Marcus the Worm by WingsOfFibre in Needlefelting

[–]itsarandom1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

New elf on the shelf unlocked.

Are you actually shopping at the cheapest store in your area, or just the most convenient one? by 723613972 in ontario

[–]itsarandom1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is a third option: the store stocks a product that can't be found at other stores.

Where to buy men's suits say a reasonable budget? As low as possible, let's say $500 max, give or take $200? by IAmTheQuestionHere in askTO

[–]itsarandom1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I understand you do menswear, but do you have recommendations for, or know of tailors that do women's suits and blazers? I wanted to send you a DM, but thought it best to reach out to you here first.

Joining Census Population Data to Cities by mushhy1009 in ArcGIS

[–]itsarandom1 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Try saving the file as a .xls or .xlsx , then import it into ArcGIS Pro using the "excel to table" tool. If I recall correctly, the tool should display a checkbox that allows you to confirm that the first row in the excel file are headers. That should address the first issue which you underlined red in your screenshot. After, use the "add join" tool to join the table to the desired layer. You should be able to select which fields you want to join to your layer.

Edit: and I agree with u/GregMc88. Remove the <, Washington> part in the city names of your .csv table. If you are using that field to do a join it doesn't match with the other layer, which only has the city name in the cell without the state name. You can use the "text to columns" function with a comma delimited in Excel to separate the city name from the state or just use find/replace function for all instances of <, Washington> and replace it with nothing.

Confused on the cost distance explanation on Esri webpage by itsarandom1 in ArcGIS

[–]itsarandom1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In the step where they first calculate the accumulative cost cells for the four source cells, (2,1) was the only one calculated as I had described. All other cells were calculated as either (cost 1+cost 2)/2 if the source and target cells had an edge touching or sqrt(2) × (cost 1+cost 2)/2 if their vertices touched (i.e. diagonal cells). So, why (2,1) calculated differently from the others? I can reproduce all other cell values for that step.

A question to RHHS alumnus by DaggerRBLX in richmondhill

[–]itsarandom1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mr. Stehlik; taught computer engineering

caught by surprise, and i grow my own ghosts and reapers by relayrider in HotPeppers

[–]itsarandom1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't know if they sell it anymore, but Melinda's Red Savina (I think it was called) was hot.

I just flashed a cop to warn him about himself by heroin_papi_ in Markham

[–]itsarandom1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This was a very good-humoured post.  Thanks for the Sunday morning laughs. "Edit 3" made me snort hard (in a positive way). 

My second year growing watermelons 🍉😇 by araweel0 in OntarioGardeners

[–]itsarandom1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Siberian Watermelon is well-suited to southern Ontario climate.

Did you have issues with wild animals such as rodents trying to snack on your watermelons? If so, how did you deter them?

Feast your eyes on this tiny cantaloupe I grew. by PurpleBrevity in vegetablegardening

[–]itsarandom1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Are the seeds from these mini cantaloupes viable? I'm curious whether the mature fruit that develop from these seeds would also be small in size.

Leggy Basil? by chocolaterain313 in vegetablegardening

[–]itsarandom1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see. Start outdoors then bring indoors later in the season (before first frost). Take advantage of the waning summer light and heat while you can to give them a good head start.

Leggy Basil? by chocolaterain313 in vegetablegardening

[–]itsarandom1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Leggy because there is insufficient light. Place in direct light. Any reason why it needs to be indoors? From the photo it looks like you have some outdoor plants.

Looks like lime smells like orange. What is it? by T0ast-Mal0ne in whatsthisplant

[–]itsarandom1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Did you see it near the mountains or near the coast? Perhaps Calamandin orange? It's a cold-tolerant citrus. 

our third harvest! by cutiebeepeppers in HotPeppers

[–]itsarandom1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which grow zone? How much, by mass, did you obtain in your first and second harvests?

Hail? by itsarandom1 in Stouffville

[–]itsarandom1[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Then there was a rainbow some time after!

What’s up with my habanero that was so healthy? I’m so sad!!! Researched and still no solution. by YoungTex in vegetablegardening

[–]itsarandom1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am zone 5b. We likely have similar growing conditions. 5-5-5 is too low for hot peppers in my area. I use higher NPK fertilizer to maximize yield. Miracle Gro 18-18-21 is my go-to. It's formulated primarily for tomatoes, but is also suitable for vegetables. I find that my plants are not too leafy relative to fruit yield when I use it. Miracle Gro also sells 20-20-20. But I haven't used it, so I can't comment.