Trundling done
- Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
- Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!
test please delete
Collapse
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
Collapse
-
-
Originally posted by SpockTo hunt a species to extinction is not logical.Originally posted by Dr. Gillian TaylorWhoever said the human race was logical?
Dry.
Sunny.
Cool at 18.9 deg in here.
1021 mBar, 30.15 in Hg, 64% RH.
Friday.
Smalls in the WM.
Smalls out of the WM and into the TD.
Shirts in the WM.
<hiatus>
Walk walked along my new route.
Warm enough.
Smalls out of the TD & airing in the front bedroom.
Shirts out of the WM and into the TD.
Cottons in the WM.
'Tis all go this morning.
In other news, due to the BH, the bins were emptied this morning.
However, due to a lack of motivation, I didn't bother putting anything out.
The Refuse Disposal and Recycling Engineers still managed to wake me up.
Shirts out of the TD.
Cottons out of the WM and into the TD.
Lunch: scrambled egg and poached tomato on Morrisons malted bread toast, bramble jelly sandwich on same x 2, a yog, 0.91 pints of good Glengettie tea.
Entertainment: "Pimpernel Smith (1941)" with that Leslie Howard.
Rather enjoyable.
All the way through I though the Fat Herman character was von Braun, but he was actually von Graum.
I think I need to syringe my ears.
Cottons out of the TD.
Shirts duly iRoned and hanging from the picture rail in the bedroom airing.
A chap claiming to be a copper (plainclothes) just asked if I'd noticed any miscreants around there having been some sort of burglary a couple of doors up.
As is usual, I know nothing.
Entertainment after tea: Discovering Eli Wallach on Sky Arts.
And very good it was too.
Almost tempted to watch "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly(1966)".
DS9 S7 E24 "The Dogs of War".
DS9 S7 E25 Part 1.
Didn't enjoy either of those particularly.
How my tastes have changed over the last 20 years.
Freecell score: 93%, running average 84% (83.9%).
A thing about guitars on BBC4 which was mildly diverting once it got to stuff I can remember, then went past that into stuff I've never listened to ever.
TFBSDrS.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 4 June 2021, 22:44.When the fun stops, STOP.Comment
-
Walk briskly walked, green ring closed
Incorporating a detour via the Amazon Locker for some USB-C to USB-A adapters so I can plug in the magnetic charger thing I got for the phone
Said phone having somehow reverted the watch to metric rather than Imperial measurements, meaning it kept telling me how many kilometres I'd walked
To be fair, once I was home and found the setting to change on the phone, the watch immediately updated the figures it was displaying
Anyway, that's done meaning I can go to Sainsbury's this evening if I so choose, and now I've got to guzzle lunch (leftover BBQ chicken thigh and a medium-sized sausage roll) down quickly as I ought to be back at work really
Recycling bin hadn't been done but they're in the neighbourhood, so I'll pop down and check again in a bitComment
-
Much rain here. It started around 9.15 am and has barely paused.
I got engrossed in some actual work and realised I'd not had lunch! Foraging now will be my next task.Comment
-
Originally posted by ladymuck View PostMuch rain here. It started around 9.15 am and has barely paused.
I got engrossed in some actual work and realised I'd not had lunch! Foraging now will be my next task.Comment
-
I've spent a good chunk of this week tracking down one of the most obscure bugs I've seen in quite a while. It eventually turned out to be the result of the normal interaction between the application server gunicorn and the web app framework Django; specifically, it arose from the fact that a Django view class definition is executed by gunicorn when it starts, so any values initialised within the view class itself get their values then, but when the view is used to respond to a request, the view's various methods are called but the class definition itself is not re-executed, so such values persist with those initial values. And that's why a view that was supposed to notice on Tuesday that it was June 1st thought that the previous month was still April
And because it's due to that interaction, there's no way any of our tests could have caught it. Only testing against an actual live deployment would reveal it. And as any updates to the code cause the entire thing to be reloaded after those changes have been pulled down, the problem went away as soon as a new PR was merged on GitHub, leaving me with nothing to test against except a database dump I'd luckily grabbed, but which of course didn't exhibit the same behaviour locally, as it was on a newly-loaded instance then
Still can't quite believe I worked it out TBH
Of course, now the PR for the (one-line) fix is being held up because I had to construct some really weird tests that work at a very low level to avoid any side effects from the rest of the framework clouding the issue, and the chap originally responsible for the code that was failing is arguing that a slightly different syntax for the same testing functionality looks nicer. The tests pass, they test what they're supposed to, and it doesn't matter a damn what they read like as nobody will ever look at them again now that very specific, very obscure problem has been fixed. And it's not even clear that some of the hairy stuff I'm doing in these tests is actually possible with that alternative syntax. And, come to that, the tests wouldn't even prevent the problem; they simply prove that if given the wrong info, it will fail as expectedLast edited by NickFitz; 4 June 2021, 16:58.Comment
-
Originally posted by NickFitz View PostI've spent a good chunk of this week tracking down one of the most obscure bugs I've seen in quite a while...
lots of stuff
....
Comment
-
Originally posted by ladymuck View Post
Comment
-
I just went and rearranged the contents of the freezer, this being the best way to free up space. Except it didn't - it's tidier in there now, but just as full as it was when I started. So I won't bother with Sainsbury's after all. There's nothing I need urgently, and I should get through a load of this stuff if I don't get any more stuff
There are worse problems to have though
Speaking of which, I've decided to upgrade my iMac to the latest version of MacOS, which means skipping a major version in between that I never bothered with. I'm doing it now as that gives me the entire weekend to try to get it all working again if things go horribly wrong; I need it for work on MondayComment
-
Need a new bin for the kitchen now. I stepped on the pedal and all the screws that hold the mechanism for lifting the top exploded out of said mechanism and fell down inside the inner plastic bit. Attempting a repair, I discovered that the plastic of the mechanism has apparently corroded or worn out or something, so there's now about two-and-a-half screws with any grip. It works for now, but it's clearly going to fall definitively to bits any day
Can't decide whether to venture to B&Q or Homebase or somewhere, or order one off Amazon. Or I could see if the hardware guy over the road has one among the plastic buckets and stuff that he puts out on the pavement every dayComment
- Home
- News & Features
- First Timers
- IR35 / S660 / BN66
- Employee Benefit Trusts
- Agency Workers Regulations
- MSC Legislation
- Limited Companies
- Dividends
- Umbrella Company
- VAT / Flat Rate VAT
- Job News & Guides
- Money News & Guides
- Guide to Contracts
- Successful Contracting
- Contracting Overseas
- Contractor Calculators
- MVL
- Contractor Expenses
Advertisers
Contractor Services
CUK News
- Autumn Budget 2024: Reeves raids contractor take-home pay Oct 31 14:11
- How Autumn Budget 2024 affects homes, property and mortgages Oct 31 09:23
- Autumn Budget 2024: Reeves raids contractor take-home pay Oct 31 09:20
- Autumn Budget 2024: Umbrella companies hit, Employer NICs hiked, and BADR heading for 18% Oct 30 16:54
- Autumn Budget 2024: chancellor’s full speech Oct 30 16:34
- RecExpo got told this about Labour’s Employment Rights Bill… Oct 30 09:10
- A limited company just got one over HMRC on VAT; here’s how Oct 29 09:24
- Business Account with ANNA Money Oct 28 15:51
- Top 5 Autumn Budget areas for IT contractors to tick off Oct 28 09:30
- Top 5 umbrella company expenses things to still do in 2024 under 2016's T&S rules Oct 24 08:21
Comment