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E_net4
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It was a similar problem to the previous question. The tag receives many questions, as well as attention from curators.

What Gabe could also have done here to find out more about the minds of ~~moderators~~moderators curators would be pressing the link at the top of that Meta question and continue traversing the chain of duplicates. Or then again, searching why questions are closed.

It was a similar problem to the previous question. The tag receives many

What Gabe could also have done here to find out more about the minds of ~~moderators~~ curators would be pressing the link at the top of that Meta question and continue traversing the chain of duplicates.

It was a similar problem to the previous question. The tag receives many questions, as well as attention from curators.

What Gabe could also have done here to find out more about the minds of moderators curators would be pressing the link at the top of that Meta question and continue traversing the chain of duplicates. Or then again, searching why questions are closed.

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Dharman Mod
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4:27 - "All right so the next question is pretty technical, but an experienced programmer should be able to help out. So this person asked:"

Initialization of a constant reference with a number

What is the meaning of the following line? Why is this allowed as 0 is an r-value and not a variable name? What is the significance of const in this statement?

const int &x = 0;

(asked May 15 '18 at 21:35) Initialization of a constant reference with a number

(Note: as presented in the video, the question was not closed and had a score of -10)

4:41 - "Aand the responses, so... first person says:"

Homework? And what does your C++ textbook have to say on the subject? -- May 15 '18 at 21:36 (now deleted)

"And the next person, very helpfully, says:"

Just read a [good book]. -- May 15 18' at 21:38 (now deleted)

"And then, 'here, this link has a similar question', which may or may not have been helpful at all":

Similar:  <link to another SO question> -- May 15 18' at 21:39

5:39 - "This next user asks:"

What is e in e.preventDefault()

I am not able to understand the parameter 'e' which is passed to prevent the Default Action in JavaScript

document.getElementById('submit').addEventListener('click', calculate, false);
function calculate(e){
  e.preventDefault():
}

(asked Sep 14 '17 at 9:57) https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4621604What is 'e' in 'e.preventDefault()'?

5:49 - "Now, to an experienced programmer this is pretty obvious. However, if you don't program and you've never seen this or you're new to programming, this is a completely valid question. The responses:"

4:27 - "All right so the next question is pretty technical, but an experienced programmer should be able to help out. So this person asked:"

Initialization of a constant reference with a number

What is the meaning of the following line? Why is this allowed as 0 is an r-value and not a variable name? What is the significance of const in this statement?

const int &x = 0;

(asked May 15 '18 at 21:35) Initialization of a constant reference with a number

(Note: as presented in the video, the question was not closed and had a score of -10)

4:41 - "Aand the responses, so... first person says:"

Homework? And what does your C++ textbook have to say on the subject? -- May 15 '18 at 21:36 (now deleted)

"And the next person, very helpfully, says:"

Just read a [good book]. -- May 15 18' at 21:38 (now deleted)

"And then, 'here, this link has a similar question', which may or may not have been helpful at all":

Similar:  -- May 15 18' at 21:39

5:39 - "This next user asks:"

What is e in e.preventDefault()

I am not able to understand the parameter 'e' which is passed to prevent the Default Action in JavaScript

document.getElementById('submit').addEventListener('click', calculate, false);
function calculate(e){
  e.preventDefault():
}

(asked Sep 14 '17 at 9:57) https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4621604

5:49 - "Now, to an experienced programmer this is pretty obvious. However, if you don't program and you've never seen this or you're new to programming, this is a completely valid question. The responses:"

4:27 - "All right so the next question is pretty technical, but an experienced programmer should be able to help out. So this person asked:"

Initialization of a constant reference with a number

What is the meaning of the following line? Why is this allowed as 0 is an r-value and not a variable name? What is the significance of const in this statement?

const int &x = 0;

(asked May 15 '18 at 21:35) Initialization of a constant reference with a number

(Note: as presented in the video, the question was not closed and had a score of -10)

4:41 - "Aand the responses, so... first person says:"

Homework? And what does your C++ textbook have to say on the subject? -- May 15 '18 at 21:36 (now deleted)

"And the next person, very helpfully, says:"

Just read a [good book]. -- May 15 18' at 21:38 (now deleted)

"And then, 'here, this link has a similar question', which may or may not have been helpful at all":

Similar: <link to another SO question> -- May 15 18' at 21:39

5:39 - "This next user asks:"

What is e in e.preventDefault()

I am not able to understand the parameter 'e' which is passed to prevent the Default Action in JavaScript

document.getElementById('submit').addEventListener('click', calculate, false);
function calculate(e){
  e.preventDefault():
}

(asked Sep 14 '17 at 9:57) What is 'e' in 'e.preventDefault()'?

5:49 - "Now, to an experienced programmer this is pretty obvious. However, if you don't program and you've never seen this or you're new to programming, this is a completely valid question. The responses:"

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E_net4
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tl;dr at the end of the answer. Spoiler: the video makes several bad points.

This is my personal statement on the video in the form of a traversal over the contents of the video, while commenting on the points stated by the author and placing relevant links from Meta Stack Overflow along the way. tl;dr at the end of the answer.

This is my personal statement on the video in the form of a traversal over the contents of the video, while commenting on the points stated by the author and placing relevant links from Meta Stack Overflow along the way. tl;dr at the end of the answer.

tl;dr at the end of the answer. Spoiler: the video makes several bad points.

This is my personal statement on the video in the form of a traversal over the contents of the video, while commenting on the points stated by the author and placing relevant links from Meta Stack Overflow along the way.

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E_net4
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