[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-22 Thread Petite Abeille
> On Jul 22, 2015, at 12:40 AM, R.Smith wrote: > > Reminds me of the old saying: I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a > frontal lobotomy! Cheers to that! :D

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-22 Thread R.Smith
On 2015-07-22 12:09 AM, Keith Medcalf wrote: > It is not the word that is offensive (that is illogical and plainly > impossible). It is the thing that is offended that is the problem -- the > gutter mind and carnal tendencies of the receiver -- I am sure there are > psychiatric descriptions

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Bernardo Sulzbach
Just to add some to the list of silly filters and silly silliness: at home I can access everything, my school blocks wikipedia. I am not kidding.

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread R.Smith
I have to agree with the web filter being at fault. I am ambivalent to whether or not the word is innocuous or whether it can be misconstrued or even if, to some people, it is truly offensive. What bothers me more is the idea that the rest of the World all needs to update their documentation

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Keith Medcalf
> I am ambivalent to whether or not the word is innocuous or whether it > can be misconstrued or even if, to some people, it is truly offensive. It is not the word that is offensive (that is illogical and plainly impossible). It is the thing that is offended that is the problem -- the gutter

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Simon Slavin
On 21 Jul 2015, at 4:46pm, Paul Sanderson wrote: > The problem seems to be with the web filter and not the abbreviation > cnt. I would suggest that the onus should be on them to adjust their > filter to prevent filtering of an innocuous word (its only > rude/offensive if the u is added).

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Paul Sanderson
The problem seems to be with the web filter and not the abbreviation cnt. I would suggest that the onus should be on them to adjust their filter to prevent filtering of an innocuous word (its only rude/offensive if the u is added). Paul www.sandersonforensics.com skype: r3scue193 twitter:

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread J Decker
On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 3:51 PM, Bernardo Sulzbach < mafagafogigante at gmail.com> wrote: > Just to add some to the list of silly filters and silly silliness: at > home I can access everything, my school blocks wikipedia. I am not > kidding. > and wikipedia blocks knowledge of bosnian pyramids

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Jonathan Moules
Of Bernardo Sulzbach Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2015 4:53 PM To: General Discussion of SQLite Database Subject: Re: [sqlite] Doc page revision request > The problem seems to be with the web filter and not the abbreviation cnt. Exactly. Let's not forget to mention that dick is a synonym for detect

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Bernardo Sulzbach
I understand that the filter is not something his father hacked with Python in 10 minutes, but I don't think this will make anyone change the page. cnt is used by Oracle, Microsoft (there is even a .cnt extension if I am not mistaken), and I'd also say that any big software company has cnt

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Simon Slavin
Could someone take a look at please ? This page was inaccessible via a web filter used in one of my students' homes because of its use of the pseudo-word 'cnt'. My guess is that this is because some online fora users use it as a form of a certain rude

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Bernardo Sulzbach
> The problem seems to be with the web filter and not the abbreviation cnt. Exactly. Let's not forget to mention that dick is a synonym for detective and that bitch is a female dog. "cnt" is fine in that context and the filter should likely be deactivated or updated. Although it may be easier to

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Bernardo Sulzbach
About using "cnt", it is by far not just this page. There are tons of documentation and programming pages out there that use "cnt" instead of "count". The last part of your message seems more valid, though.

[sqlite] Doc page revision request

2015-07-21 Thread Jim Callahan
I Simon's point about idiotic web filters is valid. "Cnt" is innocuous in formal documentation where by context it clearly means "count", but think of how people type text messages. If an online chat board in html had text like messages then a machine learning algorithm (for a web filter) would