| bio | website | epologee.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Appsterdam, The Netherlands | |
| age | 34 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 6 months |
| seen | Feb 2 at 13:18 | |
| stats | profile views | 9 |
Independent software engineer, clean coder, spare-time inventor, teacher, math tutor, snow boarder and IKO certified kite surf instructor.
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1d |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Jan 20 |
comment |
Arguments for and against backwards compatibility for new iOS projects I posted this here because it didn't fit on stackoverflow, but I do think the question is legit. Any suggestions what to change, to have this question become not-off-topic? |
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Jan 17 |
asked | Arguments for and against backwards compatibility for new iOS projects |
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Nov 12 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Aug 30 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Jul 12 |
revised |
Properties under ARC: Always or public-only? added quote from ironwolf |
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May 23 |
accepted | Properties under ARC: Always or public-only? |
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May 22 |
comment |
Properties under ARC: Always or public-only? Hi @Caleb, thanks for taking the time and writing a solid post. I hadn't thought of the KVO aspect. I'm indeed very curious as to where Apple is taking all this. ARC as is feels as one in a series of steps. I'll wait to see if someone else cares to weigh in on the subject, otherwise consider the question check marked. |
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May 22 |
revised |
Properties under ARC: Always or public-only? different title |
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May 22 |
revised |
Properties under ARC: Always or public-only? different citation. |
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May 22 |
asked | Properties under ARC: Always or public-only? |
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Apr 24 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Apr 24 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Apr 24 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Apr 24 |
comment |
Is there a semi-scientific term for this filtering behavior? Exactly what I was looking for, thanks! |
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Apr 24 |
accepted | Is there a semi-scientific term for this filtering behavior? |
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Apr 24 |
comment |
Is there a semi-scientific term for this filtering behavior? Thanks for your detailed answer, your UX-Matters link contains the name 'faceted search', but @scarfridge names that as the answer, so I'm going for his answer. Thanks! |
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Apr 23 |
asked | Is there a semi-scientific term for this filtering behavior? |
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Nov 16 |
comment |
The perfect crossfade Those terms are already in the question. But that's not what this is about. Hmm. I think I have to rephrase the question and tweak the examples, because people keep answering to the curvature of one half, not the fact that the two curves blended together cause the dip. |
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Nov 16 |
comment |
The perfect crossfade If the issue were what the function of a similar curve might look like, your math is correct. However the issue is how to deal with the blending of two colors, e.g. how to get 40% blue + 40% blue to result in 80% blue. |