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He's talking about inclement weather closings, not scheduled closings.
Quote from: enfynet on February 26, 2013, 12:15:45 pmQuote from: Kuildeous on February 25, 2013, 10:58:23 pmQuoted from a friend:QuoteWhy do I find the need to watch every school closing until mine comes up when I already know they don't have school??I just have to wonder why people still rely on watching scrolling school closings on television in the age of the internet. Somebody is doing something weird.When scheduling employees, I tend to look at calendar school closing days. It is surprisingly difficult to find that information for K-12 schools. It's a bit easier for colleges and universities. He's talking about inclement weather closings, not scheduled closings.
Quote from: Kuildeous on February 25, 2013, 10:58:23 pmQuoted from a friend:QuoteWhy do I find the need to watch every school closing until mine comes up when I already know they don't have school??I just have to wonder why people still rely on watching scrolling school closings on television in the age of the internet. Somebody is doing something weird.When scheduling employees, I tend to look at calendar school closing days. It is surprisingly difficult to find that information for K-12 schools. It's a bit easier for colleges and universities.
Quoted from a friend:QuoteWhy do I find the need to watch every school closing until mine comes up when I already know they don't have school??I just have to wonder why people still rely on watching scrolling school closings on television in the age of the internet. Somebody is doing something weird.
Why do I find the need to watch every school closing until mine comes up when I already know they don't have school??
Quote from: Donald X. on October 28, 2014, 04:29:33 pm...spin-offs are still better for all of the previously cited reasons.But not strictly better, because the spinoff can have a different cost than the expansion.
...spin-offs are still better for all of the previously cited reasons.
I just spent 10 hours writing Connect-Four in C involving forks and pipes, and I can't even play it; it's only a simulation. X_XMan, programming is hard.
Quote from: sparky5856 on March 07, 2013, 02:15:09 amI just spent 10 hours writing Connect-Four in C involving forks and pipes, and I can't even play it; it's only a simulation. X_XMan, programming is hard.C is a tad more difficult than most languages you're likely to actually program.Connect four sounds a lot more fun than anything I did when I first learned programming.
Prelude> let primes = sieve [2..] where sieve (x:xs) = x : sieve [y | y <- xs, y `mod` x /= 0]Prelude> take 20 primes[2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,37,41,43,47,53,59,61,67,71]
Haskell is beautiful:Code: [Select]Prelude> let primes = sieve [2..] where sieve (x:xs) = x : sieve [y | y <- xs, y `mod` x /= 0]Prelude> take 20 primes[2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,37,41,43,47,53,59,61,67,71]
My hair dryer just died. It was the greatest hair dryer I have ever known. RIP hair dryer.
Also the wire is really short on mine so I can't be on my laptop and dry my hair at the same time. This just gets worse and worse
Quote from: qmech on March 07, 2013, 04:08:39 amHaskell is beautiful:Code: [Select]Prelude> let primes = sieve [2..] where sieve (x:xs) = x : sieve [y | y <- xs, y `mod` x /= 0]Prelude> take 20 primes[2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,37,41,43,47,53,59,61,67,71]When I took the functional programming course we had a customized version of Haskell called Helium.I was so used to imperative programming that I thought "meh, how good can this be"?But then I learned the beauty of the mathematical statements and easy recursion with head and tail functionality, oh the elegance.I'm almost a bit sad that in my day job I still use C# and Java most of the time. If only I could work on a project which used F# for instance.
Today's wonderful amazing incredible song of the dayCarly Rae Jepsen & NIN -- Call Me A Hole (Call Me Maybe / Head Like a Hole)