The random ponderings of a not quite sane, or insane, transwoman. My thoughts on computer programming, justice, politics, and various other topics.
Author: benkey76
I am a self taught software engineer, currently employed by The Paciello Group (TPG), a Vispero™ company. I am very good at what I do and I very much enjoy it. My primary programming language is C++ but I have dabbled in Java, Python, and TCL. Most of the software I have worked on runs only under Microsoft Windows but I have dabbled in programming for GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, and Mac OS X. I also have experience in designing accessible applications and websites and accessibility testing.
Today, the White House sent out an email claiming “President Trump listened to the experts—not the media” today. Evidence suggests that he listened to a single expert who told him exactly what he wanted to hear, that COVID-19 was a non-issue. Specifically he listened to Richard A. Epstein who wrote the paper “Coronavirus Perspective.”
In the first version of this document he claimed that there would be 500 deaths due to COVID-19. A few days later he revised the document saying that he made a mistake and there would be 5,000 deaths. He later revised it again by saying there would be 50,000 deaths.
As of today there have been 80,820 deaths in the United States according to the CDC.
All hail Donald Trump; a.k.a. Donald Drumpf, a.k.a. Lord Dampnut, a.k.a. Dumbnut, a.k.a. Donnie Trumpelstiltskin, a.k.a. Donald tRUMP; our most, or perhaps least, honored (not my) POTUS and our great Bloviator in Chief!
In February Donald Trump made the following comments about COVID-19.
“Looks like by April, you know, in theory, when it gets a little warmer, it miraculously goes away.” (Feb. 10)
“The Coronavirus is very much under control in the USA. … Stock Market starting to look very good to me!” (Feb. 24)
“It’s going to disappear. One day, it’s like a miracle, it will disappear.” (Feb. 27)
At this time the Trump administration and various Republicans were relying on an article titled “Coronavirus Perspective” by Richard A. Epstein. In the first version of this document he claimed that there would be 500 deaths due to COVID-19. A few days later he revised the document saying that he made a mistake and there would be 5,000 deaths. He later revised it again by saying there would be 50,000 deaths.
As of today, there have been 67,456 deaths due to COVID-19 in the United States.
All hail Donald Trump; a.k.a. Donald Drumpf, a.k.a. Lord Dampnut, a.k.a. Dumbnut, a.k.a. Donnie Trumpelstiltskin, a.k.a. Donald tRUMP; our most, or perhaps least, honored (not my) POTUS and our great Bloviator in Chief!
All hail Donald Trump; a.k.a. Donald Drumpf, a.k.a. Lord Dampnut, a.k.a. Dumbnut, a.k.a. Donnie Trumpelstiltskin, a.k.a. Donald tRUMP; our most, or perhaps least, honored (not my) POTUS and our great Bloviator in Chief!
ASCII art image of a skull and crossbones with the text “abandon all hope, all ye who enter here” displayed below the skull and crossbones.
One factor of code quality that does not get enough attention is how easy is it to debug the code. No matter how skilled the team that writes the software, there will be bugs. When these bugs are found some poor soul will need to debug the code to determine the cause of the bug. Unfortunately this can quickly turn into a nightmare because many functions are not debuggable. Sometimes even well designed code is so difficult to debug that it causes the poor soul who has to debug it to abandon all hope.
Non-Debuggable Function
The following function is very simple. At first glance it seems to be a concise and well designed function. However, it is a major contributor to the debugging this application is a nightmare problem.
You may be wondering, how can this innocent, one-line function cause someone to abandon all hope?
When the function works as expected (meaning it returns the value you expect) it cannot. However, when the function returns false when you think it should return true the nightmare begins. The most critical piece of information that might explain why this function is not returning the expected value, the document length, is hidden away within a function call. As a result, there is no way you can look at parameter and variable values in the debugger watch window and know why the function is behaving in the way that it is.
Debuggable Function
The following function does exactly the same thing but it can be debugged in a microsecond.
All you have to do to debug this function is look at the value of the nOffset parameter and the documentLength variable in the watch window and then the reason for the unexpected behavior is immediately obvious.
In the case of today’s nightmare that inspired this article, the problem was that both the nOffset parameter and the documentLength variable happened to be equal to 296.
Additional Comments
I know that some of you are wondering whether I am aware that some debuggers will provide the return value of a function that was just called. The answer is of course I am aware of that. However, as far as I know not all debuggers support this functionality. In addition, this functionality is not as easy to use or as intuitive as the watch variable feature.
To me it just makes sense to make a very small change to make it possible to diagnose problems with the more intuitive and easier to use watch variable feature of the debugger.
On March 6, 2020, President Donald Trump’s top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, claimed that the coronavirus “is contained” in the United States. There were only 75 confirmed cases in the United States at that time.
Today there are 1,629 confirmed cases.
Now that is what I call contained! The Trump administration is obviously doing an excellent job. We should be grateful that we have such a diligent and hard working POTUS!
All hail Donald Trump; a.k.a. Donald Drumpf, a.k.a. Lord Dampnut, a.k.a. Dumbnut, a.k.a. Donnie Trumpelstiltskin, a.k.a. Donald tRUMP; our most, or perhaps least, honored (not my) POTUS and our great Bloviator in Chief!
President Trump hosted a group of America’s governors for a policy discussion at the White House yesterday, and the blue-collar economic boom was top on the agenda.
All hail Donald Trump; a.k.a. Donald Drumpf, a.k.a. Lord Dampnut, a.k.a. Dumbnut, a.k.a. Donnie Trumpelstiltskin, a.k.a. Donald tRUMP; our most, or perhaps least, honored (not my) POTUS and our great Bloviator in Chief!
How to interpret Sondland’s impeachment testimony. Hint, it is very bad news for the Republicans and Trump.
“I know that members of this committee have frequently framed these complicated issues in the form of a simple question: Was there a ‘quid pro quo?’ With regard to the requested White House call and White House meeting, the answer is yes.”
Ambassador Gordon Sondland
Translation: Yes. Trump did in fact try to commit Extortion, Bribery, and Blackmail.
Thank you Sondland.
Sonland said he acted “at the express direction of the president of the United States.”
Translation: Trump was directly involved and was calling the shots.
Again, thank you Sondland.
Sondland then said “there was no secret” and “Everyone was in the loop.”
This is completely irrelevant. If everyone involved including the POTUS, ambassadors, Sondland, and Giuliani knew that Trump was guilty of Extortion, Bribery, and Blackmail that does not make it right. He was still guilty of Extortion, Bribery, and Blackmail!
Again, thank you Sondland.
Today was a very good day, but not for Trump and his supporters.
All hail Donald Trump; a.k.a. Donald Drumpf, a.k.a. Lord Dampnut, a.k.a. Dumbnut, a.k.a. Donnie Trumpelstiltskin, a.k.a. Donald tRUMP; our most, or perhaps least, honored (not my) POTUS and our great Bloviator in Chief!
Every time I see Republicans mention the fact that “House Intelligence Committee Chair Adam Schiff (D-CA) held secretive closed-door depositions” I want to scream. These closed-door depositions were essentially the same a a grand jury hearing.
Grand jury hearings are always secret here in the United States.
The following is a key excerpt from the “Federal Grand Jury Secrecy: Legal Principles and Implications for Congressional Oversight” document.
Traditionally, the grand jury has conducted its work in secret. Secrecy prevents those under scrutiny from fleeing or importuning the grand jurors, encourages full disclosure by witnesses, and protects the innocent from unwarranted prosecution, among other things.
Federal Grand Jury Secrecy: Legal Principles and Implications for Congressional Oversight
In other words, every time a Republican brings up these secretive closed-door depositions they are just twisting the facts and trying to deceive people by claiming that the process was not legitimate when it is just how things are done here.
I recently encountered a situation in which a feature I wanted to add to my website was not supported in Internet Explorer because it relied on third-party JavaScript code that is not supported in Internet Explorer. The feature was trigged by pressing a button. The page was displayed properly but when the button was pressed nothing happened. The console revealed the reason why nothing happened when the button was pressed. The third-party JavaScript code uses a language feature not supported by Internet Explorer.
I decided that the simplest solution was to hide the button for Internet Explorer and display it for all other web browsers.
A quick Google search suggested that this was easy. The article How To Create an IE-Only Stylesheet suggested that all I need to do is use conditional comments as follows.
<!--[if !IE]><!--><p>This paragraph should be hidden in Internet Explorer and visible in all other web browsers.</p.<!--<![endif]-->
While this does work for older versions of Internet Explorer, it does not work for Internet Explorer 10 and Internet Explorer 11 as discussed in Conditional comments are no longer supported.
After giving this some thought, I decided that it might be possible to do this using CSS, as follows.
if (IsInternerExplorer()) {.hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others {display:none!important;}else {.hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others {display:block;}}
The problem is that CSS does not support if/else statements.
@supportsnot (-ms-high-contrast: none) {/* Non-IE styles here */}
Unfortunately, -ms-high-contrast is not supported for older versions of Internet Explorer; it was added in Internet Explorer 10. Therefore, if we were to make use of both the @media technique and the @supports technique the hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others class would be defined for Interner Explorer 10 and Internet Explorer 11 and for most other browsers but it would not be defined for older versions of Internet Explorer.
The Solution
Fortunately, the CSS Specificity feature provides a solution. CSS properties are calculated using Precedence Rules. A simple description of these Precedence Rules is as follows.
Inline css (html style attribute) overrides css rules in style tag and css file.
A more specific selector takes precedence over a less specific one.
Rules that appear later in the code override earlier rules if both have the same specificity.
A css rule with !important always takes precedence.
Therefore, the hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others class can be defined as follows.
/* Define the hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others class for oldversions of Interner Explorer. */.hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others {display:none;}/* Define the hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others class forInterner Explorer 10 and Interner Explorer 11. */@mediaalland (-ms-high-contrast: none), (-ms-high-contrast: active) {.hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others {display:none!important;}}/* Define the hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others class forother modern browsers. */@supportsnot (-ms-high-contrast: none) {.hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others {display:block!important;}}
Then you can use the hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others class as follows.
<p class="hidden-for-ie-visible-for-others">This paragraph should be hidden in Internet Explorer and visible in all other web browsers.</p.