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  3. posting a question / problem " format" ?

posting a question / problem " format" ?

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  • L Lost User

    When I post here , asking for help do I have to spell it out ? "...I am looking for a solution..." is it not obvious? or is this forum now a " social media chat " box? Reason for THIS post I have recently experienced a "reply" which basically restated / reformatted my post and did not actually offered a solution. End of rant

    R Offline
    R Offline
    RedDk
    wrote on last edited by
    #13

    Stuff like this usually works for me: Slumber cucumber[^]

    T 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • raddevusR raddevus

      trønderen wrote:

      where other readers are so eager to 'help' that they do not waste the time to read the entire problem description before writing down their 'contribution'.

      Ah, I see you're familiar with SO's Standard Operating Procedure. :rolleyes:

      L Offline
      L Offline
      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #14

      I will expect flaming repose , but I " all I know I learn at kindergarten " comes to mind... This forum have very simple and pointed "rules" about working with non English speaking folks, likes me. There is a part about "read the post "...

      and that is too far down the rules list for SOME English speaking folks to read...

      Unfortunately there is nada a'bout conversing with people of different levels of TECHNICAL knowledge.

      raddevusR T 2 Replies Last reply
      0
      • A Andre Oosthuizen

        Quote:

        "...I am looking for a solution..." is it not obvious?

        Firstly, this post comes across very arrogant and I personally think that you are limiting your future assistance from most members that have been supporting you loyally in the past in your numerous questions for help. You might not think that a post from a person/member is related or is a solution to your question but I can almost ensure you that the person/member that took the time, their own free time at that, to answer your question that you found unsolvable saw it as a solution. For you to then question that free time given to your cause is totally unacceptable and I really think you should re-think your post here and offer some kind of apology. I for one will ignore your future questions and will rather spend my free time helping someone that will appreciate the effort. I also welcome your down vote on this as it will prove my point.

        N Offline
        N Offline
        Nelek
        wrote on last edited by
        #15

        Andre Oosthuizen wrote:

        can almost ensure you that the person/member that took the time, their own free time at that, to answer your question that you found unsolvable saw it as a solution

        See my signature... it should actually be so easy... :sigh: :sigh:

        M.D.V. ;) If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about? Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.

        A 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • L Lost User

          I will expect flaming repose , but I " all I know I learn at kindergarten " comes to mind... This forum have very simple and pointed "rules" about working with non English speaking folks, likes me. There is a part about "read the post "...

          and that is too far down the rules list for SOME English speaking folks to read...

          Unfortunately there is nada a'bout conversing with people of different levels of TECHNICAL knowledge.

          raddevusR Offline
          raddevusR Offline
          raddevus
          wrote on last edited by
          #16

          All feedback / answers have to be "taken with a grain of salt". I've had to develop very thick skin because I post a lot of questions on StackOverflow and most of the time they are down-voted, answer incorrectly etc. Check out this one which the person answered completely wrong and tried to say I was wrong[^]. In the end, I discovered the answer myself and wrote it up for myself. I actually once posted a question to electronics.stackexchange.com (where the "engineers" tolerate nothing outside of their understanding) about why electrolytic capacitors are rated for higher voltage as the capacitance (measured in farads (uF, pF, etc) goes down. Not only did they not answer it, they deleted my question entirely and it had taken me a long while to write up the question and I wish I still had that question because it was interesting. I know that it must also be infinitely more difficult when there is a language difference involved also. Hope you get things worked out. If you get a chance, check this one out where I answered the question correctly but got down-voted and then the person tried to tell me why my working code was wrong. it was ridiculous. https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46075228/get-http-response-status-code-of-urlsession-shared-datatask/78078754#78078754[^]

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • N Nelek

            Andre Oosthuizen wrote:

            can almost ensure you that the person/member that took the time, their own free time at that, to answer your question that you found unsolvable saw it as a solution

            See my signature... it should actually be so easy... :sigh: :sigh:

            M.D.V. ;) If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about? Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.

            A Offline
            A Offline
            Andre Oosthuizen
            wrote on last edited by
            #17

            Exactly my point!

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • L Lost User

              I will expect flaming repose , but I " all I know I learn at kindergarten " comes to mind... This forum have very simple and pointed "rules" about working with non English speaking folks, likes me. There is a part about "read the post "...

              and that is too far down the rules list for SOME English speaking folks to read...

              Unfortunately there is nada a'bout conversing with people of different levels of TECHNICAL knowledge.

              T Offline
              T Offline
              trønderen
              wrote on last edited by
              #18

              I will say to your defense: Most IT people (or you could make it more general, if you like: Most people with a university degree) are very poor at explaining a problem within their field of expertise to someone outside the field. Their advanced knowledge stands in the way. Even when I ask my co-workers to explain something (I have a Master in Comp.Sci), I may have to guide them through their explanation, telling them 'First, explain how this part works, we'll take the rest afterwards', rather than everything messed up. They use terms that are specific to the stuff they are trying to explain, without explaining the term, and I have to stop them and demand an explanation. When they introduce some 'concept', I ask questions about how this concept differs from this and that older and well known concept. And so on. A good teacher/lecturer would structure his presentation, explain terms, refer to related, known stuff, and adapt the presentation to whatever background the audience has. Most IT people just opens the sluice gates to let their immense flood of advance knowledge drown you. When the audience doesn't understand a word, the IT expert usually blames the audience :-) Unfortunately, publishing books is so cheap nowadays that you see the same in a lot of IT books: You senses that the author is really knowledgeable, but the explanations are outright terrible. Sometimes, the better you know the subject area yourself, the more you see how bad the presentation is, how bad the examples are. Wikipedia is certainly no exception (in many articles, not all): When I try to make sense of them, I often ask myself: Is there a single person in the world who will understand this - and also will look it up in Wikipedia? If it takes a Master to understand the article, then you probably learned enough in your studies that you know all the stuff in the article! Some textbook authors are excellent. Some academics, even IT people, have an impressing ability to make even complex issues look easy and obvious to a lesser qualified audience. I wish we had a lot more of those. As long as that is not the case, we will have to cope with explanations that requires a lot of work to be deciphered. Sometimes you ask supplementary questions; sometimes the answer gives you the proper keywords for a google search for more understandable explanations. We won't run into those great pedagogics all the time, and have to live with it.

              Religious freedom is the freedom to say that t

              Mircea NeacsuM B J 3 Replies Last reply
              0
              • R RedDk

                Stuff like this usually works for me: Slumber cucumber[^]

                T Offline
                T Offline
                trønderen
                wrote on last edited by
                #19

                That made no sense to me!

                Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.

                R 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • T trønderen

                  That made no sense to me!

                  Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  RedDk
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #20

                  Well, my honest feelings about this inelegant fellow is that until he "'fesses" up and gives us the true location of his "unseenedness" (by editing his particulars to out his use of the mercan flag) he's just being colorful for the sake of color.

                  L 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • T trønderen

                    I will say to your defense: Most IT people (or you could make it more general, if you like: Most people with a university degree) are very poor at explaining a problem within their field of expertise to someone outside the field. Their advanced knowledge stands in the way. Even when I ask my co-workers to explain something (I have a Master in Comp.Sci), I may have to guide them through their explanation, telling them 'First, explain how this part works, we'll take the rest afterwards', rather than everything messed up. They use terms that are specific to the stuff they are trying to explain, without explaining the term, and I have to stop them and demand an explanation. When they introduce some 'concept', I ask questions about how this concept differs from this and that older and well known concept. And so on. A good teacher/lecturer would structure his presentation, explain terms, refer to related, known stuff, and adapt the presentation to whatever background the audience has. Most IT people just opens the sluice gates to let their immense flood of advance knowledge drown you. When the audience doesn't understand a word, the IT expert usually blames the audience :-) Unfortunately, publishing books is so cheap nowadays that you see the same in a lot of IT books: You senses that the author is really knowledgeable, but the explanations are outright terrible. Sometimes, the better you know the subject area yourself, the more you see how bad the presentation is, how bad the examples are. Wikipedia is certainly no exception (in many articles, not all): When I try to make sense of them, I often ask myself: Is there a single person in the world who will understand this - and also will look it up in Wikipedia? If it takes a Master to understand the article, then you probably learned enough in your studies that you know all the stuff in the article! Some textbook authors are excellent. Some academics, even IT people, have an impressing ability to make even complex issues look easy and obvious to a lesser qualified audience. I wish we had a lot more of those. As long as that is not the case, we will have to cope with explanations that requires a lot of work to be deciphered. Sometimes you ask supplementary questions; sometimes the answer gives you the proper keywords for a google search for more understandable explanations. We won't run into those great pedagogics all the time, and have to live with it.

                    Religious freedom is the freedom to say that t

                    Mircea NeacsuM Offline
                    Mircea NeacsuM Offline
                    Mircea Neacsu
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #21

                    trønderen wrote:

                    Some textbook authors are excellent. Some academics, even IT people, have an impressing ability to make even complex issues look easy and obvious to a lesser qualified audience.

                    A personal story from way back when: In my third Uni third year, we had an Electronics course and everyone said if you pass it, it's almost like having the diploma in your pocket. The amazing part was that after every course I would come out convinced I understood everything but when I would read the course again I would realize I don't have a clue. Took me a while to figure out the trick the teacher was using. He would insist on simple things until you realized how obvious they were and just gloss over complicated stuff. Almost like saying "you see 2 plus 2 equals 4 because if you take 2 fingers and 2 fingers that makes 4 fingers... and, by the way, the Laplacian of the electric field in the junction is given by this differential equation...". He had an impressing ability of masking the the complicated things in deceptive simplicity. Although I passed the course, cannot say I enjoyed it.

                    Mircea

                    T 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Mircea NeacsuM Mircea Neacsu

                      trønderen wrote:

                      Some textbook authors are excellent. Some academics, even IT people, have an impressing ability to make even complex issues look easy and obvious to a lesser qualified audience.

                      A personal story from way back when: In my third Uni third year, we had an Electronics course and everyone said if you pass it, it's almost like having the diploma in your pocket. The amazing part was that after every course I would come out convinced I understood everything but when I would read the course again I would realize I don't have a clue. Took me a while to figure out the trick the teacher was using. He would insist on simple things until you realized how obvious they were and just gloss over complicated stuff. Almost like saying "you see 2 plus 2 equals 4 because if you take 2 fingers and 2 fingers that makes 4 fingers... and, by the way, the Laplacian of the electric field in the junction is given by this differential equation...". He had an impressing ability of masking the the complicated things in deceptive simplicity. Although I passed the course, cannot say I enjoyed it.

                      Mircea

                      T Offline
                      T Offline
                      trønderen
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #22

                      I fully believe you story. Maybe that lecturer did not belong in the class of 'excellent' lecturers. Glossing over complexity can be very counter-productive, as you indicate. However: Grasping the main idea, maybe in a somewhat simplistic way, can be an essential stepping stone. There are exception situations, corner cases, that require special consideration. They can come later. Grasp the main ideas first, even if they do not cover everything. A good lecturer will make it clear where you might encounter exceptions to the main rules, and those cases will be looked at later. A bad lecturer will use his immense knowledge by rushing on to all the corner cases and exceptions long before the students have had an opportunity to digest the normal case. Regarding calculus concepts: Lots of students have merely learned 'That's the way we do it!' and have really never truly understood why that's the way to do it. That nature is that way - it is obvious and natural! A good lecturer makes it obvious to you why it simply has to be that way, why the calculus is the way it is. I remember from my high school years when I got hold of some good books in relativity, and one night realized that the twin paradox simply had to be that way! Anything else would have been completely illogical! Later, I tried to find other textbooks that would explain more advanced topics in relativity in a manner that made it equally obvious. I never found any. But when I was 16-17 yo, I was at the stage where special relativity was an obvious thing to me, even though I was certainly not a calculus wiz kid - not then, and never since. To me, as a teenager, the twin paradox was self-evident even without advanced differential math. A relativity wiz would probably say that my accept for the twin paradox as something obvious is little worth, it doesn't reflect all the complexity of the calculus. That may be right, but if I can fully accept and and appreciate the twin paradox without all that calculus, I have come a long way compared to a lot of the people around me! When I ask someone to explain a solution to me, I always ask them to first present an 'intuitive' solution. Your mainline thoughts, void of mathematical details, data types, lambdas, locking mechanisms ... Which principles do you follow in this solution? I consider calculus to be at the coding level. You can say a lot about a system without referring to implementation code. You can say a lot about relativity without going into calculus. And about elec

                      Mircea NeacsuM 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • T trønderen

                        I fully believe you story. Maybe that lecturer did not belong in the class of 'excellent' lecturers. Glossing over complexity can be very counter-productive, as you indicate. However: Grasping the main idea, maybe in a somewhat simplistic way, can be an essential stepping stone. There are exception situations, corner cases, that require special consideration. They can come later. Grasp the main ideas first, even if they do not cover everything. A good lecturer will make it clear where you might encounter exceptions to the main rules, and those cases will be looked at later. A bad lecturer will use his immense knowledge by rushing on to all the corner cases and exceptions long before the students have had an opportunity to digest the normal case. Regarding calculus concepts: Lots of students have merely learned 'That's the way we do it!' and have really never truly understood why that's the way to do it. That nature is that way - it is obvious and natural! A good lecturer makes it obvious to you why it simply has to be that way, why the calculus is the way it is. I remember from my high school years when I got hold of some good books in relativity, and one night realized that the twin paradox simply had to be that way! Anything else would have been completely illogical! Later, I tried to find other textbooks that would explain more advanced topics in relativity in a manner that made it equally obvious. I never found any. But when I was 16-17 yo, I was at the stage where special relativity was an obvious thing to me, even though I was certainly not a calculus wiz kid - not then, and never since. To me, as a teenager, the twin paradox was self-evident even without advanced differential math. A relativity wiz would probably say that my accept for the twin paradox as something obvious is little worth, it doesn't reflect all the complexity of the calculus. That may be right, but if I can fully accept and and appreciate the twin paradox without all that calculus, I have come a long way compared to a lot of the people around me! When I ask someone to explain a solution to me, I always ask them to first present an 'intuitive' solution. Your mainline thoughts, void of mathematical details, data types, lambdas, locking mechanisms ... Which principles do you follow in this solution? I consider calculus to be at the coding level. You can say a lot about a system without referring to implementation code. You can say a lot about relativity without going into calculus. And about elec

                        Mircea NeacsuM Offline
                        Mircea NeacsuM Offline
                        Mircea Neacsu
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #23

                        I think we are going on a tangent here, but hey, it's the Lounge so who cares! :)

                        trønderen wrote:

                        I remember from my high school years when I got hold of some good books in relativity

                        For me the fuse was George Gamow's One, Two, Three ... Infinity. Facts & Speculations of Science[^] when I was 12. Got my mind started on concepts like transcendental numbers, atomic structure, relativity - a smorgasbord of delicious intellectual concepts for a nerdy kid :laugh:

                        trønderen wrote:

                        even though I was certainly not a calculus wiz kid - not then, and never since.

                        Funny how our brains can work differently. For some people concepts like music, colors, or relativity for that matter, are absolutely natural. For me they are all learned concepts that I can perceive and understand but I cannot call them natural. With calculus meanwhile, I'm a fish in the water :) In the end all these differences make the world an interesting place to live. With nerds like me it would be such a boring place.

                        Mircea

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • R RedDk

                          Well, my honest feelings about this inelegant fellow is that until he "'fesses" up and gives us the true location of his "unseenedness" (by editing his particulars to out his use of the mercan flag) he's just being colorful for the sake of color.

                          L Offline
                          L Offline
                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #24

                          OK folks, you obviously looking for "I am sorry for posting such rant" so here it is

                          "I am sorry for posting such rant"

                          anything to make you feel better for wasting your voluntary time ( unfortunately ) some of you (obviously) do not care wasting mine time.

                          L N 2 Replies Last reply
                          0
                          • T trønderen

                            I will say to your defense: Most IT people (or you could make it more general, if you like: Most people with a university degree) are very poor at explaining a problem within their field of expertise to someone outside the field. Their advanced knowledge stands in the way. Even when I ask my co-workers to explain something (I have a Master in Comp.Sci), I may have to guide them through their explanation, telling them 'First, explain how this part works, we'll take the rest afterwards', rather than everything messed up. They use terms that are specific to the stuff they are trying to explain, without explaining the term, and I have to stop them and demand an explanation. When they introduce some 'concept', I ask questions about how this concept differs from this and that older and well known concept. And so on. A good teacher/lecturer would structure his presentation, explain terms, refer to related, known stuff, and adapt the presentation to whatever background the audience has. Most IT people just opens the sluice gates to let their immense flood of advance knowledge drown you. When the audience doesn't understand a word, the IT expert usually blames the audience :-) Unfortunately, publishing books is so cheap nowadays that you see the same in a lot of IT books: You senses that the author is really knowledgeable, but the explanations are outright terrible. Sometimes, the better you know the subject area yourself, the more you see how bad the presentation is, how bad the examples are. Wikipedia is certainly no exception (in many articles, not all): When I try to make sense of them, I often ask myself: Is there a single person in the world who will understand this - and also will look it up in Wikipedia? If it takes a Master to understand the article, then you probably learned enough in your studies that you know all the stuff in the article! Some textbook authors are excellent. Some academics, even IT people, have an impressing ability to make even complex issues look easy and obvious to a lesser qualified audience. I wish we had a lot more of those. As long as that is not the case, we will have to cope with explanations that requires a lot of work to be deciphered. Sometimes you ask supplementary questions; sometimes the answer gives you the proper keywords for a google search for more understandable explanations. We won't run into those great pedagogics all the time, and have to live with it.

                            Religious freedom is the freedom to say that t

                            B Offline
                            B Offline
                            BernardIE5317
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #25

                            re/ teaching please see link below. https://winkgo.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/67-Hilarious-Teacher-Memes-01-720x1080.jpg[^]

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • L Lost User

                              OK folks, you obviously looking for "I am sorry for posting such rant" so here it is

                              "I am sorry for posting such rant"

                              anything to make you feel better for wasting your voluntary time ( unfortunately ) some of you (obviously) do not care wasting mine time.

                              L Offline
                              L Offline
                              Lost User
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #26

                              Salvatore Terress wrote:

                              some of you (obviously) do not care wasting mine time.

                              Yeah, you just had to say it. The only person who wastes your time is you, with these childish whines that you are not getting the service you think you are entitled to.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • L Lost User

                                When I post here , asking for help do I have to spell it out ? "...I am looking for a solution..." is it not obvious? or is this forum now a " social media chat " box? Reason for THIS post I have recently experienced a "reply" which basically restated / reformatted my post and did not actually offered a solution. End of rant

                                G Offline
                                G Offline
                                GuyThiebaut
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #27

                                I have been thinking about the area of asking questions recently. Asking a well formed question is a skill, it's not a given that everyone knows how to ask a well-formed question. I think teaching kids how to ask a question should be part of what they learn at school.

                                Salvatore Terress wrote:

                                do I have to spell it out ?

                                Yes, you do have to spell it out. Here is a great example of asking questions with a journalist asking Richard Feynman a question, where Feynman points out how the question is difficult to answer ->Richard Feynman Magnets - YouTube[^]

                                “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

                                ― Christopher Hitchens

                                L J 2 Replies Last reply
                                0
                                • G GuyThiebaut

                                  I have been thinking about the area of asking questions recently. Asking a well formed question is a skill, it's not a given that everyone knows how to ask a well-formed question. I think teaching kids how to ask a question should be part of what they learn at school.

                                  Salvatore Terress wrote:

                                  do I have to spell it out ?

                                  Yes, you do have to spell it out. Here is a great example of asking questions with a journalist asking Richard Feynman a question, where Feynman points out how the question is difficult to answer ->Richard Feynman Magnets - YouTube[^]

                                  “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

                                  ― Christopher Hitchens

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  Lost User
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #28

                                  (Importunately ) I have to disagree for (simple) reason such point of view emphasizes the FORM of the question and ( most of the time) misses the subject of the question. I have experienced sites which basically stopped the post because it was not formatted properly or my English was not good enough, and when my post was accepted it was promptly rewritten. Of course when I pointed out that my post was not for purpose of perfect English presentation I was prompt banned. And there are sites which tells me that "your past posts were not accepted well..." All of this is NOT based on "customer is always right..."

                                  G R 2 Replies Last reply
                                  0
                                  • L Lost User

                                    (Importunately ) I have to disagree for (simple) reason such point of view emphasizes the FORM of the question and ( most of the time) misses the subject of the question. I have experienced sites which basically stopped the post because it was not formatted properly or my English was not good enough, and when my post was accepted it was promptly rewritten. Of course when I pointed out that my post was not for purpose of perfect English presentation I was prompt banned. And there are sites which tells me that "your past posts were not accepted well..." All of this is NOT based on "customer is always right..."

                                    G Offline
                                    G Offline
                                    GuyThiebaut
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #29

                                    Oh well, pearls before swine...

                                    “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

                                    ― Christopher Hitchens

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • L Lost User

                                      (Importunately ) I have to disagree for (simple) reason such point of view emphasizes the FORM of the question and ( most of the time) misses the subject of the question. I have experienced sites which basically stopped the post because it was not formatted properly or my English was not good enough, and when my post was accepted it was promptly rewritten. Of course when I pointed out that my post was not for purpose of perfect English presentation I was prompt banned. And there are sites which tells me that "your past posts were not accepted well..." All of this is NOT based on "customer is always right..."

                                      R Offline
                                      R Offline
                                      Rick York
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #30

                                      The simple fact is the customer is NOT always right and kissing a customer's backside is not the purpose of this site. The actual quote is, "In matters of taste, the customer is always right." The first phrase is an important point of distinction.

                                      "They have a consciousness, they have a life, they have a soul! Damn you! Let the rabbits wear glasses! Save our brothers! Can I get an amen?"

                                      L 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • R Rick York

                                        The simple fact is the customer is NOT always right and kissing a customer's backside is not the purpose of this site. The actual quote is, "In matters of taste, the customer is always right." The first phrase is an important point of distinction.

                                        "They have a consciousness, they have a life, they have a soul! Damn you! Let the rabbits wear glasses! Save our brothers! Can I get an amen?"

                                        L Offline
                                        L Offline
                                        Lost User
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #31

                                        It would be silly to kiss, but insults are acceptable. My favorite RTFM takes few seconds to type, so what is all this fuss about wasting "volunteer contributors" time ?

                                        N 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • L Lost User

                                          OK folks, you obviously looking for "I am sorry for posting such rant" so here it is

                                          "I am sorry for posting such rant"

                                          anything to make you feel better for wasting your voluntary time ( unfortunately ) some of you (obviously) do not care wasting mine time.

                                          N Offline
                                          N Offline
                                          Nelek
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #32

                                          I do not feel my time wasted here... I just bought popcorn and took a sit. Relaxing from technical content for a while can be refreshing :P Thank you for the entertainment :)

                                          M.D.V. ;) If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about? Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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