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- Install a Windows service using a Windows command prompt?
I want to install a Windows service using a Windows command prompt (not the Visual Studio command prompt) How do I do this?
- Using a comma before but - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I was once told by an English professor that a comma should never be used before but in a sentence For years, I have followed her advice but sometimes I just feel like it just needs to be there O
- Verify a certificate chain using openssl verify - Stack Overflow
Verify a certificate chain using openssl verify Asked 11 years, 3 months ago Modified 1 year, 4 months ago Viewed 972k times
- English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
- How can I generate a self-signed SSL certificate using OpenSSL?
Modern browsers (like the warez we're using in 2014 2015) want a certificate that chains back to a trust anchor, and they want DNS names to be presented in particular ways in the certificate And browsers are actively moving against self-signed server certificates Some browsers don't exactly make it easy to import a self-signed server certificate
- Where does the period go when using parentheses?
Where should the period go when using parentheses? For example: In sentence one, I use this example (which has a parenthesis at the end ) Should the period be inside, or outside of the parentheses?
- Using parameters in batch files at Windows command line
Using parameters in batch files: %0 and %9 Batch files can refer to the words passed in as parameters with the tokens: %0 to %9 %0 is the program name as it was called %1 is the first command line parameter %2 is the second command line parameter and so on till %9 parameters passed in on the commandline must be alphanumeric characters and delimited by spaces Since %0 is the program name as
- tenses - Using have ran or have run - English Language Usage . . .
Not really addressed in the dictionary I see "have to run", but not have run or have ran I lean towards the former as correct, but asked here to get other thoughts
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