In the course of all these, many times, because people get cut up in these activities, emotions tend to mix up. Social media such as Facebook is a hub for interaction, and people get to send messages, images, video calls, etc. Or that you felt it was too soon to let the cat out of the bag.įor some reason or the other, we tend to pass a message and then wish we could delete that message. It could be in a fit of anger you feel like saying something nasty such that after it’s out, you regret it.Īgain, you could be overwhelmed with a deep sense of affection or emotions and unintentionally send a message to the wrong person. People are moved by emotions a lot, resulting in saying things or sending messages we might not be too comfortable with later. The thing with words most times is that when they are voiced out or sent out either via short message service (SMS) or through the social media network such as Facebook, it becomes an almost impossible task to retrieve them. Great wars have been made necessary by the words we speak great times of peace have been achieved by words. The right words said at the right time can just be the saver from a precarious situation. If there is not a million comments you could probably skip the binary search and just guess from the time difference between the first comment, the last comment and your comment instead.Words are powerful they are the building block of any great enterprise. Then the following formula for M should find your post in very few iterations (1, 2, 3 depending on how evenly the comments are spread): M = (U - L) / t_L - Līut it probably won't save you much time because it is complicated to calculate the time difference in minutes. in minutes) between post L and post U, and t_Y denote the time difference between your post and post U. To find your comment (even) faster you could use the time difference to guess something between L and U other then M. This should give you the your comment within log2(1000000)=17 iterations, so even though it is complicated, you should find the comment a lot faster. Go to step 4 and repeat until you found your comment. If your post is from almost the same time, just press "Show more" until you find.If your post is newer, then the offset is to high.If your post is older, then the offset is to low.Look at the time on the comment there and compare it to the time of your post. The URL you go to should look something like this: Then go to the post and press on the time-and-date-text below one of the comments. Start by getting the time of your comment from the activity log. You could find your comment by using binary search and changing the url manually:
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