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    {
      "comment_id": 23993542,
      "creation_date": 1369154009,
      "owner": {
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        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 16674914,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Sure. The question is, how can I coerce salt into calling <code>git stash</code> <i>before</i> it does a <code>git checkout</code>?"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 21435703,
      "creation_date": 1362426132,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 15169818,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "After some fiddling, I see that you are right, and <code>$elemMatch</code> is exactly what I was looking for. Very much appreciate it."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 21366639,
      "creation_date": 1362194790,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 15169818,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "That is very helpful, thank you! In this case, I actually want the entire document. But it seems that my existing query is making sure that <i>all</i> elements of the array match the criteria, instead of &quot;one or more&quot;"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 21359427,
      "creation_date": 1362170263,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
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        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "reply_to_user": {
        "user_id": 477349,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "Sam Dufel",
        "reputation": 6945,
        "email_hash": "a1496b721105bbad7b1d024ed068f5bb"
      },
      "post_id": 15163426,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "@SamDufel this is exactly right. the flags provide a convenience in this case - rather than writing a routine to check the high-order bit on a number, you can <code>jump</code> depending on that register. (Well, there are other tricks that one uses that bit for, but you are indeed correct that, for this purpose, the flag is not strictly necessary.)"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 19409156,
      "creation_date": 1356561765,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 14044897,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "this question isn&#39;t a duplicate, much less an &#39;exact&#39; one..."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 19383082,
      "creation_date": 1356452082,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 14032095,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "edit_count": 1,
      "body": "Could you describe what you (and everyone else on this thread) mean by &quot;line-buffered&quot;? Are there other kinds of buffering? What is buffering  in the context of terminal output?"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 18773101,
      "creation_date": 1354498495,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "reply_to_user": {
        "user_id": 521034,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "Keith",
        "reputation": 10141,
        "email_hash": "1d1e92d5a4154a59c4dfb3217067fa74"
      },
      "post_id": 13675929,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 0,
      "edit_count": 1,
      "body": "<code>jay@coltrane ~ $ python t.py \nlooping...\n^Cquitting!\nbye!</code>"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 17949498,
      "creation_date": 1351812168,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 13186852,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 1,
      "body": "My python is version 2.6.5, incidentally, but I know where to go from here."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 17949469,
      "creation_date": 1351812052,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 13186852,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Ah, that is perfect. I never even occurred to me that it would be a <i>bug in the interpreter</i>! Thank you!"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 16428715,
      "creation_date": 1346711340,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 12254628,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Woah. That worked. I never would have guessed (I&#39;m new to jquery - usually normal javascript works when defined in <code>&lt;head&gt;</code>, right? When I use document.getElementById() to update elements?)"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 16289920,
      "creation_date": 1346210398,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 12167873,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 1,
      "edit_count": 1,
      "body": "Your code will always be read by two people: yourself, and then yourself 6 months from now."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 14105015,
      "creation_date": 1338468196,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 10833483,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 1,
      "body": "This thread has a lot of suggestions for obfuscation software you can download (very low signal to noise ratio, though, but there is some helpful stuff you can try.) <a href=\"http://stackoverflow.com/questions/232736/code-obfuscator-for-php\" title=\"code obfuscator for php\">stackoverflow.com/questions/232736/code-obfuscator-for-php</a>"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 14018086,
      "creation_date": 1338177377,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "reply_to_user": {
        "user_id": 82294,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "Dietrich Epp",
        "reputation": 52098,
        "email_hash": "5c5f910416e2b92bb73fa59c56fe695d"
      },
      "post_id": 10779152,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "@DietrichEpp I was thinking this too; but he does specifically say &quot;OS-level&quot; threads, which to me implied something stronger than something Python-specific."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 12779910,
      "creation_date": 1333475474,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 9982282,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Wish I could shake your hand. Thanks so much!"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 12648954,
      "creation_date": 1332955598,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 9907753,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Hi; thanks for this answer! However, this pertains to using eclipse, and I was asking how to do it <i>without</i> eclipse!"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 11709302,
      "creation_date": 1329262227,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 9285402,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Awesome, thank you! In this case, I am able to replace <code>db_name</code> with <code>database()</code> and it works as expected."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 11481015,
      "creation_date": 1328298567,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "reply_to_user": {
        "user_id": 477878,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "Joachim Isaksson",
        "reputation": 42284,
        "email_hash": "d2472e7ba5922821b712609a3fa45abd"
      },
      "post_id": 9133068,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Sure, we can add a generic &quot;id&quot; for each row as a primary key. (This example is a simplification of the full query which joins across multiple tables, but yes, we can primary key this baby.)"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 11478886,
      "creation_date": 1328291638,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 9133107,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Unfortunately, this is a no-go: <code>GROUP BY order_id, user_id</code> groups by the unique combination of order and user IDs, rather than first grouping by order_id, and then subsequently by user_id."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 10750777,
      "creation_date": 1325056212,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 8652589,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "The article I linked states &quot;Basic knowledge of assembly is required.  An understanding of virtual memory concepts, and experience with gdb are very helpful but not necessary. We also assume we are working with an Intel x86 CPU, and that the operating \nsystem is Linux&quot; Without all of that, helping understand this code in any coherent way is very very difficult. Start with basic C and pointers, and feel free to ask questions about those as you make progress. When you look at this code even a week after the &quot;pointer&quot; chapter of a C book, it&#39;ll make a lot more sense."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 10750736,
      "creation_date": 1325055994,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 8652445,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 0,
      "edit_count": 1,
      "body": "Hi! So, understanding this code requires a lot a lot a lot of background: not just C, but also assembly and how memory is laid out in the operating system. Your best bet would be to start with learning what &quot;ptr = buff&quot; does in the context of C and pointers, rather than through &quot;hacking&quot; because this code assumes the reader can do pointers in their sleep!"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 9419094,
      "creation_date": 1318422651,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 7740066,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "In this code, you seem to be using <code>-Im</code> rather than <code>-lm</code> ? It should be a lowercase L"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 9412281,
      "creation_date": 1318390125,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 7734784,
      "post_type": "question",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "If the end goal is to <i>open</i> the file, then the easiest thing to do is to try and open it, and see if it fails. But there are cases where you can see if the file exists (no matter if you&#39;re allowed to open it), in which case you want to use the below-mentioned <code>access()</code> or <code>stat()</code> functions."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 9412229,
      "creation_date": 1318389631,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 7734822,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 1,
      "body": "this is cool, I had no idea this function existed."
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 9412210,
      "creation_date": 1318389467,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 7734806,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "This is a pretty acceptable solution imho; the end goal is to see if a file exists in order to open it (stated in the question). Also, it opens the file for reading, not for writing. So I think this works!"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 9177874,
      "creation_date": 1317130396,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 2165631,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Curious: which one worked out better for you? (Dumping everything into a temp table, versus &quot;chunking&quot; your updates and having the stored proc accept arrays?)"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 9147235,
      "creation_date": 1316979392,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 7547539,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Does this mean that I could use a maximum bitrate - in this case, for DVDs, 9000kbps - as an upper bound on how large my file size could be after encoding?"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 8074706,
      "creation_date": 1311436782,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 6801502,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Though my build.xml is basically the default auto-generated one,"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 8074632,
      "creation_date": 1311436381,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 6801502,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "Hm. So it must be something wonky with my build.xml, then; <code>dexdump -f classes.dex  | grep -in adview</code> yields <code>3080: 0x0013 - 0x0040 reg=0 adView Lcom&#47;google&#47;ads&#47;AdView;</code>"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 7959077,
      "creation_date": 1310852133,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 6720355,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "(deleted my comment: oops, your code really did go to length-1!)"
    },
    {
      "comment_id": 7724222,
      "creation_date": 1309575372,
      "owner": {
        "user_id": 3788,
        "user_type": "registered",
        "display_name": "poundifdef",
        "reputation": 4803,
        "email_hash": "cad0436b3e7120f39e4d0fda8c90b89f"
      },
      "post_id": 6218157,
      "post_type": "answer",
      "score": 0,
      "body": "This almost works! The Ant perspective does not show the targets in my build.xml so that I can double click on an individual target. Do you get the same behavior?"
    }
  ]
}
