I've got my delivery recently and to check if I've got everything I have to either export order list to some app and check items I pick from package (first-picked-first-checked-out), or take all them out and go through the list line by line and check if I have this item (and put item aside)
"Tattoos and piercings are more common among those who experienced childhood abuse and neglect"
(not going to make a link for them)
What message do you get out of this title? — that most tattooed people were abused in childhood, don't you?
How about their conclusion:
> Results showed that around 40% of participants had at least one tattoo or piercing and approximately 25% of participants reported significant child abuse or neglect. Among the participants reporting child abuse, 48% had a tattoo or piercing, while only 35% of people not reporting child abuse had a tattoo or piercing.
It says that 48% were abused — almost half. Impressive, ha?
However, if you plot what they say, or recalculate, or rebuild the sentence, you get that:
only 12% are tattooed and were abused, and ~35% are just tattooed.
Just saying.
And when they finish checking — I finish the order. So they don't bother with checkout process
For the purpose of team building.
Imagine comedian (imagine Louis CK or Ricky Gervais) added to your team's chat for a week, watches how discussions go, attends Zoom calls and by the end of the week "draws a caricature" for everyone.
And then performs with a 1-1.5 hour [your-team-name]-special.
Was just watching release notes for v3.2 and I have v3.14 — and (for a moment) thought that I have an older version... because 3.14 < 3.2
It can be compared mathematically (thus sorted) and still be semantic:
— 3 — major release
— 3.1 — minor update
— 3.14 — patch
— 3.141 — tiny patch
Is it used anywhere or what am I missing?