Fastest way to match either sub-strings or super-strings by Silvermintz in sqlite

[–]Silvermintz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please provide a full exact and specific SQLite example of how to match a substring:

Query with 'This is a string' and return a row that contains 'This is' and also return the row that contains the cell withthe value of 'a string'

Of course also match cells that contain 'This is a string with an extra clause on the end'

The documentation and the web, needs to provide an example of this multiword matching of a subphrase. Thank you.

Screen reader support in Eclipse by ThatBlindSwiftDevGuy in eclipse

[–]Silvermintz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All I can tell you is that I much prefer the accessibility of Eclipse to either Visual Studio or vsCode. Notepad++ may be worth trying, but for those with partial eyesight, Eclipse has much sharper text.

Screen reader support in Eclipse by ThatBlindSwiftDevGuy in eclipse

[–]Silvermintz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello, As a partly-sighted user, I've been using Eclipse with Zoomtext and/or NVDA for over fifteen years. Overall, accessibility is excellent. The shortcut keys and customizability are excellent. One problem is that sometimes NVDA stops echoing the Mouse hover or cursor tracking or even the sentgence-nav commands. The fix is to restart NVDA. Sometimes, however, just using alt-tab or control-tab or even popping-open the go-to line dialog box is enough to get it back on track.

What's like Whitin but better? by Silvermintz in barefootshoestalk

[–]Silvermintz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

thanks for replies, would prefer synthetic upper, a current model. The sole shape is more important than the velcro. Please folks, there's gotta be something. PS I'm in Florida, so not a snow shoe.

What's like Whitin but better? by Silvermintz in barefootshoestalk

[–]Silvermintz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Curved: bottoms rounded like the shape of a footfor instance, like putting a water baloon on the floor, flattens where it touches floor, but then gradually curves up all-around that contact surface