two brothers created an IFTTT recipe to lock a door behind when leaving the network. Obviously not perfect, but an interesting concept. I'm sure it doesn't have to be limited to Google OnHub. One YouTube commenter said they could achieve this with Tasker. https://youtu.be/JPH74ZHDuCI?t=1m9s
by Joe PC
May 04, 2016 at 04:08PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
May 04, 2016 at 04:08PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
(At 1:09): Two brothers created an IFTTT recipe to lock a door behind when leaving the network. Obviously not perfect, but an interesting concept. I'm sure it doesn't have to be limited to Google OnHub. One YouTube commenter said they could achieve this with Tasker. https://youtu.be/JPH74ZHDuCI?t=1m9s
(At 1:09): Two brothers created an IFTTT recipe to lock a door behind when leaving the network. Obviously not perfect, but an interesting concept. I'm sure it doesn't have to be limited to Google OnHub. One YouTube commenter said they could achieve this with Tasker. https://youtu.be/JPH74ZHDuCI?t=1m9s
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
Friday, April 8, 2016
Photo Uploader app that I made for The City of Bakersfield: http://bit.ly/1NfgCdy I used a heavily modified Bootstrap template, Font Awesome, JavaScript, jQuery, C Sharp, and a Telerik Uploader from the AJAX Control Toolkit. It even works in Safari (had some issues and my nephew, Tim, sent me a screenshot). :D
Photo Uploader app that I made for The City of Bakersfield: http://bit.ly/1NfgCdy I used a heavily modified Bootstrap template, Font Awesome, JavaScript, jQuery, C Sharp, and a Telerik Uploader from the AJAX Control Toolkit. It even works in Safari (had some issues and my nephew, Tim, sent me a screenshot). :D
Photo Uploader app that I made for The City of Bakersfield: http://bit.ly/1NfgCdy I used a heavily modified Bootstrap template, Font Awesome, JavaScript, jQuery, C Sharp, and a Telerik Uploader from the AJAX Control Toolkit. It even works in Safari (had some issues and my nephew, Tim, sent me a screenshot). :D
Photo Uploader app that I made for The City of Bakersfield: http://bit.ly/1NfgCdy I used a heavily modified Bootstrap template, Font Awesome, JavaScript, jQuery, C Sharp, and a Telerik Uploader from the AJAX Control Toolkit. It even works in Safari (had some issues and my nephew, Tim, sent me a screenshot). :D
by Joe PC
April 08, 2016 at 05:06PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
April 08, 2016 at 05:06PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
Thursday, April 7, 2016
"Linkify.js" -- fun little side-project for work (jQuery, CSS3) since some fields in a SharePoint Survey weren't auto-linking. Also, some of the links are "ugly" and should be hidden behind an appropriate title. I added "preview" functionality, because there is no point in people having to click to see the site if they can just get a preview by hovering over the link.
"Linkify.js" -- fun little side-project for work (jQuery, CSS3) since some fields in a SharePoint Survey weren't auto-linking. Also, some of the links are "ugly" and should be hidden behind an appropriate title. I added "preview" functionality, because there is no point in people having to click to see the site if they can just get a preview by hovering over the link.
by Joe PC
April 07, 2016 at 12:09PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
by Joe PC
April 07, 2016 at 12:09PM
from Facebook
via IFTTTfrom Facebook
via IFTTT
"Linkify.js" -- fun little side-project for work (jQuery, CSS3) since some fields in a SharePoint Survey weren't auto-linking. Also, some of the links are "ugly" and should be hidden behind an appropriate title. I added "preview" functionality, because there is no point in people having to click to see the site if they can just get a preview by hovering over the link.
"Linkify.js" -- fun little side-project for work (jQuery, CSS3) since some fields in a SharePoint Survey weren't auto-linking. Also, some of the links are "ugly" and should be hidden behind an appropriate title. I added "preview" functionality, because there is no point in people having to click to see the site if they can just get a preview by hovering over the link.
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
www.cubic-bezier.com Useful & fun tool to understand the "cubic-bezier()" function in CSS transitions. I wonder if the highlighted was ever fixed in Apple Safari (WebKit).
www.cubic-bezier.com Useful & fun tool to understand the "cubic-bezier()" function in CSS transitions. I wonder if the highlighted was ever fixed in Apple Safari (WebKit).
www.cubic-bezier.com Useful & fun tool to understand the "cubic-bezier()" function in CSS transitions. I wonder if the highlighted was ever fixed in Apple Safari (WebKit).
Friday, January 29, 2016
I'm no T-SQL pro, but, as with any language, I want to exercise the best practice rather than the bare-minimum. So, I'll use the semicolon even when it's not necessary. It's like ending your sentences with periods.
I'm no T-SQL pro, but, as with any language, I want to exercise the best practice rather than the bare-minimum. So, I'll use the semicolon even when it's not necessary. It's like ending your sentences with periods.
I'm no T-SQL pro, but, as with any language, I want to exercise the best practice rather than the bare-minimum. So, I'll use the semicolon even when it's not necessary. It's like ending your sentences with periods.
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
This is funny to me.. and hopeful. (C Sharp vs Visual Basic .NET)
This is funny to me.. and hopeful. (C Sharp vs Visual Basic .NET)
This is funny to me.. and hopeful. (C Sharp vs Visual Basic .NET)
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