Problem: Article: Your mourning friend may need help with a variety of tasks the first several days or weeks after a loss. One important and often heartbreaking task is planning a funeral or memorial service for the deceased. Offer your assistance in any way that you can on such a difficult task. Even if you don't make any decisions, your presence may comfort your friend. Immediately after a devastating loss, everyone your friend knows may be trying to contact him. Volunteer to act as a gatekeeper, relaying certain information to the outside world of extended family, friends, and co-workers. Doing this can shelter your friend from some of those overly optimistic platitudes while giving the family privacy. If your friend lives alone, or the loss left her home alone, offer to stay with him. He might feel uncomfortable sleeping in his home alone or may just be comforted knowing there is someone there to talk to. Everyday tasks might fall to the wayside after a serious loss, but these things will still need to be done. Ask your loved one what chores or errands need to be completed. Make a checklist and get started ticking off items. Common chores might be paying bills, picking up groceries, sending off or bringing in mail, and cleaning up the home. Just be sure to check first. Your loved one may not want certain personal items touched or rooms disturbed. He or she may want things left how they were before the person died. A great way to help out your friend and her whole household is to coordinate with other friends or relatives to set up a meal train. Doing this minimizes the need to have to prepare meals during this time of grief. Below are a few tips to organizing a meal train:  Ask your friend if it's okay for you and others to prepare some meals for her Find out about any food allergies or intolerances Ask everyone involved to be specific in what they will be preparing/bringing Offer suggestions to others who are involved, such as buying a restaurant gift card or picking up groceries that include easy-to-fix frozen meals or sandwich/salad ingredients It might be challenging for your loved one to manage his children or pets after a significant loss. Offer to look after them by picking up the children from school, helping with homework, and making sure they get a warm meal. Take any dog(s) out for a walk and feed the pets as needed.
Summary: Offer to help with the memorial. Answer and make phone calls. See if your friend wants you to stay over. Assist with household chores or errands. Organize a meal train. Help with any children or pets.

Problem: Article: It's a yellow, green, red, and blue sphere icon. It's in the top-right corner of the Google Chrome window. A drop-down menu will appear. You'll see this toward the bottom of the drop-down menu. It's near the top of the "Appearance" heading. Doing so will prompt a house-shaped icon appear to the left of the Chrome URL bar. If the switch to the right of Show home button is blue, your browser is already showing the home button. You have two options beneath the "Show home button" heading:   New Tab page — Clicking the home button will open a blank tab, which will usually display your most-frequently visited sites.  Enter custom URL — Enter a website's address (e.g., "www.google.com") to set it as your browser's home page. There may also be a URL here already, in which case you'll need to delete it first. This option might also be a blank line. If you checked the box next to the "Enter custom URL" (or blank line, or existing URL) option, type in the address of the website you want to use as your home page, then press ↵ Enter. This will set your preferred site as your Google Chrome home page. Skip this step if you clicked the New Tab page option.
Summary: Open  Google Chrome. Click ⋮. Click Settings. Click Show home button. Select a home page option. Enter a URL if necessary.

Problem: Article: The key aspect of a good unit test is that it checks just one portion of a program. Whether you are looking to test an existing program, or planning tests for a program that isn’t written yet, you’ll need to break it down into discrete parts (“units”). You’ll then write a unit test for each one. The definition of a “unit” varies widely depending on the type of program you are developing. A unit could be a class, but also a single function or procedure. A unit test can be used to check two kinds of scenarios. State-based testing is used to see if a program unit produces proper or expected results. Interaction-based testing, on the other hand, is used to see if a unit sets anticipated methods into action. To write a good test, you’ll need to identify what you are trying to test for, so keep one of these approaches in mind as a model. Keep in mind that you’ll need to write lots and lots of unit tests. You’ll want to run a unit test for every portion of your program. Keeping your tests simple will have several benefits:  Simple tests will help ensure that you really are testing only one unit at a time. The tests’ code will be reliable. If you have complex test code, it will be more prone to problems, making it just that harder to see bugs in the code of the program you are testing. The tests will be faster, decreasing the overall amount of time it takes to do the testing. A simple test will be readable, meaning you may see some potential problems just by looking at the code itself. Seasoned developers know that there are different ways to test a program. Unit tests are narrow, specific, and look at only one portion of a program. Integration tests, on the other hand, look at the whole program in a real environment. In other words, unit testing ensures that the individual parts of a program work, while integration testing verifies that the parts work together. Integration tests also usually require external elements, such as web servers or a database. To keep unit tests controlled, write them so that they don’t require external elements.
Summary:
Map your program into units. Determine if you need state-based or interaction-based testing. Plan simple and readable tests. Differentiate unit tests from integration tests.