There are three origins: author, reader and user agent. Under normalcircumstances, the author's styles win out over the reader's styles.!important reader's styles are stronger than any other styles,including !important author styles. Both author and reader stylesoverride the user agent's default styles.
According to the above words from the book, seems author's style is stronger than reader's style, but why with !important indicator, the reader's style is stronger than author's style?? I get confused about this.
The user agent is the application (usually a browser, such as Chrome or Firefox) that you are viewing the website with. User agents have a default stylesheet. You can inspect its properties with a tool like Chrome's Developer Tools feature.
The "reader" is the web surfer viewing your site. Your site's visitors can optionally set their own stylesheets or custom rules (such as system colours or font preferences). They might do this out of personal preference, or because they have accessibility requirements.
Normally, for good reason, the author stylesheet takes precedence over user agent and reader stylesheets. However, readers have the option to set styles that authors can't override. This is also for good reason, as people with visual impairments or other accessibility issues will need certain styles to be set across all pages.
That is where your second question comes in: Normally styles in the reader's style sheet only overrides the browser's default styles (user agent's styles), but by using the !important flag it can also override styles defined by web sites. This is usually done for accessibility: People with bad eye sight, for example, could define larger font sizes or better contrast colors.
Do dba's ever restart the log reader agent if it's been running for 30, 100 or 365 days? Is this beneficial or is there a website where I can submit a snapshot of Log Reader Agent status if it ever hits 2 years without a problem? (Presuming we have no server reboots - which if course we will).
I think it depends on your environment and how busy it is but I support quite a few environments that are very stingy with their patches because they have incredibly low surface areas and end up with reboots/SQL restarts pretty infrequently (a few times a year) and the log reader agent isn't restarted outside of this schedule and there are no issues.
If your environment is high transaction and you are experiencing issues with the cleanup jobs on distribution and are running a local distributor you may see a benefit from restarting but, in general, I have found no need to worry about restarting the log reader agent.
I have two SQL Server 2008 R2 EE instances particpating in transactional replication. The setup is pretty vanilla, with no updating subscribers. However, when I re-deployed the publication the Queue Reader agent was created. I think this was added when I generated the script to create via SSMS, but I am not sure on this point.
Still not entirely sure that it is ok to remove it, but I suppose I am about 90% sure. Need some more testing before I remove it in production. Of course, I still don't know how I will remove it. I don't see a foil for sys.sp_addqreader_agent...
Over the weekend we had a network outage and the link was down for somewhere between 8-12 hours between the servers. This caused the log reader agent (which runs on the distributor) to time out due to no changes, as expected.
The link was re-established, but now there is a new issue. The log reader agent will start for a split second, pick up changes, and then end, saying Completed. It will then start up again a bit later (up to 10-15 minutes or so), do the same thing, then shut down again. If I run it manually it does indeed pick up changes and send them to the subscriber.
The Microsoft Windows account under which the Log Reader Agent runs at the Distributor. The Windows account is also referred to as the process account, because the agent process runs under this account.
The Log Reader Agent makes connections to the Publisher even if the Publisher and Distributor are on the same computer. The Log Reader Agent also makes connections to the Distributor; these connections are always made by impersonating the Windows account under which the agent runs.
As a SHIELD agent, Y/N is often overlooked and undervalued, but one of the higher ranking agents sees her potential and recommends her for a mission. Paired with the deadly Black Widow, Y/N must work with Natasha to surveil a high stakes target and find out who his dealer is, all while remaining hidden within the same hotel. The only catch is, their cover puts them as a recently married couple, and Y/N is terrified of Natasha.
Aphrodite is bored on Olympus. She suggests a competition where the prize is the reader and invites the other Greek Gods to include their champions in this contest. Aphrodite was not counting on the appearance of Thanatos nor was she counting on him including John Wick in this contest.
com.arcsight.common.InitializationException: Exception initializing 'com.arcsight.agent.sdk.b.o': Got a configuration exception: An error occured in configuration. Unable to locate any properties for 'block.sdkfilereader.properties'. (expected [C:\Program Files\ArcSightSmartConnectors\emergingthreat\current\user\agent\flexagent\block.sdkfilereader.properties])
com.arcsight.common.config.m: An error occured in configuration. Unable to locate any properties for 'block.sdkrfilereader.properties'. (expected [C:\Program Files\ArcSightSmartConnectors\Blacklisted IP\current\user\agent\flexagent\block.sdkrfilereader.properties])
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Forté Agent is an email and Usenet news client used on the Windows operating system. Agent was conceived, designed and developed by Mark Sidell and the team at Forté Internet Software in 1994 to address the need for an online/offline newsreader which capitalized on the emerging Windows GUI framework. By 1995, Agent had expanded to become a full-featured email client and remains a widely used application for integrating news and email communication on Windows. Agent supports POP email but not IMAP.
The agent there is effectively making a business decision when they read your unsolicited query. That takes time, and time is money. No one likes to waste money, right? And no one likes to lose an AMAZING author because they queried incorrectly.
I recently conducted a focus group made up of 68 teenagers (male & female between the ages of 13-18). I had them read my manuscript and complete an anonymous survey at the end. I received many wonderful comments and scored an 8.5 on a scale of 1-10. Should I mention this in my query to agents or not?
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Just a note: I will only answer general questions about the craft of writing, agents, editors or publishing. Do not ask for feedback or critique, please. Also, please keep your questions to a reasonable length. If you find you have a more involved question that will benefit from you reading your work ahead of time, please feel free to book a paid consultation using my calendar.
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