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681765,999616 bytes of data
Last post 12-04-2008 12:13 PM by Jake Grey. 24 replies.
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Lingerance


- Joined on 07-24-2007
- Canada
- Posts 1,172
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
TRWTF is your subject line is completely misleading, how the hell did you get 681 765 999 616 bytes out of something that adds up to ~4 275 000 bytes?
Also storing file sizes as floats is WTFy too.
irc://irc.slashnet.org/#TDWTF (Redirects to #CodeLove ) Yo dawg I herd hoard you like to search so I put a 2TB txt file in yo SSDS so your memory's maxed out and your computer cant do shit? -- Nyquist
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NSCoder


- Joined on 07-24-2005
- Geneva, Switzerland
- Posts 93
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
665.787109*1024=681765.999616. Clearly kvdveer uses a comma as a decimal separator, which is fairly obvious considering there is only one of them in the number in the subject, not one every three digits.
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Lingerance


- Joined on 07-24-2007
- Canada
- Posts 1,172
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
NSCoder:665.787109*1024=681765.999616. Clearly kvdveer uses a comma as a decimal separator, which is fairly obvious considering there is only one of them in the number in the subject, not one every three digits.
Except, there's actually 4275kB of _data_, just 665kB of _trimeshes_. But I see your point.
irc://irc.slashnet.org/#TDWTF (Redirects to #CodeLove ) Yo dawg I herd hoard you like to search so I put a 2TB txt file in yo SSDS so your memory's maxed out and your computer cant do shit? -- Nyquist
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pbean


- Joined on 10-06-2008
- Posts 73
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
I started to wonder why each and every thread got a 1-star rating and after some investigation I noticed 'fatdog' rates all of them with 1 star. :O Dubious.
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bjolling


- Joined on 06-08-2008
- Belgium
- Posts 431
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
pbean:I started to wonder why each and every thread got a 1-star rating and after some investigation I noticed 'fatdog' rates all of them with 1 star. :O Dubious.
It's a dirty job but someone's got to do it
 It's... Monkey Piston's Frying Circle!
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belgariontheking


- Joined on 08-20-2007
- Cincinnati, OH, USA
- Posts 2,283
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
pbean:I started to wonder why each and every thread got a 1-star rating and after some investigation I noticed 'fatdog' rates all of them with 1 star. :O Dubious.
I've known that for months. There was a time that he rated everything a 5 for about a week, but that encouraged too many shitty OPs so he went back to 1s.
SpectateSwamp exposing aliens. Obviously the World needs SSDS
[10:07] <fatdog> so from now on.. be sure to wear nice clean underwear [10:07] <mps> fatdog: That is simply not going to happen
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morbiuswilters


- Joined on 01-15-2008
- East Coast Represent!
- Posts 4,995
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
pbean:I started to wonder why each and every thread got a 1-star rating and after some investigation I noticed 'fatdog' rates all of them with 1 star. :O Dubious.
Yeah, but the OPs usually rate themselves "5" so it evens out. Nobody really gives a shit about the ratings, anyway, but I think it's better to err on the side of "1-star" than the side of "5-stars".
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bstorer


- Joined on 02-01-2007
- Alexandria, VA
- Posts 3,402
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
morbiuswilters: pbean:I started to wonder why each and every thread got a 1-star rating and after some investigation I noticed 'fatdog' rates all of them with 1 star. :O Dubious.
Yeah, but the OPs usually rate themselves "5" so it evens out. Nobody really gives a shit about the ratings, anyway, but I think it's better to err on the side of "1-star" than the side of "5-stars".
Boo! Lame post. I rate it 1 star.
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Jonathan


- Joined on 11-26-2007
- Posts 4
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
One byte of memory is 0,0009765625 kilobytes. There's nothing wrong with the precision used. The reason the total value doesn't match the sum is because the displayed values are rounded to the nearest millionth of a kilobyte.
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belgariontheking


- Joined on 08-20-2007
- Cincinnati, OH, USA
- Posts 2,283
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
Jonathan:One byte of memory is 0,0009765625 kilobytes. There's nothing wrong with the precision used. The reason the total value doesn't match the sum is because the displayed values are rounded to the nearest millionth of a kilobyte.
Really? How enlightening!
SpectateSwamp exposing aliens. Obviously the World needs SSDS
[10:07] <fatdog> so from now on.. be sure to wear nice clean underwear [10:07] <mps> fatdog: That is simply not going to happen
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Jake Grey


- Joined on 05-14-2008
- Posts 174
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
morbiuswilters:Yeah, but the OPs usually rate themselves "5" so it evens out.
Didn't even know you could do that, though I really should be past the point where I find it surprising by now.
You can never have too much time, luck, shelf space or spare duct tape.
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Zagyg


- Joined on 03-07-2008
- Luton, England
- Posts 104
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
belgariontheking:Larry Ellison I am coming to your house so you can fix your broken program at gunpoint
I've been meaning to ask, haven't you made it to Larry's house yet? We're still waiting for the fix so I guess not.
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bstorer


- Joined on 02-01-2007
- Alexandria, VA
- Posts 3,402
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
Zagyg: belgariontheking:Larry Ellison I am coming to your house so you can fix your broken program at gunpoint
I've been meaning to ask, haven't you made it to Larry's house yet? We're still waiting for the fix so I guess not.
He made the mistake of storing the address in Oracle, and he can't figure out how to get it out.
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HypocriteWorld


- Joined on 04-04-2008
- Posts 70
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
bstorer: Zagyg: belgariontheking:Larry Ellison I am coming to your house so you can fix your broken program at gunpoint
I've been meaning to ask, haven't you made it to Larry's house yet? We're still waiting for the fix so I guess not.
He made the mistake of storing the address in Oracle, and he can't figure out how to get it out.
The reason it's so hard is that there's a bunch of fields with FileNotFound in the database, and the address isn't directly stored as text, but instead requires these FileNotFound fields to provide auxiliary information which are then passed to the paulaBean.getPaula() for more processing.
((lambda (f) (f f)) (lambda (f) (f f)))
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upsidedowncreature


- Joined on 11-21-2007
- Posts 216
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
bstorer:
He made the mistake of storing the address in Oracle, and he can't figure out how to get it out.
Easy. Install the JVM, the Oracle client, Oracle Data Access Components, Run the Net Configuration Manager, configure it to use TNSNames, run something else to create your TNSNames.ora file, done. Honestly, what could be simpler?
What if the hokey cokey really IS what it's all about?
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bstorer


- Joined on 02-01-2007
- Alexandria, VA
- Posts 3,402
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
upsidedowncreature: bstorer:
He made the mistake of storing the address in Oracle, and he can't figure out how to get it out.
Easy. Install the JVM, the Oracle client, Oracle Data Access Components, Run the Net Configuration Manager, configure it to use TNSNames, run something else to create your TNSNames.ora file, done. Honestly, what could be simpler?
Knocking on every door in North America until he finds the right house?
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j6cubic


- Joined on 06-07-2007
- Posts 88
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
bstorer: upsidedowncreature: bstorer:
He made the mistake of storing the address in Oracle, and he can't figure out how to get it out.
Easy. Install the JVM, the Oracle client, Oracle Data Access Components, Run the Net Configuration Manager, configure it to use TNSNames, run something else to create your TNSNames.ora file, done. Honestly, what could be simpler?
Knocking on every door in North America until he finds the right house?
Gentlemen, RVs. Discuss.
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belgariontheking


- Joined on 08-20-2007
- Cincinnati, OH, USA
- Posts 2,283
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
j6cubic: bstorer: upsidedowncreature: bstorer:
He made the mistake of storing the address in Oracle, and he can't figure out how to get it out.
Easy. Install the JVM, the Oracle client, Oracle Data Access Components, Run the Net Configuration Manager, configure it to use TNSNames, run something else to create your TNSNames.ora file, done. Honestly, what could be simpler?
Knocking on every door in North America until he finds the right house?
Gentlemen, RVs. Discuss.
Dammit why did you have to bring that up? I never thought of knocking on every stationary door and every moving door. Shit, Larry could be on a yacht. Or a Yacht-plane. How am I gonna knock on every door of everyYacht-plane? Here's hoping he's famous enough to be on a Star Map.
SpectateSwamp exposing aliens. Obviously the World needs SSDS
[10:07] <fatdog> so from now on.. be sure to wear nice clean underwear [10:07] <mps> fatdog: That is simply not going to happen
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lolwtf


- Joined on 04-02-2008
- (null)
- Posts 303
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
belgariontheking: j6cubic: bstorer: upsidedowncreature: bstorer:
He made the mistake of storing the address in Oracle, and he can't figure out how to get it out.
Easy. Install the JVM, the Oracle client, Oracle Data Access Components, Run the Net Configuration Manager, configure it to use TNSNames, run something else to create your TNSNames.ora file, done. Honestly, what could be simpler?
Knocking on every door in North America until he finds the right house?
Gentlemen, RVs. Discuss.
Dammit why did you have to bring that up? I never thought of knocking on every stationary door and every moving door. Shit, Larry could be on a yacht. Or a zeppelin How am I gonna knock on every door of every zeppelin? Here's hoping he's famous enough to be on a Star Map.
FTFY
(null)
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bstorer


- Joined on 02-01-2007
- Alexandria, VA
- Posts 3,402
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
belgariontheking:Dammit why did you have to bring that up? I never thought of knocking on every stationary door and every moving door. Shit, Larry could be on a yacht. Or a Yacht-plane. How am I gonna knock on every door of everyYacht-plane? Here's hoping he's famous enough to be on a Star Map.
If only there were some sort of oracle to answer these questions...
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obediah


- Joined on 08-07-2006
- Posts 109
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
NSCoder:665.787109*1024=681765.999616. Clearly kvdveer uses a comma as a decimal separator, which is fairly obvious considering there is only one of them in the number in the subject, not one every three digits. I clicked on the title expecting a bug that inserted commas every 6 decimal places rather than every 3. Come to think of it, that would have been more interesting than the innapropriate use of a float in a harmless debug context. Anyway, I'd be careful about making "clear" and "obvious" assumptions with logic gleaned from posts dedicated to illogical programming practices.
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Cantabrigian


- Joined on 12-04-2008
- Posts 9
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
> 681765,999616
Hey, wasn't that my Compuserve user id?
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danixdefcon5


- Joined on 01-09-2007
- Mexico City, DF, Mexico
- Posts 608
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
Cantabrigian:> 681765,999616
Hey, wasn't that my Compuserve user id?
Geeze, it does look like a Compuserve id! By the way, what happened to Compuserve? Are they still an ISP? Or do they even exist anymore?
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Jake Grey


- Joined on 05-14-2008
- Posts 174
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Re: 681765,999616 bytes of data
From Wikipedia: CompuServe, (CompuServe Information Service, also known by its acronym CIS), was the first major commercial online service in the United States.
It dominated the field during the 1980s and remained a major player
through the mid-1990s, when it was sidelined by the rise of information
services such as AOL that charged monthly subscriptions rather than hourly rates. Today the CompuServe Information Service operates as an online service provider and an Internet service provider, owned by AOL.
You can never have too much time, luck, shelf space or spare duct tape.
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