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I was looking up some stuff about homophonic name matching and went to your site at the suggestion of one of the young sprouts that work here. I found a link to an article that mentioned something about Religious wars flaring up over differences between programming languages. But the only languages mentioned in the article were Java, C++ and VB. I'm sorry, but I'm not hip. Soundex doesn't do the job, but the only languages I could code any homophonic matching algorithm in would be COBOL or Assembler or ADS. Can anybody out there translate all this "class" and "method" stuff into words I could understand?
Would it really be terrible if you had a place for COBOL or Assembler solutions on your board? If not, can anyone direct me to a similar board for us old-timers?
The Mainframe Dinosaur.
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Is there any chance to get <pre> tags along with the appropriate syntax highlighting based on the lang attribute working for comments? Even if this was only on the messages posted for articles it would be good.
Regards,
Brian Dela
Blog^
Co-author of The Outlook Answer Book... Go on, pre-order^ it today!
Regular Expression Library builder^
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This will be added.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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Hi.
Any way to know the number of download ?
It's interresting to know the Hit number,
but how many people are downloading the
sources is also important.
Thierry
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This will be added.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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So who do we pay to get Microsoft to add Mac Intel support to their compiler/Visual suite? XCode sucks and CodeWarrior's a dead product.
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I guess it would depend on how many people agree... But I wouldn't mind seeing a forum dedicated to GDI/GDI+
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I wouldn't mind it also... I might even like it!
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Sorry for my complains. Indeed I like Code Project site. But I was hurt that the site cannot provide the function that we can update our articles manually. I send the update to editor on Sunday last week, but until now there is no response.(Update of ExcelQuicker, http://www.codeproject.com/csharp/excelquicker.asp)
My best regards,
Eunge
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Eunge wrote:
But I was hurt that the site cannot provide the function that we can update our articles manually
I belive it's not a technical problem. Problem is that if everybody could modify their articles without control, it could be and (would be) misused IMHO.
Regarding update, I have nothing to say, since I am not an editor
David
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Hi:
I think some of the forum pages are slow, particularly if the number of child threads are large. I have a simple suggestion. Perhaps it can download only the header lines and keep a hidden DIV or like that as usual, without any content.
When the particular header line is clicked, a JavaScript JSRS Call (Remote Executing Script) or XMLHttpRequest (as in Gmail) can be invoked to load the contents of that thread.
I think that should speed up rendering of pages. Is'nt it?
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
Personal Web: http://vdeepakkumar.netfirms.com/
I Blog At: http://deepak.blogdrive.com/
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Hi:
I think CP webmasters can think of linking CPForums via NNTP. So that Rich Text Posting and Offline Message/Viewing/Archival etc of Outlook Express and similar Newsreaders and be harnessed at best levels.
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
Personal Web: http://vdeepakkumar.netfirms.com/
I Blog At: http://deepak.blogdrive.com/
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In all the CP Forum Posts, there appears two links entitled 'Modify'/'Delete'. Actually these links work only for the author on his own post (controlled by the logon session).
So I think, CP can try to not rendering the link at all for other posts for which the logon account does not have Posting Ownership.
This will improve on the following perspectives:
(*) Redundant Texts/Links are avoided.
(*) If a user clicks a link and the need of a server roundtrip and a superflous server validation can be avoided.
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
Personal Web: http://vdeepakkumar.netfirms.com/
I Blog At: http://deepak.blogdrive.com/
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I often see questions posted in the forums that I too would like to know the answer to, or which just interest me to see what replies anyone might post.
Unfortunatly I don't have the luxury of time to check on a regular basis if any reply was posted, with the result that a bunch of new posts 'hide' the post of interest a few pages further.
So what I would like to suggest is the ability to 'subscribe' to a thread, so that if anyone posts a reply to a thread, everybody who subscribed to it would get notified too.
Greetings,
Davy
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I am sure this has been suggested before, but I would really like to see a break down of the votes that make up the ratings in an article. How many ones, twos, threes, fours and fives the article got. Similar to what MSDN does for their article rating system.
"You're obviously a superstar." - Christian Graus about me - 12 Feb '03
"Obviously ??? You're definitely a superstar!!!" mYkel - 21 Jun '04
Within you lies the power for good - Use it! Honoured as one of The Most Helpful Members of 2004
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Good suggestion PJ - the issue is that any change would require rewriting the existing code-base and I guess Chris would want to invest that time in the ASP.NET rewrite.
Funnily, I personally never vote anyone a 2 or a 3. It's either a 5 for an astonishingly good article, a 4 for anything I like or is well-written and a 1 for crap!
And my articles seem to gets 4s or 5s from people who like it and 1s from people who don't. I wonder whether anyone uses 2s and 3s (except accidentally)
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Message Closed
modified 24-Jan-23 12:08pm.
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Yeah, some people are dangerously stupid.
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Voting is democratic, so people can actually vote as they want I guess
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Nishant Sivakumar wrote:
Voting is democratic
Bah... that crazy system again...
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