Test

SMPTE color bars – Click for your own test pattern kit

This page is for posters to test comments prior to submitting them to WUWT. Your tests will be deleted in a while, though especially interesting tests, examples, hints, and cool stuff will remain for quite a while longer.

Some things that don’t seem to work any more, or perhaps never did, are kept in Ric Werme’s Guide to WUWT.

Formatting in comments

WordPress does not provide much documentation for the HTML formatting permitted in comments. There are only a few commands that are useful, and a few more that are pretty much useless.

A typical HTML formatting command has the general form of <name>text to be formatted</name>. A common mistake is to forget the end command. Until WordPress gets a preview function, we have to live with it.

N.B. WordPress handles some formatting very differently than web browsers do. A post of mine shows these and less useful commands in action at WUWT.

N.B. You may notice that the underline command, <u>, is missing. WordPress seems to suppress for almost all users, so I’m not including it here. Feel free to try it, don’t expect it to work.

Name Sample Result
b (bold) This is <b>bold</b> text This is bold text
Command strong also does bolding.
 
i (italics) This is <i>italicized</i> text This is italicized text
Command em (emphasize) also does italics.
 
a (anchor) See <a href=http://wermenh.com>My home page</a> See My home page
A URL by itself (with a space on either side) is often adequate in WordPress. It will make a link to that URL and display the URL, e.g. See http://wermenh.com.

 

Some source on the web is presenting anchor commands with other parameters beyond href, e.g. rel=nofollow. In general, use just href=url and don’t forget the text to display to the reader.

 
blockquote (indent text) My text

 

<blockquote>quoted text</blockquote>

More of my text

My text

 

quoted text

More of my text

Quoted text can be many paragraphs long.

 

WordPress italicizes quoted text (and the <i> command enters normal text).

 
strike This is <strike>text with strike</strike> This is text with strike
 
pre (“preformatted” – use for monospace display) <pre>These lines are bracketed<br>with &lt;pre> and &lt;/pre>
These lines are bracketed

with <pre> and </pre>
Preformatted text, generally done right. Use it when you have a table or something else that will look best in monospace. Each space is displayed, something that <code> (next) doesn’t do.
 
code (use for monospace display) <code>Wordpress handles this very differently</code> WordPress handles this very differently
See http://wattsupwiththat.com/resources/#comment-65319 to see what this really does.
 

Youtube videos

Using the URL for a YouTube video creates a link like any other URL. However, WordPress accepts the HTML for “embedded” videos. From the YouTube page after the video finishes, click on the “embed” button and it will suggest HTML like:

<iframe width="560" height="315"

        src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/yaBNjTtCxd4"

        frameborder="0" allowfullscreen>

</iframe>

WordPress will convert this into an internal square bracket command, changing the URL and ignoring the dimension. You can use this command yourself, and use its options for dimensions. WordPress converts the above into something like:

Use this form and change the w and h options to suit your interests.

Images in comments

If WordPress thinks a URL refers to an image, it will display the image

instead of creating a link to it. The following rules may be a bit excessive,

but they should work:

  1. The URL must end with .jpg, .gif, or .png. (Maybe others.)
  2. The URL must be the only thing on the line.
  3. This means you don’t use <img>, which WordPress ignores and displays nothing.
  4. This means WordPress controls the image size.
  5. <iframe> doesn’t work either, it just displays a link to the image.

If you have an image whose URL doesn’t end with the right kind of prefix, there may be two options if the url includes attributes, i.e. if it has a question mark followed by attribute=value pairs separated by ampersands.

Often the attributes just provide information to the server about the source of the URL. In that case, you may be able to just delete everything from the question mark to the end.

For some URLs, e.g. many from FaceBook, the attributes provide lookup information to the server and it can’t be deleted. Most servers don’t bother to check for unfamiliar attributes, so try appending “&xxx=foo.jpg”. This will give you a URL with one of the extensions WordPress will accept.

WordPress will usually scale images to fit the horizontal space available for text. One place it doesn’t is in blockquoted text, there it seems to display fullsize and large images overwrite the rightside nav bar text.

Special characters in comments

Those of us who remember acceptance of ASCII-68 (a specification released in 1968) are often not clever enough to figure out all the nuances of today’s international character sets. Besides, most keyboards lack the keys for those characters, and that’s the real problem. Even if you use a non-ASCII but useful character like ° (as in 23°C) some optical character recognition software or cut and paste operation is likely to change it to 23oC or worse, 230C.

Nevertheless, there are very useful characters that are most reliably entered as HTML character entities:

Type this To get Notes
&amp; & Ampersand
&lt; < Less than sign

 

Left angle bracket

&bull; Bullet
&deg; ° Degree (Use with C and F, but not K (kelvins))
&#8304;

 

&#185;

&#178;

&#179;

&#8308;

 

¹

²

³

Superscripts (use 8304, 185, 178-179, 8308-8313 for superscript digits 0-9)
&#8320;

 

&#8321;

&#8322;

&#8323;

 

Subscripts (use 8320-8329 for subscript digits 0-9)
&pound; £ British pound
&ntilde; ñ For La Niña & El Niño
&micro; µ Mu, micro
&plusmn; ± Plus or minus
&times; × Times
&divide; ÷ Divide
&ne; Not equals
&nbsp;   Like a space, with no special processing (i.e. word wrapping or multiple space discarding)
&gt; > Greater than sign

 

Right angle bracket

Generally not needed

Various operating systems and applications have mechanisms to let you directly enter character codes. For example, on Microsoft Windows, holding down ALT and typing 248 on the numeric keypad may generate the degree symbol. I may extend the table above to include these some day, but the character entity names are easier to remember, so I recommend them.

Latex markup

WordPress supports Latex. To use it, do something like:

P = e\sigma AT^{4}     (Stefan-Boltzmann's law)

\mathscr{L}\{f(t)\}=F(s)

to produce

P = e\sigma AT^{4}     (Stefan-Boltzmann’s law)

\mathscr{L}\{f(t)\}=F(s)

Linking to past comments

Each comment has a URL that links to the start of that comment. This is usually the best way to refer to comment a different post. The URL is “hidden” under the timestamp for that comment. While details vary with operating system and browser, the best way to copy it is to right click on the time stamp near the start of the comment, choose “Copy link location” from the pop-up menu, and paste it into the comment you’re writing. You should see something like http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/07/15/central-park-in-ushcnv2-5-october-2012-magically-becomes-cooler-in-july-in-the-dust-bowl-years/#comment-1364445.

The “#<label>” at the end of the URL tells a browser where to start the page view. It reads the page from the Web, searches for the label and starts the page view there. As noted above, WordPress will create a link for you, you don’t need to add an <a> command around it.

One way to avoid the moderation queue.

Several keywords doom your comment to the moderation queue. One word, “Anthony,” is caught so that people trying to send a note to Anthony will be intercepted and Anthony should see the message pretty quickly.

If you enter Anthony as An<u>th</u>ony, it appears to not be caught,

so apparently the comparison uses the name with the HTML within it and

sees a mismatch.

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July 8, 2022 3:18 pm

<i>not</i>

Reply to  Gunga Din
July 8, 2022 3:19 pm

<I>not</I>

Reply to  Gunga Din
January 17, 2024 2:34 pm

test

Editor
July 27, 2022 9:21 am

Post without a photo.

Editor
July 27, 2022 9:22 am

foo – no can delete!

sutton-mills-flood.jpg
August 6, 2022 6:08 am

Quoted paragraphs:

<blockquote>
It may help to remember that before their higher education climate scientists were school kids probably inculcated with the view that fossil-fuel use is unnatural and therefore bad. Opposing it therefore probably makes many of them feel virtuous. This is unfortunate. To paraphrase Hoosier poet Max Ehrmann, we’re children of the universe; no less than the trees and the stars, we have a right to be here. 

Humans are no less a part of nature than the calcareous organisms that over the eons removed so much carbon from the cycle of life that during the last glaciation plant life came perilously close to carbon-dioxide starvation. So instead of seeing humans’ fossil-fuel use as unnatural perhaps we should look upon it as nature’s way of restoring the state that supported evolution of most complex life, including our primate ancestors.

For many of us laymen the climate question boils down to whether the (speculative) benefit to future generations justifies the (more-certain) cost of avoiding emissions today. Again, even a 5°C increase by the end of the century is estimated to delay gross-world-product growth by only three years.
</blockquote>

Rest of the story

August 11, 2022 7:16 am

T_f = frac{m_1 T_1 + m_2 T_2}{m_1 + m_2}

August 11, 2022 7:16 am

T_f = \frac{m_1 T_1 + m_2 T_2}{m_1 + m_2}

Beta Blocker
August 29, 2022 8:21 am

comment image

Admin
August 31, 2022 9:51 pm

woo hoo

c1ue
September 1, 2022 6:46 pm

Hi,
I’m looking for a retired electrical engineer who is interested in working with me on a new/old technology project that addresses the electricity curtailment and flared natural gas problems.
Ideally someone with strong industrial scale electrical device development experience. Experience with physics/chemistry a plus.

Janice Moore
September 2, 2022 10:55 am
Janice Moore
September 2, 2022 10:57 am
Janice Moore
September 2, 2022 10:58 am

Charles Rotter
Reply to  Janice Moore
January 17, 2024 2:48 pm

by bye

Admin
September 2, 2022 4:51 pm

Test comment

Martin C
Reply to  Eric Worrall
September 6, 2022 9:12 pm

Eric or Mods, an odd thing has happened with commenting.  It occurs both in Edge and Firefox.   As of an article on August 23 (the article about 600,000 workers required for the green transition, there now is an odd ‘field’ that appears to be info on formatting text.   Articles prior to that don’t have this, but they also now don’t show the ability to ‘reply’ to a comment.  
I have attached (or tried to attach) screen shots of what it shows in Edge, in the ‘before’ and ‘after conditions.  In Firefox, each little ‘block’ seen in edge huge (i will try to attach a screen shot in a little bit); but wanted to point out this oddity.   

WUWT comment before.png
Martin C
Reply to  Martin C
September 6, 2022 9:13 pm

Well, it looks like just the ‘before’ is there, so will try to post the ‘after’ picture

WUWT comment AFTER .png
Martin C
Reply to  Martin C
September 6, 2022 9:22 pm

And one thing i forgot to mention, is that when clicking to ‘reply’ to someone, that odd ‘box’ shows up below the area that comments are being entered – see the screen shot of when i was typing this comment (replying to my previous one).  

Posting a comment.png
Charles Rotter
Reply to  Eric Worrall
January 17, 2024 2:48 pm

test

Admin
September 5, 2022 8:11 pm

September 10, 2022 7:30 pm

sqrt(&sum;((x<sub>i</sub> – x<sub>m</sub>)<sup>2</sup>…(x<sub>n</sub> – x<sub>m</sub)<sup>2</sub) / n-1
Σ

Janice Moore
October 14, 2022 4:43 pm

Well done!
 
Good for you
to take up weapons of persuasion. This is a battle, a battle for science.
 
You take up
the banner laid down by Hal Lewis in 2011 after his resoundingly robust stand
for truth:
 
(from his
letter in which he resigns from the APS (American Physical Society) – bolding
mine)
 
 
the global warming scam, with the
(literally) trillions of dollars driving it, that has corrupted so many
scientists, and has carried APS before it like a rogue wave. It is the
greatest and most successful pseudoscientific fraud I have seen in my long life
as a physicist. Anyone who has the faintest doubt that this is so should
force himself to read the ClimateGate documents, which lay it bare. (Montford’s book organizes
the facts very well.) I don’t believe that any real physicist, nay scientist,
can read that stuff without revulsion. …
 
***
 
… This is not fun and games, these are
serious matters involving vast fractions of our national substance, and the
reputation of the Society as a scientific society is at stake. …
 
***
 
fraud on a scale I have never seen, and I
lack the words to describe its enormity. Effect on the APS position: none. None
at all. This is not science; other forces are at work. …
 
***
 
This scheming at APS HQ is so bizarre that
there cannot be a simple explanation for it. 
 
***
 
I think it is
the money
. Your own Physics Department (of which
you are chairman) would lose millions a year if the global warming bubble
burst. … .
 
I want no part of it, so please accept my
resignation.
 

 
Hal
 
 
(Source: https://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/10/16/hal-lewis-my-resignation-from-the-american-physical-society/
)

Janice Moore
October 22, 2022 2:02 pm

Why do I keep going into moderation…. is the magic word: Lindzen?

Janice Moore
Reply to  Janice Moore
October 22, 2022 2:02 pm

Salby?

Janice Moore
Reply to  Janice Moore
October 22, 2022 2:03 pm

🤨

November 9, 2022 6:16 am

Log in Test

November 9, 2022 6:23 am

Test password manager

November 12, 2022 4:26 pm

Attempting to use new registration.

Admin
December 22, 2022 10:19 pm

Test message

Admin
January 1, 2023 6:07 pm

Story tip test – Eric Worrall

January 30, 2023 10:37 am

<pre> Record Highs for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007 Newer-April ’12 Older-’07 (did not include ties) 6-Jan 68 1946 Jan-06 69 1946 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 9-Jan 62 1946 Jan-09 65 1946 Same year but “new” record 3*F lower 31-Jan 66 2002 Jan-31 62 1917 “New” record 4*F higher but not in ’07 list 4-Feb 61 1962 Feb-04 66 1946 “New” tied records 5*F lower 4-Feb 61 1991 23-Mar 81 1907 Mar-23 76 1966 “New” record 5*F higher but not in ’07 list 25-Mar 84 1929 Mar-25 85 1945 “New” record 1*F lower 5-Apr 82 1947 Apr-05 83 1947 “New” tied records 1*F lower 5-Apr 82 1988 6-Apr 83 1929 Apr-06 82 1929 Same year but “new” record 1*F higher 19-Apr 85 1958 Apr-19 86 1941 “New” tied records 1*F lower 19-Apr 85 2002 16-May 91 1900 May-16 96 1900 Same year but “new” record 5*F lower 30-May 93 1953 May-30 95 1915 “New” record 2*F lower 31-Jul 100 1999 Jul-31 96 1954 “New” record 4*F higher but not in ’07 list 11-Aug 96 1926 Aug-11 98 1944 “New” tied records 2*F lower 11-Aug 96 1944 18-Aug 94 1916 Aug-18 96 1940 “New” tied records 2*F lower 18-Aug 94 1922 18-Aug 94 1940 23-Sep 90 1941 Sep-23 91 1945 “New” tied records 1*F lower 23-Sep 90 1945 23-Sep 90 1961 9-Oct 88 1939 Oct-09 89 1939 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 10-Nov 72 1949 Nov-10 71 1998 “New” record 1*F higher but not in ’07 list 12-Nov 75 1849 Nov-12 74 1879 “New” record 1*F higher but not in ’07 list 12-Dec 65 1949 Dec-12 64 1949 Same year but “new” record 1*F higher 22-Dec 62 1941 Dec-22 63 1941 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 29-Dec 64 1984 Dec-29 67 1889 “New” record 3*F lower Record Lows for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007 Newer-’12 Older-’07 (did not include ties) 7-Jan -5 1884 Jan-07 -6 1942 New record 1 warmer and 58 years earlier 8-Jan -9 1968 Jan-08 -12 1942 New record 3 warmer and 37 years later 3-Mar 1 1980 Mar-03 0 1943 New record 3 warmer and 26 years later 13-Mar 5 1960 Mar-13 7 1896 New record 2 cooler and 64 years later 8-May 31 1954 May-08 29 1947 New record 3 warmer and 26 years later 9-May 30 1983 May-09 28 1947 New tied record 2 warmer same year and 19 and 36 years later 30 1966 30 1947 12-May 35 1976 May-12 34 1941 New record 1 warmer and 45 years later 30-Jun 47 1988 Jun-30 46 1943 New record 1 warmer and 35 years later 12-Jul 51 1973 Jul-12 47 1940 New record 4 warmer and 33 years later 13-Jul 50 1940 Jul-13 44 1940 New record 6 warmer and same year 17-Jul 52 1896 Jul-17 53 1989 New record 1 cooler and 93 years earlier 20-Jul 50 1929 Jul-20 49 1947 New record 1 warmer and 18 years earlier 23-Jul 51 1981 Jul-23 47 1947 New record 4 warmer and 34 years later 24-Jul 53 1985 Jul-24 52 1947 New record 1 warmer and 38 years later 26-Jul 52 1911 Jul-26 50 1946 New record 2 warmer and 35 years later 31-Jul 54 1966 Jul-31 47 1967 New record 7 warmer and 1 years later 19-Aug 49 1977 Aug-19 48 1943 New record 1 warmer and 10, 21 and 34 years later 49 1964 49 1953 21-Aug 44 1950 Aug-21 43 1940 New record 1 warmer and 10 years later 26-Aug 48 1958 Aug-26 47 1945 New record 1 warmer and 13 years later 27-Aug 46 1968 Aug-27 45 1945 New record 1 warmer and 23 years later 12-Sep 44 1985 Sep-12 42 1940 New record 2 warmer and 15, 27 and 45 years later 44 1967 44 1955 26-Sep 35 1950 Sep-26 33 1940 New record 2 warmer and 12 earlier and 10 years later 35 1928 27-Sep 36 1991 Sep-27 32 1947 New record 4 warmer and 44 years later 29-Sep 32 1961 Sep-29 31 1942 New record 1 warmer and 19 years later 2-Oct 32 1974 Oct-02 31 1946 New record 1 warmer and 38 years earlier and 19 years later 32 1908 15-Oct 31 1969 Oct-15 24 1939 New tied record same year but 7 warmer and 22 and 30 years later 31 1961 31 1939 16-Oct 31 1970 Oct-16 30 1944 New record 1 warmer and 26 years later 24-Nov 8 1950 Nov-24 7 1950 New tied record same year but 1 warmer 29-Nov 3 1887 Nov-29 2 1887 New tied record same year but 1 warmer 4-Dec 8 1976 Dec-04 3 1966 New record 5 warmer and 10 years later 21-Dec -10 1989 Dec-21 -11 1942 New tied record same year but 1 warmer and 47 years later -10 1942 31 ? Dec-05 8 1976 December 5 missing from 2012 list</pre>

February 17, 2023 4:48 pm

test

February 20, 2023 9:23 am

<pre> Record Highs for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007 Newer-April ’12 Older-’07 (did not include ties) 6-Jan 68 1946 Jan-06 69 1946 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 9-Jan 62 1946 Jan-09 65 1946 Same year but “new” record 3*F lower 31-Jan 66 2002 Jan-31 62 1917 “New” record 4*F higher but not in ’07 list 4-Feb 61 1962 Feb-04 66 1946 “New” tied records 5*F lower 4-Feb 61 1991 23-Mar 81 1907 Mar-23 76 1966 “New” record 5*F higher but not in ’07 list 25-Mar 84 1929 Mar-25 85 1945 “New” record 1*F lower 5-Apr 82 1947 Apr-05 83 1947 “New” tied records 1*F lower 5-Apr 82 1988 6-Apr 83 1929 Apr-06 82 1929 Same year but “new” record 1*F higher 19-Apr 85 1958 Apr-19 86 1941 “New” tied records 1*F lower 19-Apr 85 2002 16-May 91 1900 May-16 96 1900 Same year but “new” record 5*F lower 30-May 93 1953 May-30 95 1915 “New” record 2*F lower 31-Jul 100 1999 Jul-31 96 1954 “New” record 4*F higher but not in ’07 list 11-Aug 96 1926 Aug-11 98 1944 “New” tied records 2*F lower 11-Aug 96 1944 18-Aug 94 1916 Aug-18 96 1940 “New” tied records 2*F lower 18-Aug 94 1922 18-Aug 94 1940 23-Sep 90 1941 Sep-23 91 1945 “New” tied records 1*F lower 23-Sep 90 1945 23-Sep 90 1961 9-Oct 88 1939 Oct-09 89 1939 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 10-Nov 72 1949 Nov-10 71 1998 “New” record 1*F higher but not in ’07 list 12-Nov 75 1849 Nov-12 74 1879 “New” record 1*F higher but not in ’07 list 12-Dec 65 1949 Dec-12 64 1949 Same year but “new” record 1*F higher 22-Dec 62 1941 Dec-22 63 1941 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 29-Dec 64 1984 Dec-29 67 1889 “New” record 3*F lower Record Lows for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007 Newer-’12 Older-’07 (did not include ties) 7-Jan -5 1884 Jan-07 -6 1942 New record 1 warmer and 58 years earlier 8-Jan -9 1968 Jan-08 -12 1942 New record 3 warmer and 37 years later 3-Mar 1 1980 Mar-03 0 1943 New record 3 warmer and 26 years later 13-Mar 5 1960 Mar-13 7 1896 New record 2 cooler and 64 years later 8-May 31 1954 May-08 29 1947 New record 3 warmer and 26 years later 9-May 30 1983 May-09 28 1947 New tied record 2 warmer same year and 19 and 36 years later 30 1966 30 1947 12-May 35 1976 May-12 34 1941 New record 1 warmer and 45 years later 30-Jun 47 1988 Jun-30 46 1943 New record 1 warmer and 35 years later 12-Jul 51 1973 Jul-12 47 1940 New record 4 warmer and 33 years later 13-Jul 50 1940 Jul-13 44 1940 New record 6 warmer and same year 17-Jul 52 1896 Jul-17 53 1989 New record 1 cooler and 93 years earlier 20-Jul 50 1929 Jul-20 49 1947 New record 1 warmer and 18 years earlier 23-Jul 51 1981 Jul-23 47 1947 New record 4 warmer and 34 years later 24-Jul 53 1985 Jul-24 52 1947 New record 1 warmer and 38 years later 26-Jul 52 1911 Jul-26 50 1946 New record 2 warmer and 35 years later 31-Jul 54 1966 Jul-31 47 1967 New record 7 warmer and 1 years later 19-Aug 49 1977 Aug-19 48 1943 New record 1 warmer and 10, 21 and 34 years later 49 1964 49 1953 21-Aug 44 1950 Aug-21 43 1940 New record 1 warmer and 10 years later 26-Aug 48 1958 Aug-26 47 1945 New record 1 warmer and 13 years later 27-Aug 46 1968 Aug-27 45 1945 New record 1 warmer and 23 years later 12-Sep 44 1985 Sep-12 42 1940 New record 2 warmer and 15, 27 and 45 years later 44 1967 44 1955 26-Sep 35 1950 Sep-26 33 1940 New record 2 warmer and 12 earlier and 10 years later 35 1928 27-Sep 36 1991 Sep-27 32 1947 New record 4 warmer and 44 years later 29-Sep 32 1961 Sep-29 31 1942 New record 1 warmer and 19 years later 2-Oct 32 1974 Oct-02 31 1946 New record 1 warmer and 38 years earlier and 19 years later 32 1908 15-Oct 31 1969 Oct-15 24 1939 New tied record same year but 7 warmer and 22 and 30 years later 31 1961 31 1939 16-Oct 31 1970 Oct-16 30 1944 New record 1 warmer and 26 years later 24-Nov 8 1950 Nov-24 7 1950 New tied record same year but 1 warmer 29-Nov 3 1887 Nov-29 2 1887 New tied record same year but 1 warmer 4-Dec 8 1976 Dec-04 3 1966 New record 5 warmer and 10 years later 21-Dec -10 1989 Dec-21 -11 1942 New tied record same year but 1 warmer and 47 years later -10 1942 31 ? Dec-05 8 1976 December 5 missing from 2012 list </pre>

March 1, 2023 12:34 pm

Save the <s>whales</s> windmills!

March 2, 2023 12:22 pm
   Record Highs for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007   Newer-April '12 Older-'07 (did not include ties)     6-Jan 68 1946 Jan-06 69 1946  Same year but "new" record 1*F lower   9-Jan 62 1946 Jan-09 65 1946  Same year but "new" record 3*F lower   31-Jan 66 2002 Jan-31 62 1917  "New" record 4*F higher but not in '07 list   4-Feb 61 1962 Feb-04 66 1946  "New" tied records 5*F lower   4-Feb 61 1991        23-Mar 81 1907 Mar-23 76 1966  "New" record 5*F higher but not in '07 list   25-Mar 84 1929 Mar-25 85 1945  "New" record 1*F lower   5-Apr 82 1947 Apr-05 83 1947  "New" tied records 1*F lower   5-Apr 82 1988        6-Apr 83 1929 Apr-06 82 1929  Same year but "new" record 1*F higher   19-Apr 85 1958 Apr-19 86 1941  "New" tied records 1*F lower   19-Apr 85 2002        16-May 91 1900 May-16 96 1900  Same year but "new" record 5*F lower   30-May 93 1953 May-30 95 1915  "New" record 2*F lower   31-Jul 100 1999 Jul-31 96 1954  "New" record 4*F higher but not in '07 list   11-Aug 96 1926 Aug-11 98 1944  "New" tied records 2*F lower   11-Aug 96 1944        18-Aug 94 1916 Aug-18 96 1940  "New" tied records 2*F lower   18-Aug 94 1922        18-Aug 94 1940        23-Sep 90 1941 Sep-23 91 1945  "New" tied records 1*F lower   23-Sep 90 1945        23-Sep 90 1961        9-Oct 88 1939 Oct-09 89 1939  Same year but "new" record 1*F lower   10-Nov 72 1949 Nov-10 71 1998  "New" record 1*F higher but not in '07 list   12-Nov 75 1849 Nov-12 74 1879  "New" record 1*F higher but not in '07 list   12-Dec 65 1949 Dec-12 64 1949  Same year but "new" record 1*F higher   22-Dec 62 1941 Dec-22 63 1941  Same year but "new" record 1*F lower   29-Dec 64 1984 Dec-29 67 1889  "New" record 3*F lower             Record Lows for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007   Newer-'12 Older-'07 (did not include ties)     7-Jan -5 1884 Jan-07 -6 1942  New record 1 warmer and 58 years earlier   8-Jan -9 1968 Jan-08 -12 1942  New record 3 warmer and 37 years later   3-Mar 1 1980 Mar-03 0 1943  New record 3 warmer and 26 years later   13-Mar 5 1960 Mar-13 7 1896  New record 2 cooler and 64 years later   8-May 31 1954 May-08 29 1947  New record 3 warmer and 26 years later   9-May 30 1983 May-09 28 1947  New tied record 2 warmer same year and 19 and 36 years later    30 1966         30 1947        12-May 35 1976 May-12 34 1941  New record 1 warmer and 45 years later   30-Jun 47 1988 Jun-30 46 1943  New record 1 warmer and 35 years later   12-Jul 51 1973 Jul-12 47 1940  New record 4 warmer and 33 years later   13-Jul 50 1940 Jul-13 44 1940  New record 6 warmer and same year   17-Jul 52 1896 Jul-17 53 1989  New record 1 cooler and 93 years earlier   20-Jul 50 1929 Jul-20 49 1947  New record 1 warmer and 18 years earlier   23-Jul 51 1981 Jul-23 47 1947  New record 4 warmer and 34 years later   24-Jul 53 1985 Jul-24 52 1947  New record 1 warmer and 38 years later   26-Jul 52 1911 Jul-26 50 1946  New record 2 warmer and 35 years later   31-Jul 54 1966 Jul-31 47 1967  New record 7 warmer and 1 years later   19-Aug 49 1977 Aug-19 48 1943  New record 1 warmer and 10, 21 and 34 years later    49 1964         49 1953        21-Aug 44 1950 Aug-21 43 1940  New record 1 warmer and 10 years later   26-Aug 48 1958 Aug-26 47 1945  New record 1 warmer and 13 years later   27-Aug 46 1968 Aug-27 45 1945  New record 1 warmer and 23 years later   12-Sep 44 1985 Sep-12 42 1940  New record 2 warmer and 15, 27 and 45 years later    44 1967         44 1955        26-Sep 35 1950 Sep-26 33 1940  New record 2 warmer and 12 earlier and 10 years later    35 1928        27-Sep 36 1991 Sep-27 32 1947  New record 4 warmer and 44 years later   29-Sep 32 1961 Sep-29 31 1942  New record 1 warmer and 19 years later   2-Oct 32 1974 Oct-02 31 1946  New record 1 warmer and 38 years earlier and 19 years later    32 1908        15-Oct 31 1969 Oct-15 24 1939  New tied record same year but 7 warmer and 22 and 30 years later    31 1961         31 1939        16-Oct 31 1970 Oct-16 30 1944  New record 1 warmer and 26 years later   24-Nov 8 1950 Nov-24 7 1950  New tied record same year but 1 warmer   29-Nov 3 1887 Nov-29 2 1887  New tied record same year but 1 warmer   4-Dec 8 1976 Dec-04 3 1966  New record 5 warmer and 10 years later   21-Dec -10 1989 Dec-21 -11 1942  New tied record same year but 1 warmer and 47 years later    -10 1942           31       ?   Dec-05 8 1976  December 5 missing from 2012 list 
Reply to  Gunga Din
March 2, 2023 12:25 pm

Almost got the old “pre /pre” to work.

March 2, 2023 12:27 pm

Record Highs for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007 Newer-April ’12 Older-’07 (did not include ties) 6-Jan 68 1946 Jan-06 69 1946 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 9-Jan 62 1946 Jan-09 65 1946 Same year but “new” record 3*F lower 31-Jan 66 2002 Jan-31 62 1917 “New” record 4*F higher but not in ’07 list 4-Feb 61 1962 Feb-04 66 1946 “New” tied records 5*F lower 4-Feb 61 1991 23-Mar 81 1907 Mar-23 76 1966 “New” record 5*F higher but not in ’07 list 25-Mar 84 1929 Mar-25 85 1945 “New” record 1*F lower 5-Apr 82 1947 Apr-05 83 1947 “New” tied records 1*F lower 5-Apr 82 1988 6-Apr 83 1929 Apr-06 82 1929 Same year but “new” record 1*F higher 19-Apr 85 1958 Apr-19 86 1941 “New” tied records 1*F lower 19-Apr 85 2002 16-May 91 1900 May-16 96 1900 Same year but “new” record 5*F lower 30-May 93 1953 May-30 95 1915 “New” record 2*F lower 31-Jul 100 1999 Jul-31 96 1954 “New” record 4*F higher but not in ’07 list 11-Aug 96 1926 Aug-11 98 1944 “New” tied records 2*F lower 11-Aug 96 1944 18-Aug 94 1916 Aug-18 96 1940 “New” tied records 2*F lower 18-Aug 94 1922 18-Aug 94 1940 23-Sep 90 1941 Sep-23 91 1945 “New” tied records 1*F lower 23-Sep 90 1945 23-Sep 90 1961 9-Oct 88 1939 Oct-09 89 1939 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 10-Nov 72 1949 Nov-10 71 1998 “New” record 1*F higher but not in ’07 list 12-Nov 75 1849 Nov-12 74 1879 “New” record 1*F higher but not in ’07 list 12-Dec 65 1949 Dec-12 64 1949 Same year but “new” record 1*F higher 22-Dec 62 1941 Dec-22 63 1941 Same year but “new” record 1*F lower 29-Dec 64 1984 Dec-29 67 1889 “New” record 3*F lower Record Lows for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007 Newer-’12 Older-’07 (did not include ties) 7-Jan -5 1884 Jan-07 -6 1942 New record 1 warmer and 58 years earlier 8-Jan -9 1968 Jan-08 -12 1942 New record 3 warmer and 37 years later 3-Mar 1 1980 Mar-03 0 1943 New record 3 warmer and 26 years later 13-Mar 5 1960 Mar-13 7 1896 New record 2 cooler and 64 years later 8-May 31 1954 May-08 29 1947 New record 3 warmer and 26 years later 9-May 30 1983 May-09 28 1947 New tied record 2 warmer same year and 19 and 36 years later 30 1966 30 1947 12-May 35 1976 May-12 34 1941 New record 1 warmer and 45 years later 30-Jun 47 1988 Jun-30 46 1943 New record 1 warmer and 35 years later 12-Jul 51 1973 Jul-12 47 1940 New record 4 warmer and 33 years later 13-Jul 50 1940 Jul-13 44 1940 New record 6 warmer and same year 17-Jul 52 1896 Jul-17 53 1989 New record 1 cooler and 93 years earlier 20-Jul 50 1929 Jul-20 49 1947 New record 1 warmer and 18 years earlier 23-Jul 51 1981 Jul-23 47 1947 New record 4 warmer and 34 years later 24-Jul 53 1985 Jul-24 52 1947 New record 1 warmer and 38 years later 26-Jul 52 1911 Jul-26 50 1946 New record 2 warmer and 35 years later 31-Jul 54 1966 Jul-31 47 1967 New record 7 warmer and 1 years later 19-Aug 49 1977 Aug-19 48 1943 New record 1 warmer and 10, 21 and 34 years later 49 1964 49 1953 21-Aug 44 1950 Aug-21 43 1940 New record 1 warmer and 10 years later 26-Aug 48 1958 Aug-26 47 1945 New record 1 warmer and 13 years later 27-Aug 46 1968 Aug-27 45 1945 New record 1 warmer and 23 years later 12-Sep 44 1985 Sep-12 42 1940 New record 2 warmer and 15, 27 and 45 years later 44 1967 44 1955 26-Sep 35 1950 Sep-26 33 1940 New record 2 warmer and 12 earlier and 10 years later 35 1928 27-Sep 36 1991 Sep-27 32 1947 New record 4 warmer and 44 years later 29-Sep 32 1961 Sep-29 31 1942 New record 1 warmer and 19 years later 2-Oct 32 1974 Oct-02 31 1946 New record 1 warmer and 38 years earlier and 19 years later 32 1908 15-Oct 31 1969 Oct-15 24 1939 New tied record same year but 7 warmer and 22 and 30 years later 31 1961 31 1939 16-Oct 31 1970 Oct-16 30 1944 New record 1 warmer and 26 years later 24-Nov 8 1950 Nov-24 7 1950 New tied record same year but 1 warmer 29-Nov 3 1887 Nov-29 2 1887 New tied record same year but 1 warmer 4-Dec 8 1976 Dec-04 3 1966 New record 5 warmer and 10 years later 21-Dec -10 1989 Dec-21 -11 1942 New tied record same year but 1 warmer and 47 years later -10 1942 31 ? Dec-05 8 1976 December 5 missing from 2012 list

Admin
March 17, 2023 7:01 pm

Test story tip

Admin
March 17, 2023 7:28 pm

Test story tip from eric.

michael hart
April 11, 2023 5:14 am

<i>test</i>

May 29, 2023 5:39 am

Upload a picture from PC.

Nurses-Guide-to-Apocalypse.jpg
Beta Blocker
June 19, 2023 1:33 pm

TEST

Here is the schedule of forthcoming retirements of Australia’s coal-fired power plants

as taken from Wikipedia in June 2023:

..

comment image

..

comment image

July 4, 2023 4:23 am

RMS

\sqrt{\frac{x_1^2 + x_2^2 + \dots + x_n^2}{N}}

RSS

\sqrt{x_1^2 + x_2^2 + \dots + x_n^2}

RSS / N

\frac{\sqrt{x_1^2 + x_2^2 + \dots + x_n^2}}{N}

August 16, 2023 8:21 am
  55 Record Highs for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007   Newer-April '12 Older-'07 (did not include ties)     6-Jan 68 1946 Jan-06 69 1946  Same year but "new" record 1*F lower   9-Jan 62 1946 Jan-09 65 1946  Same year but "new" record 3*F lower   31-Jan 66 2002 Jan-31 62 1917  "New" record 4*F higher but not in '07 list   4-Feb 61 1962 Feb-04 66 1946  "New" tied records 5*F lower   4-Feb 61 1991        23-Mar 81 1907 Mar-23 76 1966  "New" record 5*F higher but not in '07 list   25-Mar 84 1929 Mar-25 85 1945  "New" record 1*F lower   5-Apr 82 1947 Apr-05 83 1947  "New" tied records 1*F lower   5-Apr 82 1988        6-Apr 83 1929 Apr-06 82 1929  Same year but "new" record 1*F higher   19-Apr 85 1958 Apr-19 86 1941  "New" tied records 1*F lower   19-Apr 85 2002        16-May 91 1900 May-16 96 1900  Same year but "new" record 5*F lower   30-May 93 1953 May-30 95 1915  "New" record 2*F lower   31-Jul 100 1999 Jul-31 96 1954  "New" record 4*F higher but not in '07 list   11-Aug 96 1926 Aug-11 98 1944  "New" tied records 2*F lower   11-Aug 96 1944        18-Aug 94 1916 Aug-18 96 1940  "New" tied records 2*F lower   18-Aug 94 1922        18-Aug 94 1940        23-Sep 90 1941 Sep-23 91 1945  "New" tied records 1*F lower   23-Sep 90 1945        23-Sep 90 1961        9-Oct 88 1939 Oct-09 89 1939  Same year but "new" record 1*F lower   10-Nov 72 1949 Nov-10 71 1998  "New" record 1*F higher but not in '07 list   12-Nov 75 1849 Nov-12 74 1879  "New" record 1*F higher but not in '07 list   12-Dec 65 1949 Dec-12 64 1949  Same year but "new" record 1*F higher   22-Dec 62 1941 Dec-22 63 1941  Same year but "new" record 1*F lower   29-Dec 64 1984 Dec-29 67 1889  "New" record 3*F lower             Record Lows for the day as listed in July, 2012 compared to what was listed 2007   Newer-'12 Older-'07 (did not include ties)     7-Jan -5 1884 Jan-07 -6 1942  New record 1 warmer and 58 years earlier   8-Jan -9 1968 Jan-08 -12 1942  New record 3 warmer and 37 years later   3-Mar 1 1980 Mar-03 0 1943  New record 3 warmer and 26 years later   13-Mar 5 1960 Mar-13 7 1896  New record 2 cooler and 64 years later   8-May 31 1954 May-08 29 1947  New record 3 warmer and 26 years later   9-May 30 1983 May-09 28 1947  New tied record 2 warmer same year and 19 and 36 years later    30 1966         30 1947        12-May 35 1976 May-12 34 1941  New record 1 warmer and 45 years later   30-Jun 47 1988 Jun-30 46 1943  New record 1 warmer and 35 years later   12-Jul 51 1973 Jul-12 47 1940  New record 4 warmer and 33 years later   13-Jul 50 1940 Jul-13 44 1940  New record 6 warmer and same year   17-Jul 52 1896 Jul-17 53 1989  New record 1 cooler and 93 years earlier   20-Jul 50 1929 Jul-20 49 1947  New record 1 warmer and 18 years earlier   23-Jul 51 1981 Jul-23 47 1947  New record 4 warmer and 34 years later   24-Jul 53 1985 Jul-24 52 1947  New record 1 warmer and 38 years later   26-Jul 52 1911 Jul-26 50 1946  New record 2 warmer and 35 years later   31-Jul 54 1966 Jul-31 47 1967  New record 7 warmer and 1 years later   19-Aug 49 1977 Aug-19 48 1943  New record 1 warmer and 10, 21 and 34 years later    49 1964         49 1953        21-Aug 44 1950 Aug-21 43 1940  New record 1 warmer and 10 years later   26-Aug 48 1958 Aug-26 47 1945  New record 1 warmer and 13 years later   27-Aug 46 1968 Aug-27 45 1945  New record 1 warmer and 23 years later   12-Sep 44 1985 Sep-12 42 1940  New record 2 warmer and 15, 27 and 45 years later    44 1967         44 1955        26-Sep 35 1950 Sep-26 33 1940  New record 2 warmer and 12 earlier and 10 years later    35 1928        27-Sep 36 1991 Sep-27 32 1947  New record 4 warmer and 44 years later   29-Sep 32 1961 Sep-29 31 1942  New record 1 warmer and 19 years later   2-Oct 32 1974 Oct-02 31 1946  New record 1 warmer and 38 years earlier and 19 years later    32 1908        15-Oct 31 1969 Oct-15 24 1939  New tied record same year but 7 warmer and 22 and 30 years later    31 1961         31 1939        16-Oct 31 1970 Oct-16 30 1944  New record 1 warmer and 26 years later   24-Nov 8 1950 Nov-24 7 1950  New tied record same year but 1 warmer   29-Nov 3 1887 Nov-29 2 1887  New tied record same year but 1 warmer   4-Dec 8 1976 Dec-04 3 1966  New record 5 warmer and 10 years later   21-Dec -10 1989 Dec-21 -11 1942  New tied record same year but 1 warmer and 47 years later    -10 1942           31       ?   Dec-05 8 1976  December 5 missing from 2012 list 
michael hart
September 3, 2023 7:32 am

 “≈”, “≃”, and “≅”?

September 7, 2023 3:46 pm

Test comment from foo.

Janice Moore
September 14, 2023 1:31 pm
Janice Moore
September 14, 2023 1:32 pm

Youtube “short” video not form a window. Now, for a regular length youtube video:

Janice Moore
Reply to  Janice Moore
September 14, 2023 1:33 pm

Ah, ha! 🙂

September 21, 2023 9:13 am
Reply to  Yirgach
September 21, 2023 9:15 am
Janice Moore
September 27, 2023 12:52 pm

comment image

Janice Moore
October 7, 2023 12:13 pm
Jim Masterson
October 7, 2023 2:19 pm

\[
k \cdot T = \frac{1}
{3} \cdot m \cdot \overline {C^2 }
\]

Jim Masterson
October 7, 2023 2:21 pm

k \cdot T = \frac{1} {3} \cdot m \cdot \overline {C^2 }

Beta Blocker
October 11, 2023 8:59 am

comment image?crop=(0,0,2599,1462)&width=600

comment image?crop=(0,0,2599,1462)&width=600

Jim Masterson
October 11, 2023 11:00 am

comment image

Jim Masterson
October 11, 2023 11:14 am

$k \cdot T = \frac{1}{3} \cdot m \cdot \overline {C^2 } $

Jim Masterson
October 11, 2023 11:15 am

\begin{math}
k \cdot T = \frac{1}{3} \cdot m \cdot \overline {C^2 }
\end{math}

Beta Blocker
November 27, 2023 7:10 am

Let’s see what this looks like as one photo

comment image

Beta Blocker
November 27, 2023 8:31 am

2nd test – version with empty space on the right side

comment image

After picture discussion test ….

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Beta Blocker
January 15, 2024 6:52 am

Jim Masterson
December 3, 2023 8:48 pm

dU = &delta;Q – &delta;W

Jim Masterson
December 3, 2023 8:49 pm

dU = δQ – δW

Jim Masterson
December 3, 2023 8:50 pm

dU = δQ – δW

Jim Masterson
December 3, 2023 9:00 pm

T = 32&deg;F

Jim Masterson
December 3, 2023 9:04 pm

T = 32℃F

Jim Masterson
December 3, 2023 9:06 pm

T = 32°F

December 12, 2023 10:05 pm

<iframe width=”560″ height=”315″

    src=”https://youtu.be/5gNT0SWf3Ls”

    frameborder=”0″ allowfullscreen>

</iframe>

December 16, 2023 1:51 pm
pressure is related to density by 
p=\dfrac{\rho}{m}kT
December 16, 2023 1:58 pm

To see this, consider a gas column of cross-sectional area A. The pressure p at a given altitude h has to be such as to exert an upward force pA equal to the entire weight of the column portion above h. At altitude h+dh the weight above is less by the weight g\rho Adh of the infinitesimal gas sliver between h and h+dh, resulting in an equal reduction Adp in the force:

Adp=-g\rho Adh.

Remembering that the mass density \rho equals the product mN/V of the molecular mass m and the number N of molecules per unit volume V, we can infer from the ideal-gas law pV=NkT that pressure is related to density by

p=\dfrac{\rho}{m}kT

Plugging that into our relationship Adp=-g\rho Adh between changes in altitude and pressure, making Coombes & Laue’s assumption that the gas is isothermal, and separating variables yields:

\dfrac{d\rho}{\rho}=-\dfrac{mg}{kT}dh.

By integrating and presciently calling the constant of integration \ln(\rho_0) we obtain:

\ln(\rho)=\ln(\rho_0)-\dfrac{mgh}{kT},

which implies that density decays exponentially with altitude:

\rho=e^{-\frac{mg}{kT}h}.

December 24, 2023 5:30 am

<pre>Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
365 236 345 248 238 384 371 251 380 369 293</pre>

Reply to  Steve Case
December 24, 2023 5:33 am

Well, that doesn’t work )-: How ’bout this:

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
365 236 345 248 238 384 371 251 380 369 293
Beta Blocker
January 15, 2024 7:31 am
youcantfixstupid
February 9, 2024 10:27 pm

f<sub>0</sub>

youcantfixstupid
February 9, 2024 10:37 pm

<b>bold</b>

Janice Moore
February 15, 2024 3:57 pm

comment image&f=1&nofb=1&ipt=80c51a0161a75a5e0ee9fad51a706ba9ad9e924c0b67e2458033c9f19a229805&ipo=images

Jim Masterson
February 21, 2024 10:22 am

&Delta;S = &delta;Q/T

Jim Masterson
February 21, 2024 10:23 am

ΔS = δQ/T

February 24, 2024 11:16 am

UK wind power down to 1%
https://ibb.co/yhhkqb1

Jim Masterson
February 29, 2024 6:26 pm

“. . . has no feedback.”

The Lorenz system equations are:

dx/dt = σ*(y – x)

dy/dt = x*(ρ – z) – y

dz/dt = x*y – β*z

where:
σ = 10
ρ = 28
β = 8/3

Not all values of rho, sigma, and beta lead to chaos, but these do.

I see lots of feedback. I guess you missed one there.

Janice Moore
March 17, 2024 12:30 pm

comment image

Beta Blocker
April 2, 2024 10:32 am

Link to BPA Capacity Factor Illustration

comment image