One night in Baker StreetSomebody has kidnapped Jason Baker!No shoot Sherlock: Test your internet and detective skills with this one!I'm more of the setting sun than the rising sun. Who am I? And why?A visual riddle about a figureA Letter: Moriarty is deadEye the bull's-eye!Soapbox on a street cornerWhat was Detective Sherlock missing?My Grandfather's Final MessageWhen at first you don't succede try and Try again
Why does Eliyahu appear at a brit milah?
ArcPy Delete Function not working inside for loop?
My credit card has no magnetic stripe. Is this a problem in the USA?
DC Series motor and its starting
Does inertia keep a rotating object rotating forever, or something else?
Is there an English equivalent for "Les carottes sont cuites", while keeping the vegetable reference?
Why does FFmpeg choose 10+20+20 ms instead of an even 16 ms for 60 fps GIF images?
Why doesn't philosophy have higher standards for its arguments?
Why do space operations use "nominal" to mean "working correctly"?
How to find location on Cambridge-Mildenhall railway that still has tracks/rails?
Preview an archive contents without extracting it
Optimising the Selection of MaxValue in Association
Can a Resident Assistant be told to ignore a lawful order?'
Why is Katakana not pronounced Katagana?
Cover a cube with four-legged walky-squares!
Is straight-up writing someone's opinions telling?
Was Apollo 13 radio blackout on reentry longer than expected?
Why is Google approaching my VPS machine?
How can the electric potential be zero at a point where the electric field isn't, if that field can give a test charge kinetic energy?
Which GPUs to get for Mathematical Optimization (if any...)?
How many bits in the resultant hash will change, if the x bits are changed in its the original input?
How can a drink contain 1.8 kcal energy while 0 g fat/carbs/protein?
Is there a typesafe way to get a Database.QueryLocator?
Why does "git status" show I'm on the master branch and "git branch" does not in a newly created repository?
One night in Baker Street
Somebody has kidnapped Jason Baker!No shoot Sherlock: Test your internet and detective skills with this one!I'm more of the setting sun than the rising sun. Who am I? And why?A visual riddle about a figureA Letter: Moriarty is deadEye the bull's-eye!Soapbox on a street cornerWhat was Detective Sherlock missing?My Grandfather's Final MessageWhen at first you don't succede try and Try again
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
$begingroup$
The raindrops ran down the windows of 221B Baker Street while Sherlock Holmes played a sad melody upon his violin. The weather and the music reflected his mood, for it had been a trying and vexatious twenty-four hours. It was rare for a problem to stymie him like this, but try as he might to distract himself from the perplexing riddle that had been posed to him, his mind always found a way to wander back to it.
With an angry cry, Sherlock cast down his violin and hunched over the crumpled paper once more.
“Something the matter, Holmes?” inquired Dr Watson from his chair by the fire. Sherlock rounded on his roommate in frustration and disbelief.
“Deduce for yourself, John. My crying out, my ill treatment of my instrument, my tormented posture – are these the actions of a man for whom nothing is the matter?!”
Sherlock turned back to the note on the table and muttered under his breath…
“No cipher that I have ever seen… The lower case letters simply must be important – else why would they be there?... A substitution perhaps, but then also…”
Dr Watson ventured to speak again. “You are still considering the importance of that note then?”
“Considering?!” fumed Sherlock. “Watson, I am far past merely ‘considering’. I am consumed. My thoughts, my words, my very being – all of it is drawn towards this exasperating code… and yet I am unable to decipher it at all! What meaning can it possibly convey?! It bears all the hallmarks of Moriarty’s twisted mind – he must not be permitted to defeat me. See!”
Sherlock thrust the paper out towards his colleague and friend; the letters of its message stood black in the fire light.
SH,
YOU CaN SeArCH ThIS LaNd. YOU CaN PErUSe MoUNTaINS, CaNYONS, SeAs.
YOU CaN PrOBe, SnOOP, PrY As OFTeN, As SWIFTlY, As CoNSTaNTlY As YOU WISH.
I ScOFF At YOU. I SnICKEr. I BrAg.
ONCe SUN HAs ArISeN – IF YOU Be NO WISEr – I WIn.
Dr Watson stroked his chin and opened his mouth. “Suppose that this-” But before he could go further Sherlock had torn the page sharply away from him.
“Suppose nothing, Watson. If this problem troubles me – the great Sherlock Holmes – to this extent, what measly hope is there of your having a solution? Take yourself off to bed – you shall be of far more use elsewhere. Meanwhile, I shall not have rest until the answer is in my hand and Moriarty’s enigma lies shattered, whispering all of its secrets to me.”
“If you insist, Sherlock,” replied Watson, removing himself from the room, a knowing look upon his face.
Sherlock laboured all night. With great howls and shrieks, he toiled and slogged, but when the dawn came and Dr Watson re-entered the room after a good night’s sleep, he found his associate prostrate on the floor, bedraggled and groaning as if in great agony.
“I am vanquished, Watson. As Queen Victoria lives and breathes, I have been unable to fathom the answer. I must concede. Moriarty is victorious.”
“No,” said Dr Watson. Sherlock looked up.
“No?” replied Sherlock through bloodshot eyes. “How can Moriarty not have won? I have failed to solve his cipher.”
Dr Watson smiled. “I say ‘No’, because it is not Moriarty’s cipher.” Sherlock frowned. “It is mine, Sherlock. In fact, it is not even strictly a cipher – it is merely a trifle, of my own devising. An attempt to demonstrate to my close friend – to you – that sometimes I do have an intellect, as overshadowed as it may be by your own. And as you can see, the sun has arisen – and you are no wiser. Therefore, I win!”
Sherlock stood up and laid a hand on Dr Watson’s shoulder. “Then I congratulate you, Watson. It is you, and not Moriarty, who has bettered me on this occasion. I stand here a humbler and less conceited man. But pray, tell me, what is the secret to your riddle?”
Dr Watson grinned. “It is very simple, Holmes – it is __________.”
Sherlock closed his eyes, abject. “Of course, of course.” Then he looked askew at his conqueror. “But in that case Watson, you have made one mistake…”
What one word did Dr Watson say to Sherlock to explain his riddle? And what is the mistake which Sherlock has spotted? Both answers are required for a complete solution.
knowledge enigmatic-puzzle history
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The raindrops ran down the windows of 221B Baker Street while Sherlock Holmes played a sad melody upon his violin. The weather and the music reflected his mood, for it had been a trying and vexatious twenty-four hours. It was rare for a problem to stymie him like this, but try as he might to distract himself from the perplexing riddle that had been posed to him, his mind always found a way to wander back to it.
With an angry cry, Sherlock cast down his violin and hunched over the crumpled paper once more.
“Something the matter, Holmes?” inquired Dr Watson from his chair by the fire. Sherlock rounded on his roommate in frustration and disbelief.
“Deduce for yourself, John. My crying out, my ill treatment of my instrument, my tormented posture – are these the actions of a man for whom nothing is the matter?!”
Sherlock turned back to the note on the table and muttered under his breath…
“No cipher that I have ever seen… The lower case letters simply must be important – else why would they be there?... A substitution perhaps, but then also…”
Dr Watson ventured to speak again. “You are still considering the importance of that note then?”
“Considering?!” fumed Sherlock. “Watson, I am far past merely ‘considering’. I am consumed. My thoughts, my words, my very being – all of it is drawn towards this exasperating code… and yet I am unable to decipher it at all! What meaning can it possibly convey?! It bears all the hallmarks of Moriarty’s twisted mind – he must not be permitted to defeat me. See!”
Sherlock thrust the paper out towards his colleague and friend; the letters of its message stood black in the fire light.
SH,
YOU CaN SeArCH ThIS LaNd. YOU CaN PErUSe MoUNTaINS, CaNYONS, SeAs.
YOU CaN PrOBe, SnOOP, PrY As OFTeN, As SWIFTlY, As CoNSTaNTlY As YOU WISH.
I ScOFF At YOU. I SnICKEr. I BrAg.
ONCe SUN HAs ArISeN – IF YOU Be NO WISEr – I WIn.
Dr Watson stroked his chin and opened his mouth. “Suppose that this-” But before he could go further Sherlock had torn the page sharply away from him.
“Suppose nothing, Watson. If this problem troubles me – the great Sherlock Holmes – to this extent, what measly hope is there of your having a solution? Take yourself off to bed – you shall be of far more use elsewhere. Meanwhile, I shall not have rest until the answer is in my hand and Moriarty’s enigma lies shattered, whispering all of its secrets to me.”
“If you insist, Sherlock,” replied Watson, removing himself from the room, a knowing look upon his face.
Sherlock laboured all night. With great howls and shrieks, he toiled and slogged, but when the dawn came and Dr Watson re-entered the room after a good night’s sleep, he found his associate prostrate on the floor, bedraggled and groaning as if in great agony.
“I am vanquished, Watson. As Queen Victoria lives and breathes, I have been unable to fathom the answer. I must concede. Moriarty is victorious.”
“No,” said Dr Watson. Sherlock looked up.
“No?” replied Sherlock through bloodshot eyes. “How can Moriarty not have won? I have failed to solve his cipher.”
Dr Watson smiled. “I say ‘No’, because it is not Moriarty’s cipher.” Sherlock frowned. “It is mine, Sherlock. In fact, it is not even strictly a cipher – it is merely a trifle, of my own devising. An attempt to demonstrate to my close friend – to you – that sometimes I do have an intellect, as overshadowed as it may be by your own. And as you can see, the sun has arisen – and you are no wiser. Therefore, I win!”
Sherlock stood up and laid a hand on Dr Watson’s shoulder. “Then I congratulate you, Watson. It is you, and not Moriarty, who has bettered me on this occasion. I stand here a humbler and less conceited man. But pray, tell me, what is the secret to your riddle?”
Dr Watson grinned. “It is very simple, Holmes – it is __________.”
Sherlock closed his eyes, abject. “Of course, of course.” Then he looked askew at his conqueror. “But in that case Watson, you have made one mistake…”
What one word did Dr Watson say to Sherlock to explain his riddle? And what is the mistake which Sherlock has spotted? Both answers are required for a complete solution.
knowledge enigmatic-puzzle history
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The raindrops ran down the windows of 221B Baker Street while Sherlock Holmes played a sad melody upon his violin. The weather and the music reflected his mood, for it had been a trying and vexatious twenty-four hours. It was rare for a problem to stymie him like this, but try as he might to distract himself from the perplexing riddle that had been posed to him, his mind always found a way to wander back to it.
With an angry cry, Sherlock cast down his violin and hunched over the crumpled paper once more.
“Something the matter, Holmes?” inquired Dr Watson from his chair by the fire. Sherlock rounded on his roommate in frustration and disbelief.
“Deduce for yourself, John. My crying out, my ill treatment of my instrument, my tormented posture – are these the actions of a man for whom nothing is the matter?!”
Sherlock turned back to the note on the table and muttered under his breath…
“No cipher that I have ever seen… The lower case letters simply must be important – else why would they be there?... A substitution perhaps, but then also…”
Dr Watson ventured to speak again. “You are still considering the importance of that note then?”
“Considering?!” fumed Sherlock. “Watson, I am far past merely ‘considering’. I am consumed. My thoughts, my words, my very being – all of it is drawn towards this exasperating code… and yet I am unable to decipher it at all! What meaning can it possibly convey?! It bears all the hallmarks of Moriarty’s twisted mind – he must not be permitted to defeat me. See!”
Sherlock thrust the paper out towards his colleague and friend; the letters of its message stood black in the fire light.
SH,
YOU CaN SeArCH ThIS LaNd. YOU CaN PErUSe MoUNTaINS, CaNYONS, SeAs.
YOU CaN PrOBe, SnOOP, PrY As OFTeN, As SWIFTlY, As CoNSTaNTlY As YOU WISH.
I ScOFF At YOU. I SnICKEr. I BrAg.
ONCe SUN HAs ArISeN – IF YOU Be NO WISEr – I WIn.
Dr Watson stroked his chin and opened his mouth. “Suppose that this-” But before he could go further Sherlock had torn the page sharply away from him.
“Suppose nothing, Watson. If this problem troubles me – the great Sherlock Holmes – to this extent, what measly hope is there of your having a solution? Take yourself off to bed – you shall be of far more use elsewhere. Meanwhile, I shall not have rest until the answer is in my hand and Moriarty’s enigma lies shattered, whispering all of its secrets to me.”
“If you insist, Sherlock,” replied Watson, removing himself from the room, a knowing look upon his face.
Sherlock laboured all night. With great howls and shrieks, he toiled and slogged, but when the dawn came and Dr Watson re-entered the room after a good night’s sleep, he found his associate prostrate on the floor, bedraggled and groaning as if in great agony.
“I am vanquished, Watson. As Queen Victoria lives and breathes, I have been unable to fathom the answer. I must concede. Moriarty is victorious.”
“No,” said Dr Watson. Sherlock looked up.
“No?” replied Sherlock through bloodshot eyes. “How can Moriarty not have won? I have failed to solve his cipher.”
Dr Watson smiled. “I say ‘No’, because it is not Moriarty’s cipher.” Sherlock frowned. “It is mine, Sherlock. In fact, it is not even strictly a cipher – it is merely a trifle, of my own devising. An attempt to demonstrate to my close friend – to you – that sometimes I do have an intellect, as overshadowed as it may be by your own. And as you can see, the sun has arisen – and you are no wiser. Therefore, I win!”
Sherlock stood up and laid a hand on Dr Watson’s shoulder. “Then I congratulate you, Watson. It is you, and not Moriarty, who has bettered me on this occasion. I stand here a humbler and less conceited man. But pray, tell me, what is the secret to your riddle?”
Dr Watson grinned. “It is very simple, Holmes – it is __________.”
Sherlock closed his eyes, abject. “Of course, of course.” Then he looked askew at his conqueror. “But in that case Watson, you have made one mistake…”
What one word did Dr Watson say to Sherlock to explain his riddle? And what is the mistake which Sherlock has spotted? Both answers are required for a complete solution.
knowledge enigmatic-puzzle history
$endgroup$
The raindrops ran down the windows of 221B Baker Street while Sherlock Holmes played a sad melody upon his violin. The weather and the music reflected his mood, for it had been a trying and vexatious twenty-four hours. It was rare for a problem to stymie him like this, but try as he might to distract himself from the perplexing riddle that had been posed to him, his mind always found a way to wander back to it.
With an angry cry, Sherlock cast down his violin and hunched over the crumpled paper once more.
“Something the matter, Holmes?” inquired Dr Watson from his chair by the fire. Sherlock rounded on his roommate in frustration and disbelief.
“Deduce for yourself, John. My crying out, my ill treatment of my instrument, my tormented posture – are these the actions of a man for whom nothing is the matter?!”
Sherlock turned back to the note on the table and muttered under his breath…
“No cipher that I have ever seen… The lower case letters simply must be important – else why would they be there?... A substitution perhaps, but then also…”
Dr Watson ventured to speak again. “You are still considering the importance of that note then?”
“Considering?!” fumed Sherlock. “Watson, I am far past merely ‘considering’. I am consumed. My thoughts, my words, my very being – all of it is drawn towards this exasperating code… and yet I am unable to decipher it at all! What meaning can it possibly convey?! It bears all the hallmarks of Moriarty’s twisted mind – he must not be permitted to defeat me. See!”
Sherlock thrust the paper out towards his colleague and friend; the letters of its message stood black in the fire light.
SH,
YOU CaN SeArCH ThIS LaNd. YOU CaN PErUSe MoUNTaINS, CaNYONS, SeAs.
YOU CaN PrOBe, SnOOP, PrY As OFTeN, As SWIFTlY, As CoNSTaNTlY As YOU WISH.
I ScOFF At YOU. I SnICKEr. I BrAg.
ONCe SUN HAs ArISeN – IF YOU Be NO WISEr – I WIn.
Dr Watson stroked his chin and opened his mouth. “Suppose that this-” But before he could go further Sherlock had torn the page sharply away from him.
“Suppose nothing, Watson. If this problem troubles me – the great Sherlock Holmes – to this extent, what measly hope is there of your having a solution? Take yourself off to bed – you shall be of far more use elsewhere. Meanwhile, I shall not have rest until the answer is in my hand and Moriarty’s enigma lies shattered, whispering all of its secrets to me.”
“If you insist, Sherlock,” replied Watson, removing himself from the room, a knowing look upon his face.
Sherlock laboured all night. With great howls and shrieks, he toiled and slogged, but when the dawn came and Dr Watson re-entered the room after a good night’s sleep, he found his associate prostrate on the floor, bedraggled and groaning as if in great agony.
“I am vanquished, Watson. As Queen Victoria lives and breathes, I have been unable to fathom the answer. I must concede. Moriarty is victorious.”
“No,” said Dr Watson. Sherlock looked up.
“No?” replied Sherlock through bloodshot eyes. “How can Moriarty not have won? I have failed to solve his cipher.”
Dr Watson smiled. “I say ‘No’, because it is not Moriarty’s cipher.” Sherlock frowned. “It is mine, Sherlock. In fact, it is not even strictly a cipher – it is merely a trifle, of my own devising. An attempt to demonstrate to my close friend – to you – that sometimes I do have an intellect, as overshadowed as it may be by your own. And as you can see, the sun has arisen – and you are no wiser. Therefore, I win!”
Sherlock stood up and laid a hand on Dr Watson’s shoulder. “Then I congratulate you, Watson. It is you, and not Moriarty, who has bettered me on this occasion. I stand here a humbler and less conceited man. But pray, tell me, what is the secret to your riddle?”
Dr Watson grinned. “It is very simple, Holmes – it is __________.”
Sherlock closed his eyes, abject. “Of course, of course.” Then he looked askew at his conqueror. “But in that case Watson, you have made one mistake…”
What one word did Dr Watson say to Sherlock to explain his riddle? And what is the mistake which Sherlock has spotted? Both answers are required for a complete solution.
knowledge enigmatic-puzzle history
knowledge enigmatic-puzzle history
edited Jul 9 at 11:06
Stiv
asked Jul 8 at 21:18
StivStiv
1,6925 silver badges25 bronze badges
1,6925 silver badges25 bronze badges
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Answer:
It is very simple, Holmes – it is elementary.
Explanation:
The entire message is composed of the abbrevations for chemical elements. The lowercase letters appear whenever there is a two letter symbol. For example, the word "CaN" includes the symbol "Ca" for Calcium followed by "N" for Nitrogen. The word "SeArCH" is composed of "Se" (Selenium), "Ar" (Argon), "C" (Carbon), and "H" (Hydrogen). .
The mistake:
In the word "At", the element At (Astatine) was only discovered in 1940, which means Watson and Sherlock would not have known this symbol.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
@JS1 A perfect answer - well done!
$endgroup$
– Stiv
Jul 9 at 4:34
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "559"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpuzzling.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85980%2fone-night-in-baker-street%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Answer:
It is very simple, Holmes – it is elementary.
Explanation:
The entire message is composed of the abbrevations for chemical elements. The lowercase letters appear whenever there is a two letter symbol. For example, the word "CaN" includes the symbol "Ca" for Calcium followed by "N" for Nitrogen. The word "SeArCH" is composed of "Se" (Selenium), "Ar" (Argon), "C" (Carbon), and "H" (Hydrogen). .
The mistake:
In the word "At", the element At (Astatine) was only discovered in 1940, which means Watson and Sherlock would not have known this symbol.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
@JS1 A perfect answer - well done!
$endgroup$
– Stiv
Jul 9 at 4:34
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Answer:
It is very simple, Holmes – it is elementary.
Explanation:
The entire message is composed of the abbrevations for chemical elements. The lowercase letters appear whenever there is a two letter symbol. For example, the word "CaN" includes the symbol "Ca" for Calcium followed by "N" for Nitrogen. The word "SeArCH" is composed of "Se" (Selenium), "Ar" (Argon), "C" (Carbon), and "H" (Hydrogen). .
The mistake:
In the word "At", the element At (Astatine) was only discovered in 1940, which means Watson and Sherlock would not have known this symbol.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
@JS1 A perfect answer - well done!
$endgroup$
– Stiv
Jul 9 at 4:34
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Answer:
It is very simple, Holmes – it is elementary.
Explanation:
The entire message is composed of the abbrevations for chemical elements. The lowercase letters appear whenever there is a two letter symbol. For example, the word "CaN" includes the symbol "Ca" for Calcium followed by "N" for Nitrogen. The word "SeArCH" is composed of "Se" (Selenium), "Ar" (Argon), "C" (Carbon), and "H" (Hydrogen). .
The mistake:
In the word "At", the element At (Astatine) was only discovered in 1940, which means Watson and Sherlock would not have known this symbol.
$endgroup$
Answer:
It is very simple, Holmes – it is elementary.
Explanation:
The entire message is composed of the abbrevations for chemical elements. The lowercase letters appear whenever there is a two letter symbol. For example, the word "CaN" includes the symbol "Ca" for Calcium followed by "N" for Nitrogen. The word "SeArCH" is composed of "Se" (Selenium), "Ar" (Argon), "C" (Carbon), and "H" (Hydrogen). .
The mistake:
In the word "At", the element At (Astatine) was only discovered in 1940, which means Watson and Sherlock would not have known this symbol.
edited Jul 9 at 2:01
answered Jul 9 at 1:36
JS1JS1
5,59519 silver badges35 bronze badges
5,59519 silver badges35 bronze badges
$begingroup$
@JS1 A perfect answer - well done!
$endgroup$
– Stiv
Jul 9 at 4:34
add a comment |
$begingroup$
@JS1 A perfect answer - well done!
$endgroup$
– Stiv
Jul 9 at 4:34
$begingroup$
@JS1 A perfect answer - well done!
$endgroup$
– Stiv
Jul 9 at 4:34
$begingroup$
@JS1 A perfect answer - well done!
$endgroup$
– Stiv
Jul 9 at 4:34
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Puzzling Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpuzzling.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f85980%2fone-night-in-baker-street%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown