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- Reddit - Dive into anything
Reddit is a network of communities where people can dive into their interests, hobbies and passions There's a community for whatever you're interested in on Reddit
- Getting todays date in YYYY-MM-DD in Python? - Stack Overflow
4 date today() and datetime today() both give today's date in naïve datetime, which sometimes isn't useful when you actually want today's date in some other timezone (e g today's date on a server that runs elsewhere) In that case, datetime now() is more useful because you can pass timezone to it
- Orangetheory Fitness - Reddit
The unofficial community for anyone interested in Orangetheory Fitness Come here to discuss the workouts, the results, and get help from your fellow OTFers We are operated and moderated by community members, and we are not affiliated with the Orangetheory Fitness company
- How to get all groups that a user is a member of? - Stack Overflow
PowerShell's Get-ADGroupMember cmdlet returns members of a specific group Is there a cmdlet or property to get all the groups that a particular user is a member of?
- Politics - Reddit
Jim Jordan's curious rise: A tale of how Christian nationalism consumed the GOP - It's not really about Jesus, so much as a belief that only members of their lily white tribe are "real" Americans
- How do I find out which process is listening on a TCP or UDP port on . . .
It's not ideal, but if you use Sysinternals' Process Explorer you can go to specific processes' properties and look at the TCP tab to see if they're using the port you're interested in It is a bit of a needle and haystack thing, but maybe it'll help someone
- News - Reddit
The place for news articles about current events in the United States and the rest of the world Discuss it all here
- How do I get the current time in Python? - Stack Overflow
At least to me, it seemed like this post was implying that both the naive and aware methods were (still) equally acceptable ways to get the UTC time, which is why I pointed out that that's not what Python's (latest) documentation says
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