#src 404
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screenshot character art: sebychu | dA (deactivated)
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as for adding a favicon and using CSS:
For CSS, I recommend using an external sheet on your website so you can have every page that you want to use that style link to it. (this also applies to any scripts you like, like sparkle.js)
For a favicon, just make a 16x16 image and put the following at the start of the html (or in the "head". technically it could go anywhere)
<link rel="icon" type="image/x-icon" href="/path/to/favicon.png">
For a CSS sheet, use:
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/path/to/sheet.css">
For a script you'd like to include, use this for every script you'd like to add to a page:
<script src="/scripts/sparkles.js"><script>
By the way, my site is at https://catboybeebop.neocities.org/!
Also, on neocities you can have a custom 404 page. Just make a page in the root of your site named "not_found.html" and it'll work :-)
Also, because I can: My site has a JS check for WebTV (since I plan on making a WTV version of the site eventually) so that it automatically redirects you if you visit the site (unless you go to a specific url manually)
*Taking notes* Thank you so much for helping me dude! :3
I already do have a custom 404 page, I don't wanna spoil it so try putting in a random string of numbers to see it >:3c
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Joya Khairallah (52 KG) Captures Two Junior World Records: 183.5-Kilogram (404.5-Pound) Deadlift and 428.5-Kilogram (944.7-Pound) Total
New Post has been published on https://eazyfitness.net/joya-khairallah-52-kg-captures-two-junior-world-records-183-5-kilogram-404-5-pound-deadlift-and-428-5-kilogram-944-7-pound-total/
Joya Khairallah (52 KG) Captures Two Junior World Records: 183.5-Kilogram (404.5-Pound) Deadlift and 428.5-Kilogram (944.7-Pound) Total
[] Joya Khairallah (52 KG) Captures Two Junior World Records: 183.5-Kilogram (404.5-Pound) Deadlift and 428.5-Kilogram (944.7-Pound) Total – Breaking Muscle
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How to handle images in a Rails / Webpacker / React app?
I am using Webpacker with rails 5.1.4 to play with React, Redux, and react-router-dom.
I have a Navbar.jsx component in app/javascript/src/components/ that needs to display an image, but I am not able to access my images stored in app/assets/images/.
Here is what I've tried :
<img src="logo.png" alt="Logo" /><img src="assets/logo.png" alt="Logo" /><img src="assets/images/logo.png" alt="Logo" />
From root path the last attempt works because /assets/images/logo.png does exist, but when I navigate to /posts/:id, it gives me the following error:
logo.png:1 GET http://localhost:3000/posts/assets/images/logo.png 404 (Not Found)
Can you help me? And more over what's your way to handle images in that kind or hybrid React/Rails app?
Thanks
https://codehunter.cc/a/reactjs/how-to-handle-images-in-a-rails-webpacker-react-app
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https://shingakunet.com/searchList/ksl_daitan/gl_jd010/gs_j1010/
https://shingakunet.com/searchList/ksl_senkaku/jl_nd010/jm_nc130/js_n1160/
https://shingakunet.com/searchList/ksl_senkaku/gl_jd010/gs_j1010/
https://shingaku.mynavi.jp/zenkoku/search/dt/?ctd1=2&sc=13&s=73
https://shingakunet.com/searchList/ksl_daitan/ksm_11/gl_jd010/gs_j1010/
https://shinronavi.com/search/result?sk%5B%5D=A&fld%5B%5D=R-404
https://www.jslim.jp/?page_id=1084
https://shingakunet.com/searchList/ksl_daitan/tandai/gl_jd010/
https://www.gakkou.net/daigaku/src/?srcmode=gkm&gkm=03007
https://shingakunet.com/searchList/ksl_daitan/gl_jd010/gs_j1020/
https://www.best-shingaku.net/search/gk3gm9g907gs3.html
https://shingaku.mynavi.jp/zenkoku/search/dt/?sc=15&s=86
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Hello! :))) How do you insert an image into AO3? I've tried using the insert image feature but it never works, only gives me Error 404.
you have to use html.
here's an article: https://www.canto.com/blog/insert-image-html/
but essentially it should look like: <img src=”(your image URL here)”>
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pooshlmer.com/wakaba/src/1201824080819.png (404)
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بوردو الفرنسي يُمدِّد عقد اللاعب المغربي ياسين بن رحو https://ift.tt/30HyqM4
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VNC Chapter 47 Analysis
They're labeling this as "chapter 48" on official sites, but the last chapter was chapter 46.5, so I'm just going to call this 47 and hope for the best. XD Anyway, let's get right into it.
We start out with Jeanne at Carbunculus Castle, the place Noé and Vanitas were infamously kicked out of back in chapter 13. We see that Jeanne has an interest in books (and that Luca has given her permission to read his) and goes straight for the fairy tales.
Now, I suspect as a bourreau, she wasn't granted a whole lot of time to read, so the fact that Luca let's her read his books is probably considered a luxury. She looks awfully excited to be reaching for a book. Once again, we see how much Luca cares about her and how much has been withheld from Jeanne for so long.
Because of this, I'm guessing she's unfamiliar with a lot of the stories we take for granted, such as Sleeping Beauty. Regardless, Jeanne enjoys the story about the princess and inserts herself in it, only as the prince rather than the princess. It's interesting that, despite her history with Vanitas where he's been the one helping her (when he wasn't mocking her), she sees herself as the hero of the piece and Vanitas as the person who she can save. This fits in with the more domineering personality she's been demonstrating lately. And frankly, Vanitas is probably going to need her help at some point, so she's probably not completely wrong, even if it seems unlikely that Vanitas would ever accept such a simple romance.
Here's the thing, Jeanne's view on romance is pretty simplistic. That's not bad, but it means she and Vanitas are once again coming at things with a very different perspective. She's envisioning a relationship where she protects him, he welcomes this behavior, and then they go off to enjoy romantic bliss. But the thing is, we know Vanitas doesn't feel this way at all. He's terrified of genuine emotion because he can't believe anyone would think well of him, so unsurprisingly he hates himself, and he doubly hates it when people try to save him or protect him at their own expense (see his reaction to Noé doing just that in chapter 11). So, everything Jeanne wants out of a relationship right now is not going to work for Vanitas. Because, well, all Vanitas wanted out of a relationship was someone who would hate him while also being fun to mess with.
...His standards are pretty low. He is clearly not ready for a relationship of any kind. And, well, Jeanne isn't either, really, because her standards are too... unrealistic, especially considering who we're talking about here.
Anyway, Luca shows up and the two chat a bit before they're interrupted with the news that Dominique is missing.
Now this here is very interesting for a lot of reasons. 1) Apparently the de Sades are not considered reliable. She's been gone for three days and they're only now looking into it? This family is supposed to be politically savvy, yet somehow they get away with ridiculous behavior. Hmmm... 2) We finally know what Dominique's duty is: she's a royal guard. This is big. For one, it means she's been wearing an actual uniform this whole time and it's not just her sense of style. For another, she and Jeanne have kind of similar professions. They're both protecting the royal family. And yet, despite having this important job, Dominique's family treats her like a failure. Why? Is it her meek personality? Or do they not consider the duty of a royal guard all that important?
Honestly, the more I think about it, the more I wonder if "royal guard" translates to "de Sade spy" because I have a hard time believing this crafty of an aristocratic family would allow their daughter to simply be on guard duty all day. If so, no wonder Dominique is always so stressed.
The guard continue to tell Luca something, but we don't get to hear the whole exchange because we shift to Jeanne's perspective. Still, the guard is saying that something is happening in the humans' Paris, and I think it's safe to assume it's the "vampiric incidents" Noé referenced in chapter 45.
Considering how things are turning out, I think we can also assume the curse bearer is Dominique and these incidents were instigated by Misha. Why would he do this? To get Noé's and Vanitas's attention. His plans haven't really been subtle so far, but he likely knows what they've been up to: saving vampires.
Still, this theory doesn't totally hold up because Misha's plan rested on Dominique luring Noé to him. If we assume he corrupted her name, it's possible she went on a rampage without his instruction and this wasn't part of the plan whatsoever, though, and is therefore still possible.
Luca asks Jeanne to do him a favor, but at this point we cut back to Noé, so we don't know what it's going to be. I'm not sure what role Jeanne and Luca are going to play in this arc. They're unlikely to come in time to save Dominique; they have no idea where she is and even if Vanitas stopped to ask for help, it would be too late. What's more likely is they'll get involved after Vanitas has "rescued" Noé or intervened in some fashion.
Speaking of Noé, he really had a lousy time of it this chapter, didn't he? I'm beginning to see a shift in dynamics. In the first two arcs (Bal Masqué and Catacombs) Noé was the one who did the bulk of the protecting in his partnership with Vanitas. He saved him from Ruthven and he saved him from Moreau. With Gévaudan and now this arc, it seems Vanitas is having to step in to protect Noé.
Having said that, Noé still seems to be the target for a lot more of the malicious acts in this series than Vanitas is, and I'll talk a bit more about that momentarily.
Misha says he wants Noé to drink Vanitas's blood so he'll finally know why Vanitas killed their "Father." Noé admits he has no idea what this kid is even talking about, which surprises Misha.
That all by itself already raises some questions. Everything we've seen of Vanitas makes it pretty obvious he wouldn't talk about his past so easily, but Misha assumed Noé must know a great deal about Vanitas.
Misha: "Well, well. I was overthinking it, huh? You've been together all this time, and yet... You don't know a thing about my brother, do you Noé?"
Was Vanitas more open before he killed Vanitas of the Blue Moon? Or did Misha simply assume that for Vanitas to spend any length of time with someone suggested it must be someone he'd talk to about everything? I mean, in fairness, Vanitas has confided more in Noé than anyone else, but they haven't known each other that long, so his entire backstory would be a bit much right now. Also, how long as Misha been keeping an eye on them? He seems to have some idea of how things are going between them. Either that, or he's making a lot of assumptions.
I find this darkly amusing. Misha has some awareness of how insane his request sounds, but he figures it's simply because Noé doesn't have all the facts and not because, you know, he kidnapped his best friend and is threatening to kill her.
Anyway, Misha rightly assumes that explaining things will probably take a lot of time and Noé frankly has no reason to believe him anyway, so he reaches a conclusion: he'll just have Noé drink his own blood, give him the facts, and then toss Noé at Vanitas to finally get the answer he seeks.
This is such a fascinating mix of good and bad logic colliding here. On one hand, information is good! You definitely want people to have that if you're hoping to get them to help you. On the other hand, forcing the guy you're holding hostage to engage in an intimate act with you to learn those facts probably isn't going to endear him to you in any shape or form. 8D Misha simply assumes that once Noé sees how Vanitas killed his father, he will sympathize with him and want to help him. He's completely forgetting that he is hurting Noé and the person he cares about, Dominique, and that that isn't something he's about to forget anytime soon. He's also not taking into account that Noé has, you know, morals. Forcing himself on Vanitas isn't something he's going to readily do even if he does think killing Vanitas of the Blue Moon was messed up.
Noé doesn't want to drink Misha's blood. He is horrified by his behavior, his actions, and what is basically sexual harassment at this point. But despite all that, Noé drinks his blood anyway, and the reasoning is simple.
She means everything to him and he's worried about her. I've wondered for a while now if Noé is aware of how traumatized Dominique actually is from what happened to Louis. This section makes me think that the answer is "yes."
I can't find the panel right now, but I seem to remember at some point Vanitas made a comment about Dominique being forward or something like that and Noé said "She wasn't always like that." But he said it so simply I figured he thought Dominique underwent a transition just because. But the above panel shows that her transformation was really painful for Noé, too. He had to witness her physically change herself, emotionally change herself, all in an effort to become another person, whom they both cared about and missed. That's psychologically taxing for everyone involved and I think that both Noé and Dominique assigned themselves the duty of protecting the other. Dominique spends all her time trying to make sure Noé is safe as well as trying to become someone she thinks Noé will love, and now we see that Noé was so frightened by her attempt to become Louis he knew he had to do everything he could to protect her.
Also, for ages now I've thought that Noé was projecting Louis onto Dominique or that certain moments with Dominique made him think of Louis, but I need to retract some of that. Since Dominique spent so much time dressed as Louis, those time he "thought of Louis" were probably times he was thinking of Dominique in her "Louis phase." Which is definitely hard to keep track of, but for now I think we should just assume all the times he drank "Louis's blood," or danced with "Louis" he really did do those things with Dominique.
Which means another thing: these two have a much higher chance of being a couple than I originally thought. There's even more history and backstory together than I'd realized, and we're really seeing how much Noé cares for Dominique now. The real hindrance in this relationship is Noé's obliviousness and Dominique's self-hatred.
But let's get to Misha's backstory, which we get to see as Noé views his memories.
This panel right here explains Misha's behavior pretty well actually, which is handy because Misha's behavior is decidedly unsettling. There's no denying the sexual way Misha handled himself when he offered his blood to Noé and it seemed to me like a very learned behavior. We see here that's the case. The phrase "turn tricks" means to engage in sex, so what the guards are telling us is that Misha's mother had him perform sexual acts with her customers. So, that's unbelievably messed up, but Misha's behavior makes a lot more sense now. He was taught to do this, is used to doing this, and knows it's a method to get what he wants. Well, he wants Noé to do something for him, and, well, drinking blood is often a seduction method for vampires, so I guess by that logic he should get exactly what he wants.
Except Noé isn't a customer, he's not interested in Misha, and he's essentially having a panic attack. Not an ideal way of getting someone to do what you want. Like I said, Misha's logic is a fascinating mix of good and bad and that is really being highlighted right now.
Also, going back to Misha making assumptions about Noé and Vanitas's relationship, I think it's likely that, given his background, he was probably convinced those two were sleeping with each other, which is probably why he also figured Noé knew more about Vanitas than he does.
One thing that surprised me about this chapter was that we got to see Roland! Out of all the things I expected, I really didn't expect to learn that he and Misha met at some point. XD But this is an interesting connection, one that I feel like has to come up again at some point. We see that Roland is very good with children with a good sense of humor and a kind nature. We also see he was pretty heavily injured when Misha first met him.
I really have to wonder what happened to put Roland in such a sorry state....
Regardless, he assures Misha he will have a new home with lots of friends. But then Misha asks an odd question: Why did the chasseurs kill the vampire that killed his mother?
Roland is understandably confused and then horrified as Misha explains the vampire saved his mother.
And here we are, back to the question of "What is salvation?"
Misha says his mother became cruel to him and that she was always angry, but the vampire restored her smile and she seemed kind again. In other words, she died, but she was also restored, however briefly, to the mother Misha had missed for so long.
So, Vanitas and Misha both had their families killed by vampires. Vanitas's reaction is more what we might expect from that trauma: he distrusts vampires, maybe hates them, but he's also seen how awful humans are and has decided everyone is awful. We can assume that the death of Vanitas's family didn't restore any faith in vampires, that's for sure.
But for Misha, that wasn't the case. This vampire was clearly a cruel, horrible man, but Misha was already used to being around cruel, horrible people. That probably didn't register as all that different from the norm. But his mother's smile did, and so he views vampires fondly.
Basically, we're seeing two different reactions to somewhat similar trauma (the death of one's family) and different ways of treating vampires based off of it. Vanitas wants them to stay away from him unless he's the one with all the power and because he wants to maintain a sense of autonomy, he especially doesn't want an Archiviste drinking his blood. He threatened Noé with death if he ever attempted it. He keeps his secrets close and people far away.
Misha was raised in an environment where he was hardly keeping people away. He's used to being an open book--or at least pretending to be one--and so he embraces vampires and wants his past to be known because that's how he establishes power: by drawing people in. Misha sees an Archiviste's abilities as "useful" not "bad."
Anyway, Roland makes a comment about the vampires leading Misha's heart astray. I wonder if this is how Astolfo feels about Roland now? Hmm...
We briefly see Olivier as well, and he's just as beat up as Roland. Just what were these two doing? Also, someone says "my Lord," which I think was aimed at Olivier, and if so, that confirms my suspicions that he's of the aristocracy.
Misha is whisked away the second Roland's back is turned and he's given to Moreau who then places him in Vanitas's care. My guess is the next several chapters are going to be Misha's flashbacks before we return to the present day, which means it's going to be a bit before we hear from Vanitas and Jeanne.
My biggest question is, of course, how Vanitas will react to this scene. I can see it going a few ways. He could be appalled at what Misha has done and direct his anger at him. Or he might wonder if Noé was so eager to know his past he agreed to drink Misha's blood for that alone.
But in this case, it really has nothing to do with Vanitas; Noé is simply willing to do whatever it takes to save Dominique. Learning about Vanitas wasn't something he was remotely interested in in this scenario. Quite different from the norm!
Also, can Noé even trust the memories he sees from Misha? Are these memories "accurate" or are they distorted by Misha's own impressions? Furthermore, what will happen to Noé after being immersed in someone else's memories for so long? He can't fully remember Jean-Jacques's memories because it was all smashed together, but this is a very clear reading, possibly the deepest he's ever done. I don't know if he'll recover readily from this.
And when Vanitas gets there, how is he going to save Noé and Dominique? Will he freeze when he sees Misha? How powerful is this kid?
And then there's the mark on Misha's arm. It's on the opposite arm to Vanitas's, which makes me think the mark shows up wherever a vampire bites as opposed to having a set location. Another interesting thing about this mark is that he's missing part of his arm. In the flashback, Misha has both hands, so did he lose one because of Moreau? Or is this a result of being rewritten from using the book too much? There's a lot to consider there.
I'm very eager to see the next chapter. This is quite a clever way of giving us some backstory without having Noé betray Vanitas's trust. I'm curious to see how things continue and just how awful Moreau was. b>Edit: So, I completely forgot to make a couple of points. XD I'll just add them to the bottom.
I wanted to talk about Noé and how he's been bearing the brunt of the trauma of late and why that might be. I think at least some of it is to go against our expectations. Noé is a vampire, and generally speaking, vampires have the advantage in any story about them. They're stronger, practically immortal, and knowledgeable on account of their age. Noé is physically stronger than Vanitas, but he isn't immortal, and he's actually somewhat naive. This is already different from our expectation. But what's also different is Noé undergoing so much trauma.
Of course, I don't think Mochizuki is doing this just to mess with our expectations. I also think it's because Noé tends to be trusting and he tends to go into situations without proper warning from Vanitas. On several occasions now, Noé has criticized Vanitas for not stating things clearly (the Catacombs arc) and for not telling him vital information (the Gévaudan arc). And whenever Vanitas doesn't tell him something, Noé suffers for it. A few other examples: If Noé had known how little Vanitas trusts Ruthven, maybe he would have been more careful about going out to coffee with him. If he'd known Vanitas even had a brother and that he was dangerous, maybe he could have asked Vanitas for help first. If he'd known there was a second book he would have been radically more prepared for what faces him now.
I'm not trying to say all of this is Vanitas's fault because it isn't. Noé could be more careful in general and less trusting as well. But it definitely wouldn't have hurt for Vanitas to speak up sooner.
Another thing I wanted to touch on briefly is something I've talked about before, and that's how one of the themes of this series is consent and what that actually looks like. We have Vanitas and Jeanne where I think consent was dubious in their relationship, but then it transformed and is maybe more consensual now (their relationship is currently in flux). Then we see how Noé has had a lot of unwanted attention thrust on him from people like Ruthven, Chloé, and now Misha. I think that suggests that at some point, we're going to have to see him in a more stable, consensual relationship. Noé tends to brush things off; he let go of Chloé's treatment easily. But with this constant barrage, I feel like we're either going to see him snap or we're going to see him be more firm in his boundaries.
And then about his drinking Misha's blood: Will this finally heal his hand? I know I've been fixated on his chopped off hand for a while now, but it really drives me crazy. 8D
Okay, I think I've covered everything I meant to now. There was a lot to think about with this chapter.
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Welp, I’m Going to Grillby’s: A Fanwork Analysis
Many fan works suppose Grillby set up a new pub (also called Grillby’s) on the Surface after the Pacifist ending. Cross-species patrons and booming business is only possible for monster-run businesses when anti-monster prejudice is low, and there are few reasons (other than prejudice) humans wouldn’t patronize Grillby’s. Therefore, in any work where anti-monster prejudice is fairly low, Grillby’s will always have some degree of popularity among humans. Thus, the success of Grillby’s, and how quickly Grillby’s-related problems are solved, is a useful clue or indicator of anti-monster prejudice levels.
Fan Works
GlitchTale
Camila Cuevas's GlitchTale (specifically Season 2) is very unusual for how quickly Grillby’s becomes very popular, as well as the low prejudice levels and speed of monster integration in general. To be more specific, Grillby’s business (and Muffet's business) is not only patronized by humans, but are explicitly the most popular restaurants in the city, and compete for customers. If Muffet, a spider-like monster who only ran a bake sale before, can have a thriving business, it suggests Grillby’s popularity isn’t a statistical anomaly of a sign of especially good food. That, and the fact the blue bunny NPC still sells Nice Cream, suggests monster food vendors’ success is part of a greater trend. Admittedly, the popularity of Grillby’s could be from the restaurants' very novelty, given the work’s time scale. Yet, the fact so many people are trying out magic food, made by a fire monster and a spider monster within less than a month after monsters’ reappearance, suggests people adjusted to living with monsters very well. Indeed, the time scale of Grillby’s suggests business-folk and lawmakers are also friendly to (or at least indifferent to) monsters, to the point Grillby and Muffet can both start businesses and get food vendor licenses very quickly.
The work’s very fast integration and positive sentiment to monsters would be very unrealistic, were it not for the fact GlitchTale’s world differs so much from Earth. Its socio-political, historical, and geographical details all make for a smooth path for monsters. Indeed, institutions (e.g., The Anti-Monster Department) and knowledge from the first war of humans and monsters even continue to the modern day. The result of all these differences is that monsters are (largely) very comfortable in human society.1
Charakterny Comics
Insanelyadd's Charkaterny comics show a world with slightly greater anti-monster prejudice. The comic has a small plot, set a year after the barrier was broken, in which a kid bought a hot dog from Sans and the kid’s mother “freaked out” and made lots of complaints upon learning it was magic. Due to some legal oversight, magic food apparently isn’t included in a normal food vendor’s license. Therefore, after all these complaints, Sans gets his food vendor’s license revoked for “violations” with the food. Papyrus (now an ambassador) suspects what happened to Sans could also happen to other monster food sellers (e.g., Grillby). While Grillby’s itself is not shown, other monster food vendors signing the petition suggests the success of Grillby’s isn’t unusual. Apparently, a significant number of humans like magic food and/or monster businesses, and they disapprove of the possibility monster businesses can be shut down for serving magic food. The petition is signed, and the plot is quickly resolved.
Undertale: Long Road
(As a fanfiction, Long Road does not have illustrations. The author of this article provided one)
WolvenOne's* Long Road* takes place a year after the barrier broke, and although things are fairly good for monsters, they have to deal with influential groups of anti-monster politicians and a monster-killing mage squad.
As its timespan is much longer than GlitchTale’s, the level of Grillby’s success and species intermixing is more plausible, by real-world rather than fictional standards. In this work, Grillby's explicitly has at least one human employee, who is happy to work there and with monsters. Since magical food “didn’t need to be digested, converted to energy instantly, could heal minor injuries, [...] and never made you fat”, it became popular among humans: “even humans preferred magically prepared foods, at least on the occasions that they could get it.”
The Anomaly
Coffelemental's The Anomaly’s has one of the more complex approaches to human-monster relations, with anti-monster levels varying by time period and region. Unlike most works, The Anomaly is explicitly set in real-world geographical areas, cultures, and time periods, putting more real-life-inspired context to the monsters’ struggles. Although Grillby’s is popular among humans in The Anomaly, there's no indication it's unusually so: it’s normal for a popular bar/restaurant. No other monster food shops are shown, but many monsters have gainful employment in a variety of professions[^2], suggesting being a monster food vendor is feasible. The twelve-year timespan means there has been plenty of time for monsters to integrate into wider human society, but also plenty of time for people to make anti-monster laws.
Deeper Down
Zeragii's Deeper Down treats monsters the worst: monsters were restricted to the forest around Mt. Ebott for weeks in encampments. While The Anomaly’s timeline also started with similar encampments, the actual story is set twelve years after the barrier breaking, when monsters have more rights and societal integration. Though Grillby still makes food in Deeper Down, he does not operate a restaurant: that Grillby's doesn't even exist shows the situation is very bad for monsters.
Conclusions
Based on the five works, one can make certain conclusions about the success and patron composition of Grillby's in a Post-Pacifist setting. (These conclusions ought to be taken with a grain of salt, due to low sample size.)
There is a negative correlation between the success of Grillby's and anti-monster prejudice.As prejudice goes down, the success of Grillby's increases.2
At a certain high prejudice level, Grillby's cannot exist. (No works sampled have Grillby's closing down due to anti-monster prejudice, though.)
If prejudice levels are very low (GlitchTale), Grillby's will receive human patrons very quickly. If prejudice levels are higher (The Anomaly, Long Road), Grillby's will receive human patrons later.3
There can be different prejudice levels among customers, lawmakers, and departments that give out food vendor licenses.
Anti-monster prejudice is still a problem...but the biggest threat isn't from a human. ↩︎
Presumably there's some limit to this. Otherwise, at the point where's no anti-monster prejudice, Grillby's becomes a chain restaurant that takes over the world. Extending that, if the prejudice gets into the negatives, where lots of humans absolutely love monsters, Grilby's would presumably become an international food conglomerate. ↩︎
In the U.S., sushi and Chinese food were once variously viewed as dirty, gross, bizarre or unhealthy (for special reasons), but they're very popular there now. Given how long it took for those foods to become popular on the national level, the time scales for Grillby’s popularity for all of these works is especially impressive. ↩︎
#Undertale#Post-Pacifist#Undertale Comics#Undertale Fanfiction#Skelechara#Undertale: Long Road#The Anomaly#Analysis#Grillby's
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react routing and django url conflict
I am using reactjs as a frontend and django as backend. React router is used for routing. When i refresh the page that has routed by react router, i get django 404 Page Not Found error. If i refresh the homepage, i dont get any such error because the homepage is rendered by django template too using its url.
Do i have to configure that in the webpack? My project structure is i have seperated django and reactjs. I have created a folder as frontend where reactjs file resides.
UPDATE
homepage template has all the link for routes like addrestaurant.
my webpack.config file
const path = require("path");if(!process.env.NODE_ENV) { process.env.NODE_ENV = 'development';}module.exports = { entry: [ './src/index.js' ], output: { path: path.join("../app/static/build/", "js"), filename: "app.js", publicPath: "../app/static/build/" }, devtoo: 'source-map', debug: true, module: { loaders: [{ exclude: /node_modules/, loader: 'babel', query: { presets: ['react', 'es2015', 'stage-1'] } }, {test: /\.(jpe?g|png|gif|svg)$/i, loader: "url-loader?name=images/[name].[ext]"}, ] }, resolve: { extensions: ['', '.js', '.jsx'] }, devServer: { historyApiFallback: true, contentBase: './' }};
urls.py
urlpatterns = [ url(r'^', views.home, name="homePage"), url(r'^(?:.*)/?$', views.home),]
home.html
{% extends 'base.html' %}{% block title %} Foodie | Homepage {% endblock title%}{% block content %} <div class="homepage"> </div>{% endblock %}{% block js %} {{ block.super }} <script type="text/javascript"> var data = { isUserAuthenticated:{% if request.user.is_authenticated %}true{% else %}false{% endif %} }; console.log('data',data); $(function() { app.showHomePage(".homepage",data); }); </script>{% endblock %}
index.js
window.app = { showHomePage: function(id,data){ render( <Provider store={createStoreWithMiddleware(reducers)}> <Router> <App /> </Router> </Provider>, document.querySelector(id) ); },}
Banner is a child component of App component
const Banner = (props) => ( <div className="navbar-container"> <div className="ui container"> <div className="ui large secondary menu"> <a className="toc item"> <i className="sidebar icon"></i> </a> <div className="item logo"> <div className="ui logo shape"> <div className="sides"> <div className="active ui side"> Foodie </div> </div> </div> </div> <Link to="/restaurant" className="active item tab">Home</Link> <Link to='/addrestaurant' className='item tab'>Add Restaurant</Link> <Link to="/products" className="item tab">Products</Link> <div className="right item"> <a href="" id="bookingInfoButton" className="ui white inverted button">Booking</a> </div> </div> </div> </div>);export default Banner;
https://codehunter.cc/a/reactjs/react-routing-and-django-url-conflict
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eu vendo todos os posts direcionados para mim falando coisas do tipo "feliz dia das mães!!!! a sua mãe é uma mulher incrível por ter te colocado no mundo!!!! :)" sendo que minha mãe é horrível
#tipo se fosse uma pessoa com uma mãe legal eu ficaria tipo 'good for them'#mas tem gente que manda esses posts pra mim mano#(não aqui; no zap e no insta)#falando pra eu mandar pra minha mãe#e eu tô tipo <:(#dacta.txt
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Start up the year.
It’s a new decade!
So, Cheers!
The drive got overheated.
It’s warm and hot.
It’s all ablaze.
Not to worry!
Don’t panic!
It’s out!
Ooops. We need a restart.
This one has a virus.
Can someone find the plug?
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Happy New DECADE! Hola hola, I’m BACK—and with a crazy, exciting, emotional series of photo essays summarizing my past 10 years living and traveling solo around the world. It will also explain why I kind of “ghosted” y’all (sorry about that). I’m proud to announce I’ve made it to the other end of the tunnel after MANY sharp turns and (mis)adventures—so excited to start off a new decade finally able to share them with YOU again.
Off we go!
A decade of living and traveling solo around the world (part 1!)
2009-2010
Lived in Egypt, Morocco, and Florida; also explored Spain, Italy, Iceland, Panama, Mexico, NYC
I ended the previous decade – which officially started my solo adventures traveling around the world – with a year studying abroad in Egypt, a summer traveling the Middle East, and 4 months in Morocco.
traveled to the Great Pyramids of Giza, Egypt at age 20
Riding camels through a natural reserve bordering the Red Sea. 2009
Ramses II, your ego is truly heavy (me at Abu Simbel Temple, summer 2009)
Bahariya Oasis, Western Desert, Egypt! Visited in 2009 (Photo: Fellow student M. Begault)
And it was among the great contrasts of the barren desert of the Sinai Peninsula and one of the bodies of water with the most abundant marine life in the world that I got certified as a SCUBA diver, all the way to advanced. I even got to explore one of the top 10 ship wreck dives in the world, the SS Thistlegorm.
descent for DEEP dive for my PADI advanced open water certification in the Red Sea, Egypt
seemingly barren of life on the surface, teeming with life underwater! That’s the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt
“Oh, and a few quick trips to Europe!
first trip to Rome:
My 1st trip to Rome was possible thanks to Couchsurfing. Fall 2009
That December, I finished a magical semester living in Morocco (which I road tripped with fellow exchange students over the weekends!)
me in Essaouira, Morocco with one of the local kids we took in for lunch
Hidden beach found during a road trip through Morocco, fall 2009
Morocco is where I flew out to the UK and onto a sick 6-day stopover trip to ICELAND! Crazy that it was cheaper for me to do this free side trip with Icelandair on my way back home to Puerto Rico than to book a more direct flight, haha! That was my first time in Iceland and, 10 years later, it still tops my list of most favorite countries in the world – it’s like visiting a different PLANET:
Me with silica mud mask at the Blue Lagoon, Iceland. December 2009
In front of one of the many majestic waterfalls of Iceland. December 2009
I even got to see the northern lights! I CRIED, their beauty overwhelmed me:
HD cameras/smartphones were not as affordable back then (2009!), so my pictures don’t do them justice!
After spending the Puerto Rican holidays with my family, I went back to the continental U.S. in January 2010 and got to swim with manatees in Florida. It was my 1st encounter with animals in the wild!
swimming with manatees in Florida THIS close is one of the top highlights of my whole LIFE
I couldn’t stop smiling!
I was still a full time college student, so after the Spring 2010 semester kicked off, I took advantage of my very last official Spring Break to sail the San Blas Islands, Panama and to party on an overwater hostel in Bocas Del Toro:
Solo travel around the world = many friends made! From left: American, Puerto Rican (me!), Australian, American, and Israeli at over-water hostel
One of the many isolated, pristine San Blas Islands, Panama. Spring 2010
GRADUATION!
After working my butt off holding several jobs/writing essays for study abroad scholarships to pay for university plus travel the world while studying full time, I finally graduated with honors distinction from college in December 2010. Took me 5 and a 1/2 years (2 degrees, 11 countries, and a 3rd language later) but hey, gotta work hard and play hard.
me graduating with 2 degrees from University after traveling the world!
BUT! Before hitting the real world? A BACKSTREET BOYS CRUISE!
Me at the bottom (blue/white dress) holding Brian and the rest of the BACKSTREET BOYS! Only Kevin missing 😦
Limbo dancing on stage with the Backstreet Boys at a beach party in Cozumel. One of these photos of me actually made it to be the cover photo of the official Backstreet Boys Facebook page after the cruise. EPIC!
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After an epic celebrity party cruise and graduation, I said good bye to 2010 and hello to 2011 by watching the ball drop NYE in Times Square, New York City from the VIP lane! Click on that pink text link to read the full story on how I pulled this off (it involves NYPD officers…lol)
New Years in Times Square, NYC – memories like this one will always be part of my daily happiness!
2011-2012
From solo traveling around the world to a wedding, a baby, and other surprises
Little did I know this year we would have a very Puerto Rican wedding and I would find out I was going to be an AUNTIE. My little sis is all grown up! ❤
little did I know this would be one of our last happy family portraits…
from solo traveling around the world to my very first BABY NEPHEW! Born in 2012
Another pivotal chapter of my life also began in 2011: TRAVEL BLOGGING!
That’s the summer LatinAbroad was born!
And this would be the year I’d meet “The One” for me.
Mr. B and me on the far left in our base camp, Tampa Bay, Florida
Shortly after, I traveled without a plan to Curacao. From ending up in a guesthouse recommended by the very taxi driver that had just picked me up at the airport to Couchsurfing and hitchhiking with strangers around the island, this is been one of my funnest trips to date!
me at one of the best beaches of Curacao, Kenepa Grandi
what I love about traveling the world: Locals like him
2012 was mostly about professional growth and exploring the Americas for me. I got promoted to marketing and translation manager after working for a year and a 1/2 with a company and was gaining experience so I could eventually spend more (and do more) while traveling around the world–no more financial restraints or limits!
I still had a handful of adventures that year though, including my first travel conferences in NYC and Keystone, Colorado; my first press trips, sponsored hotel stays and tours in Puerto Rico and Playa Del Carmen; and even my first-ever SNOWFALL in Texas!
Me rappelling into a cenote by Mayan ruins in the Yucatan during my first sponsored press trip
Me in the middle of The Beast zip line in Puerto Rico: Among Top 2 Highest ones in the world!
2013 – when life and dreams crumbled…
This was the year things turned awry – my health went from perfect to terrifying…I got chronically ill (took 2 years to get an official diagnosis for) and was never able to use my hands the same way again. I couldn’t type nor mouse click. I spent up to 14 hours bedridden. I could barely blog, even with aids and voice recognition software. I was discriminated against and unfairly fired from a job I loved. I tried to sue but had to settle for a crap amount because hey, Florida is a “right to work” state and fibromyalgia is a “suspect condition.”
BUT! The irony is that because of this sharp turn in my path I reached the lifestyle I always dreamed of having – and MORE (keep reading this series to find out HOW!).
Me (far left, in red) unsuspecting that, in a mere few days, my life (and health) would never be the same…
PART 2 of 10 years traveling around the world series coming up soon!
10 years living, #traveling solo around the world: 30+countries, 4 continents, a baby & a life-altering diagnosis [pt 1] Happy New DECADE! Hola hola, I'm BACK—and with a crazy, exciting, emotional series of photo essays summarizing my past 10 years living and traveling solo around the world.
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