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Jay's user avatar
Jay
Engineer Consultant at Ensemble Engineering Inc.
  • Member for 9 years, 6 months
  • Last seen more than 3 years ago
  • San Diego, CA, USA
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I regret that I used the word "many" when I was accidentally including supportive comments by others, my comments on the previous post that led to this post, and edits to the question performed by non-moderator member with privileges.
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I regret if I unintentionally disrespected anyone by not knowing the difference between (diamond)moderators, and "community members with privileges".
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I cannot help but notice that the attentive non-moderators with privileges quickly deleted my non-inflammatory posts they regarded as unhelpful, but left in place the inflammatory ones that were against my point.
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I am forming the impression that some users treat Stack Overflow like a video game, and gang up on perfectly respectable answers and downvote them "because they can." Are diamond moderators wise to this and responsive when they see it?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
@NicolBolas When they infer that milliseconds are unsupported because some functions state they do not support milliseconds, what is that?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
@Nicol Bolas Did you read this link from Microsoft where they explain how to avoid the rounding? If somewhere Microsoft said "milliseconds are deprecated" they would have won long ago. This is compelling to me. link That link says the opposite to me: milliseconds are supported, but you have to know a secret..
awarded
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I mean a user who can mark a post "duplicate" and edit your question and delete peoples comments?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I am absolutely sincere in trying to find if there is a compelling reason I should not use sub-second time, as it appears to work in that code. No one posted code showing when it does NOT work, only worry and speculation. And some vitriol.
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
Thanks, is there a shorthand for "community member with privileges"?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
Maybe I should say "This Looks Like Proof to me, am I missing something?" Would that be a question (with the code)?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I regret my use of caps, I will do better in the future. Is there shorthand for "community members with privileges?"
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
@MartijnPieters Thank you for your comment. Can I ask if moderators (the diamond folks) just delete mechanically based on community members with privileges, or do they do significant review?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
This is even exceeding my attention span soon! I really invite review, am I ever not nice in my assertions or replies? I am adding stuff up by user1: the pattern of deletions, the dismissal with incorrect arguments, and the recruiting of a confederate (user2 cites user1 as authority in his argument) but I can only appeal to user1 to help? Seems unlikely but thanks for the thoughts.
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
Look away quickly before the facts appear! Interesting difference between VBA description of the Data data type and VB description: [link]docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/visual-basic/language-‌​reference/… [link]docs.microsoft.com/en-us/office/vba/language/reference‌​/… The VB version promises ALL the resolution of the IEEE754: "and times from 12:00:00 AM (midnight) through 11:59:59.9999999 PM. Each increment represents 100 nanoseconds" The VBA version omits any mention of sub-second resolution (dumbed down?) but DOES reference the same "IEEE 64-bit (8-byte)".
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
@fbueckert I hate to point out that you have bought into his assertion which is patently false. It's like a virus! You are even elaborating without pausing to recognize it is false! Almost like you are now invested in it! Please let me offer some proof? Or should I give up now?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
Thank you @fbueckert I want to go RIGHT THERE, but without anger! Just because SOME FUNCTIONS limit the range of the Date variable type, it DOES NOT MEAN I am stretching a data type beyond it's intended purpose. Is it the caps that are triggers?
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Why does milliseconds in a VBA Date variable trigger angry responses?
I think this is anger: You must really hate your fellow programmers and yourself to violate the encapsulation of data types like that. – this 2
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