| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 5 months |
| seen | May 28 at 23:07 | |
| stats | profile views | 5 |
|
May 26 |
accepted | Etymology of “seat-of-the-pants” |
|
May 26 |
asked | Etymology of “seat-of-the-pants” |
|
May 19 |
awarded | Critic |
|
May 19 |
accepted | Can one feel claustrophobic? |
|
May 19 |
asked | Can one feel claustrophobic? |
|
Apr 12 |
accepted | Verb to describe “to enable or to disable” |
|
Feb 5 |
awarded | Teacher |
|
Feb 4 |
comment |
Verb to describe “to enable or to disable” Notice the "potentially" in brackets. I think the verb to set conveys that. "Set to the enabled state" and "set to the disabled state" do not make implicit statements about the previous state, but to toggle does. |
|
Feb 4 |
comment |
Verb to describe “to enable or to disable” I thought of that. The problem of toggle is that it implicitly implies a change to a different state. I want to convey the possibility of staying in the same state. |
|
Feb 4 |
answered | Verb to describe “to enable or to disable” |
|
Feb 4 |
asked | Verb to describe “to enable or to disable” |
|
Dec 30 |
awarded | Editor |
|
Dec 30 |
awarded | Scholar |
|
Dec 30 |
awarded | Student |
|
Dec 30 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Dec 30 |
comment |
Antonym of “comfort zone” I like "push my personal boundaries". Thanks. |
|
Dec 30 |
accepted | Antonym of “comfort zone” |
|
Dec 30 |
revised |
Antonym of “comfort zone” edited body |
|
Dec 30 |
asked | Antonym of “comfort zone” |