I would like to have a loading spinner overlay my graph (without hiding the graph) while the graph is loading. Is there a way to make the Loading component have a transparent background/not hide the underlying children?

@sislvacl @nickest Both solutions does not work for me. Maybe im doing something wrong. The children of my Loading component is a DataTable. In my callback the output is the data of the datatable. The loading bars are visible but not the datatable. the datatable is visible when loading is finished(callback returns). I put the loader-warpper to theh assets.css. What im doing wrong? Best regards!


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I have a callback function redrawing a graph. This callback takes several seconds so I find it important to have it wrapped in dcc.Loading so that the user can immediately see whether or not the graph is finished.

I tried to inspect the loading element in order to modify its CSS. There are two issues though. First, passing the style property to dcc.Loading only modifies the spinner, not the overlay. Second, the overlay itself has no class so I cannot define my custom CSS for it.

I have a model loaded from a gltf file into a scene. I am wondering if there is an easy way to make the model semi-transparent? In web development you would set an opacity parameter to .5 or something like that. Is there an equivalent in three.js?

The check for object.material is included because not all objects are THREE.Mesh types; there may be THREE.Group or other objects. In most cases the materials created by GLTFLoader use THREE.MeshStandardMaterial.

Is Creatine Loading Necessary for Maximizing Muscle Creatine Stores?Creatine (monohydrate) remains the most effective sports nutrition supplement for increasing muscle mass, muscle strength, and overall exercise performance. Countless studies have demonstrated the benefits of creatine supplementation, with and without a creatine loading phase [1].

A creatine "loading phase" is often recommended when (re)starting creatine supplementation, specifically creatine monohydrate. Intramuscular creatine stores are saturated rapidly by front-loading with large daily doses of creatine. In turn, loading creatine allows athletes and gym-goers to realize the ergogenic effects of creatine supplements in a shorter time than standard maintenance doses of creatine.

For creatine supplements to be effective for athletic performance, they must help saturate skeletal muscle creatine stores. The body synthesizes small amounts of creatine endogenously, and creatine is also found in some foods (e.g., red meat), but it is impractical to achieve full muscle creatine saturation through whole foods/diet alone; hence, creatine supplementation is needed.

The body, primarily muscle mass, constantly exhausts creatine stores to generate adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the veritable energetic "currency" of cells. Therefore, taking creatine consistently for extended periods is necessary to maximize the benefits.

Even if you start with a creatine loading phase, intramuscular creatine levels will diminish upon cessation of supplementation. After a loading phase, supplementing with creatine daily (in lower doses) is critical for ongoing ergogenic effects.

Many creatine supplements advise an initial "loading phase" to saturate muscle creatine stores, but plenty of evidence now exists to refute the "need to load" when taking creatine [4]. You don't need to start by loading creatine.

At best, a creatine loading phase will expedite the process of saturating muscle creatine stores, but it won't lead to more pronounced benefits or muscle gains than a standard maintenance dose of creatine [5].

Loading creatine entails 5 to 10 days of "megadosing" a creatine supplement, typically creatine monohydrate, followed by a transition to a considerably lower maintenance dose of creatine. In most studies, the static creatine loading dose is 20 to 25 grams of creatine monohydrate per day, split into 3 to 4 smaller doses, for one week [6].

However, some research has prescribed a relative creatine loading phase with 0.3 grams of creatine per kilogram of body weight [7]. For a 100-kg (220-lb) athlete, that comes out to a sizable 30 grams of creatine per day during the loading phase. (Note that you will need to adjust these doses depending on which form of creatine you're taking.)

Determination of which creatine supplementation strategy is preferred may depend on the goal of the individual. For instance, if an athlete is hoping to maximize the ergogenic potential of creatine supplementation in a very short period of time (< 30 days), adopting the creatine' loading' strategy may be advised.

Supplementing creatine daily can provide myriad benefits for athletes and active individuals alike, especially those who engage in resistance training and explosive exercise. And while a creatine loading phase will accelerate muscle creatine saturation, it's not always prudent to load creatine when initiating creatine supplementation.

Taking "megadoses" of creatine (e.g., 20+ grams of creatine monohydrate per day) may not be tolerable for everyone; it's well-known that large doses of creatine can cause untoward effects in certain individuals, notably gastrointestinal distress and muscle cramps [9]. Water retention, however, is not really a "side effect" of creatine supplementation; it's actually one of the ways creatine promotes an anabolic milieu in muscle cells [10].

For athletes and gym-goers that find creatine loading exacerbates adverse effects, it's best to use smaller doses (e.g. 2 to 5 grams of creatine monohydrate per day) daily for at least four consecutive weeks. This approach will allow for muscle creatine stores to be fully saturated while minimizing potential side effects.

B. Add a transparent colour to your palette and move it to the first slot of the palette. This is required because each layer is Indexed too, but layers require a transparent colour to be useful, so Aseprite just picks the first colour to act as the transparency. By giving Aseprite that extra colour to use as the transparency, your other colours will be freed up from acting as the transparent colour.

Aseprite does not have skeletal animation features built in, it only does frame animation. However, frame animation is for most purposes the best way to work with pixel art, since skeletal animation will tend to distort the artwork in ways unsuitable for pixel art, so it could be worth learning even if you get Pivot to work or use a different skeletal animation tool (there are cheaper options than Animate, such as Spriter).

does aseprite has something similar as pivot?

the black background in this is supposed to be transparent but when i try to replace all the black with the transparent colour it mostly messes it up,

this is before

image786266 39 KB

You could try a Lua script. Make sure the sprite is in RGB color mode, that the fireball layer is not a Background (is not underlined), that your palette has one and only one clear black color at index 0.

I'm having an issue where none of the pop up windows are displaying correctly. I only see a thin outline of the actual window, but the entire content is clear and transparent so i can't see anything. I can move the window around and click the buttons if I know where it is, but I'd like to be able to actual see it. This problem seems to fix itself temporray if I restart excel multiple times or if I go into the editor and display the prompt through there, but the issue will resurface again later.


I'm running Excel 2016 for Microsoft Office 365 32 bit, version 1902 on a Windows Server 2016 VM.

HI All, I had same issue. After a lot of struggle including reinstalling power bi serveral times, changing the diplay setting , version changes etc... what worked for me is finally is clicking on "Repair" in the app settings fo power Bi.

Hey, all. I think I stumbled onto a good fix for this issue. ALT+F4 will close the blank pop-up window. Then you can just re-launch the editor. Since it is an infrequent (but regular) occurrence, the 2nd launch has always worked for me. Hope this helps.

Same issue here. It feels more frequent and more complicated to resolve. I used to be able to do as others have mentioned, move the transparent box around, move it to another monitor, wait it out, escape it away. However, now I'm completely locked up. Going to have to kill it in the task manager. I also do not have these issues with Power Query in Power BI, just Excel.

I had previously thought it was somehow related to having an extended display between laptop and external monitor with different resolutions, but I recently had this occur on a different machine that was not connected to an external monitor.

I have found that if I hit escape the blank dialog will disappear. If that doesn't work (in case I have clicked somewhere else) I click tab and then escape and repeat in that order until the dialog disappears. It avoids having to resort to the task manager or wait it out.

Glad to know its not just me. Sometimes its worked to select the outline and hit the escape key but usually its a job for task manager. I've found it can occur with any of the settings dialogs in Power Query Editor and probably when i have too many files open.

I run into this error several times a week. My "fix" is to close Excel from Task Manager and hope it does not occur again a long time after I have saved. The most common (but not only) command when this occurs is when I select 'Choose Columns'.

I had the same issue. At the bottom of my MS Excel window, the the left of the zoom slider are the words "Display Settings." After I clicked on that, I selected "Optimize for compatibility." Then I restarted all MS Office programs like it said and now I can see the power query windows and contents.

This does work but you can also drag the window to your primary display screen and it will be visible there. The avoids the blurry display on the secondary screen that occurs when you select "optimize for compatibility". 152ee80cbc

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