Reading through their mail merge tutorial, their method looks insanely risky: putting all addresses in “to” and rembering to click another button.
Reading through their mail merge tutorial, their method looks insanely risky: putting all addresses in “to” and rembering to click another button.
That’s really interesting. So does that mean the interpreter just checks whether the current line is more indented, less indented, or equal vs. the preceding, without caring by how much?
Please elaborate (eg which standard is this defined in?)
“Gourmetally free”, surely, without the oppression of the squeamish crowds?
I meant it more in the sense of one channel, when shutting down for the night, emitting the “next channel” tone such that every viewer’s set would change to a channel that was still broadcasting.
Would it have been possible for the speakers of the time to emit those frequencies? Imagining the equivalent of a Twitch raid: “I’m done broadcasting so I’m going to send you to the next channel.”
Investment bankers would like a word (but they probably don’t have time).
You were so close: Edinburgh only got its name after Edward I invaded Scotland in 1296. Before that it (which was then a larger area than the present Edinburgh) had just been called “the Burgh”, which depending on regional variation would have been pronounced either “burg” or “boro”. “Edinburgh” referred to a smaller area within the Burgh that the king’s guards would patrol more severely due to the perceived increased risk of rebellion due to higher population density.
(/joke)