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A few hours ago I lost my dear friend Nalini to cancer. Nalini was a great mom, wife, friend and scholar, and a fighter to the end. Nalini is the bravest person I have ever known. I miss her smile, her wicked sense of humor, and her heart of gold.
/ravi
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I'm sorry to hear that - she sounds like a wonderful person.
Remember, she is not gone while you still remember her. My sincere condolences - it's never easy to lose a close friend, and it doesn't get noticeably easier each time.
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
English doesn't borrow from other languages.
English follows other languages down dark alleys, knocks them over and goes through their pockets for loose grammar.
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Thanks, OG. She's an amazing lady[^].
OriginalGriff wrote: she is not gone while you still remember her. Agreed. I feel the body is but a vehicle for the soul - the body breaks down, but the soul lingers on.
/ravi
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May you be strong in your time of sorrow.
Keep Clam And Proofread
--
√(-1) 23 ∑ π...
And it was delicious.
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I'm sorry for your loss
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I'm so sorry about your friend, Ravi. It sounds like she left a legacy of vivid memories for you, so she lives on.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Thanks, Gary. Yes, she does!
/ravi
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My sincerest condolences. It sounds like she made the world a better place.
CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr., P. E.
Comport Computing
Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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Thanks, Walt. Indeed she did. The day before she relapsed (almost exactly a year ago), she went ahead with her plans to host a Thanksgiving meal for a group of her university students who were unable to go home for the break. She's set the bar high.
/ravi
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I've done that sort of thing in the past, both for soldiers stationed nearby who had no family around for Thanksgiving and Christmas and for some of the foreign students here at UT, but I wasn't battling a relapse of anything. It's definitely rewarding and appreciated at the same time - the perfect definition of a win-win situation.
I've found the best way to keep the memories of loved ones alive is to pay their thoughtfulness forward for them.
CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr., P. E.
Comport Computing
Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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Walt Fair, Jr. wrote: the memories of loved ones alive is to pay their thoughtfulness forward for them. Indeed. I know she'd want that.
/ravi
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I also lost a dear friend to cancer this summer and as I posted on a tribute photo; "Life goes on but to a different beat".
I'm sure she was a special person. R.I.P.
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Thanks, Mike. I remember your post. Friendships mean more to me today than ever before.
/ravi
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My grandmother who lived to be 100 told me one time that one of the worst parts of getting old was you lose all your friends. What's scarey is it's starting to happen to me!
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I stand to lose a brother shortly, my condolences. I plan to set aside the good memories and cherish them.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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I'm very sorry to hear that, Mycroft. I wish you and your family peace and strength.
/ravi
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Condolences for your loss.
Cancer sucks. That is all.
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thatrajaNobody remains a virgin, Life screws everyone
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Seems you had great loss
RIP for your loved one
Believe Yourself™
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I have spent all day recreating a project because VS decided last night that there was a problem, and kept flashing up error message boxes with compilation error problems - and then running the app anyway, as if nothing had happened.
Now, I've had this one before, and I'm pretty sure it means that VS has got itself confused and stored some bad info in one of it's many intermediate files - one it doesn't actually clean when you tell it clean the solution, or rebuild all. And the only solution I have found is to create a new project and add each end every file, one at a time, building each file in, and eventually you end up with the same project as you started with, but it compiles this time...
So I did. And sure, I have the same project I had yesterday, but it all works now.
For an hour.
Then it decided to find a new problem...this time it couldn't set up a variable in the designer.cs file because
protected MyWalletBL.Branch Branch;
...
this.selectFavourites.Branch = ((MyWalletBL.Branch)(resources.GetObject("selectFavourites.Branch")));
has a different type on each side of the equals...
Two hours of searching, faffing and general swearing.
Then I removed all the references from each project, cleaned the solution, closed VS, reopened it, cleaned it again, and put the references back.
Oh look! It works again...
It looks like VS keeps intermediate semicompiled assemblies and can refer to two different versions of the same assembly in the same line of code without you having to change that assembly in any way
And I haven't even tried to make my base class UserControl abstract yet...maybe I won't do that at all!
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
English doesn't borrow from other languages.
English follows other languages down dark alleys, knocks them over and goes through their pockets for loose grammar.
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I hate it when VS decides to do that. I usually use VS or #D for editing, and compile from the command line.
Keep Clam And Proofread
--
√(-1) 23 ∑ π...
And it was delicious.
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OriginalGriff wrote: make my base class UserControl abstract You do realize that's the Visual Studio equivalent of crossing the streams[^], don't you?
Software Zen: delete this;
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