| bio | website | blog.adriania.com.ar |
|---|---|---|
| location | Chile | |
| age | 33 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 11 months |
| seen | Jul 30 '12 at 20:46 | |
| stats | profile views | 16 |
I'm a web developer currently living in Santiago, Chile. I'm always trying to improve my skills. I earn my daily bread on PHP / (My|PostGre)SQL / JavaScript development, working with CakePHP, PrototypeJS, Script.aculo.us and jQuery, but I'm also experimenting with Django. I'm interested in many areas of programming and in learning new programming languages.
I'm also a budding roleplayer and GM. I have mastered 4E DND for a year and a half now, and love the job.
|
Jul 30 |
awarded | Caucus |
|
Jun 14 |
awarded | Yearling |
|
Aug 5 |
comment |
Quoting a question at the end of a sentence which is itself a question Brute wasn't a frenchman... |
|
Jul 13 |
comment |
“Picking up your litter puts road-workers at risk” — is this strangely-worded road sign grammatically correct? +1 for actually coming up with a sensible, short and clear sentence with the intended meaning. |
|
Jul 7 |
comment |
Are there meta-plurals beyond “peoples”? @Stan yes, I hadn't read your answer when I wrote my comment. |
|
Jul 6 |
comment |
Are there meta-plurals beyond “peoples”? @Stan Is it not? What is "The Jewish People"? |
|
Jul 5 |
comment |
Are there meta-plurals beyond “peoples”? @Fumble he's asking about collective nouns and their plurals, as I see it. |
|
Jul 5 |
answered | Are there meta-plurals beyond “peoples”? |
|
Jun 28 |
comment |
Noun for enable (“enability”, “enabliness”)? Or maybe "Please check device state". In programming, I normally use state to refer to the binary value of a variable or flag. |
|
Jun 23 |
comment |
A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try These aren't bad, but to me, the question didn't ask for "hard to please", but for "impossible to please". |
|
Jun 23 |
awarded | Commentator |
|
Jun 23 |
comment |
A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try well yes. But not going by what @SidCool is telling me... |
|
Jun 23 |
comment |
A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try Indeed. Of the ways to quit, this is the classiest. |
|
Jun 23 |
comment |
A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try Either the boss knows what the word means, and he feels a bit insulted, or he doesn't, and feels ignorant (and insulted 10 minutes later when he checks it). I don't see it as an advantage. |
|
Jun 23 |
comment |
A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try From your other comments: if you had to tell this to your boss, the last thing I'd do if I wanted to patch things with him is concentrate the message on one word. If you wanted to quit, on the other hand, go right ahead :) |
|
Jun 23 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Jun 23 |
revised |
A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try added 235 characters in body |
|
Jun 23 |
comment |
A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try Rude? It literally means "that cannot be pleased". |
|
Jun 23 |
answered | A single word for someone who is not pleased no matter how hard you try |
|
Jun 17 |
comment |
How rude is “to eat like a pig”? ironically (yes, I know), a bird eats much more, relative to its own weight, than a pig, horse or human. |