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I'm having the exactly the same issue...
But i found a workaround,
view the article you want to bookmark and then click on the right part of the link right below the menubar (in front of the link is a small house icon, thats a link like "where am I").
Now you are getting a list of all aticles in that chapter... find your article and move your mouse to the articles caption... then another bookmark link appears, this one works (at least for me)
Martin
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Thanks for the report. We're looking into it now.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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I'm not as active on this site as I us to be, but once upon a time I was a C# MVP posting between 600-800 respones mainly in the C# forum per month for several years (well, at that volume probably about 1.5 years or so). That was back before 2005. Are reputation points calculated that far back? Given my "Authority" reputation score it would seem not, but it seems that Author reputation points are more or less correct.
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Program Manager II
Visual Studio Professional Deployment Experience
Microsoft
[My Articles] [My Blog]
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your rep graph[^] seems to suggest you wrote some articles before you had any Authority indeed.
Luc Pattyn [My Articles] Nil Volentibus Arduum
The quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get. Please use <PRE> tags for code snippets, they improve readability. CP Vanity has been updated to V2.3
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Which is another reason I know it's wrong.
One of the reasons I got an MVP in 2004 is partly because of the amount fo community support I did on CodeProject - all the C# forum at that time.
If reputation is calculated all the way back, did perhaps the relationship of "programming forums" to the old/new "C#" forum change?
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Program Manager II
Visual Studio Professional Deployment Experience
Microsoft
[My Articles] [My Blog]
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I don't know the definitive answer to your question; AFAIK all available logs have been processed (*), so maybe there was no voting system back then, or the votes weren't logged then.
BTW: the "protector" hyperlink in your bio isn't functioning at the moment.
(*) except for downloading files (which have been processed since earlier this year only; older ones will be added, and all of them will be reduced in value).
Luc Pattyn [My Articles] Nil Volentibus Arduum
The quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get. Please use <PRE> tags for code snippets, they improve readability. CP Vanity has been updated to V2.3
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I don't think they did but shouldn't just having posted one count?
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Program Manager II
Visual Studio Professional Deployment Experience
Microsoft
[My Articles] [My Blog]
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Reputation points are calculated back to the dawn of time, but the issue is now from when they are calculated, but on what data are they calculated.
Forum reputation is based on the questions and answers you post as well as the votes on your questions and answers. Until August 2005 we only had "posts", but after August we labelled posts as questions, answers, general etc.
Authority points are awarded when you answer a question or when your answer is upvoted. Unfortunately for you, life dragged you away from the site just after we made these changes, so your posts, labelled "general" were never counted towards your rep.
However, I'm rerunning the rep calculator as soon as we work through a perf issue and I will reassign posts as "questions" or "answers" through a mix of guesswork and keyword searching. You should get a bunch of points owing.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Thanks for the explanation, Chris. I try to make it back here from time to time. Nice to see so many familiar names still.
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Program Manager II
Visual Studio Professional Deployment Experience
Microsoft
[My Articles] [My Blog]
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And it's definitely nice seeing you again.
I've been bugging Jeff about a Redmond trip sooner rather than later.
?
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Sounds great! Give me a heads up when you have a date in mind.
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Program Manager II
Visual Studio Professional Deployment Experience
Microsoft
[My Articles] [My Blog]
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Why are CP pages not filling the entire width of my browser window anymore like they used to up until about a week ago?
Thomas
Tosch
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Look at the bottom of every page. You can find Layout: fixed | fluid
Refer this Clickety[^]
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Scroll to the bottom of the screen and click the Fluid link.
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thanks, works fine again.
Wonder why this suddenly changed, has been 'fluid' for years now, just one of those things I guess.
Tosch
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Geekness alert:
It's actually been "fixed" for a long time, but the width of the fixed sized has been tuned to fit a 19" screen, so most people never noticed it. Further, because it's not actually, truly, fixed, but rather just a "max width", it looks fluid on anything smaller than fullscreen 19".
What I have done is tightened it up so that it's more of a 17" full screen view rather than 19".
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Chris Maunder wrote: t's actually been "fixed" for a long time, but the width of the fixed sized has been tuned to fit a 19" screen, so most people never noticed it. Further, because it's not actually, truly, fixed, but rather just a "max width", it looks fluid on anything smaller than fullscreen 19".
mmmmm, I don't think so.
Chris Maunder wrote: What I have done is tightened it up so that it's more of a 17" full screen view rather than 19".
Ok, that explains it.
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I recently noticed it is possible to edit the title of an article in your bookmarks (or rather edit the title of your bookmark). That can be pretty handy at times, but it does not do much good since the bookmark groups prevent me from really finding what I want (original titles are usually fine)...
I have 5 pages of bookmarks and I just had to find an article about binding in the 'Database' group in my bookmarks. I have some articles on Design Patters in 'Programming Tips' (while I also have 'Design and Architecture' and 'Uncategorised Tips and Tricks'). I even have an article on an ErrorProvider for WinForms under the header 'C/C++'
My point is that I have to go through 5 pages of bookmarks to find a specific title and ignore the groups. If we could put bookmarks in our own groups then that would be pretty awesome
It's an OO world.
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Naerling wrote: If we could put bookmarks in our own groups then that would be pretty awesome
I have always thought this was a great idea.
--
** Jack of all trades and master of none.
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This article has a vote of 2, but no messages in the bottom forum which say "my vote of 2".
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It could be that the vote was applied, and then the poster deleted the message. I assume that wouldn't wipe out the vote. Fortunately the author should have received an email with details of who applied the vote and why they did it.
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If a message is removed via "vote to remove", the vote will be removed. I am not sure if the same applies to a message that is deleted by the OP, but I would guess so and that's the way it should do.
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Posting the message isn't transactionalised with casting a vote, so if we had a database slowdown (eg during backups) there's a chance the vote went through but the comment didn't.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Internally, yes, and we were planning to but then the cost and hassle of leasing an IPv6 line from the hosting centre meant we decided we'd wait until more than 5 people in the world would visit.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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