Antipattern?
In common case, second table is anti-pattern in context of database design. And, even more, it has specific name: Entity-Attribute-Value (EAV). There are some cases, when using this design is justified, but that are rare cases - and even there it can be avoided.
Why EAV is bad
D...
It is strong not advised. Use of global variables (and global state in general) is and extremely bad practice. Someone with 6k reputation should be aware of it. At this point it look more like intentional misinformation of a newbie. — tereško1 min ago
@tereško I see fit just do delete that crap. If that user don't know why that is bad, then it's impossible to explain in comments. And no sense in that ..
@AlmaDo If you continue watching bleach, you'll come across phrases like "I know you're much muchMUCH stronger than me, but I'll beat you because I have to", and "I'm sorry, I'm just not allowed to get injured anymore"
In Naruto, Madara (the character I am based on) is OP as hell, because he has the top eye technique, because he absorbed the power of his rival (who is at least as strong as him), and most recently, because he has the power of an actual god on his side.
@tereško @AlmaDo I think there's no other series with powers as awesome as those in there, and everything is very well-explained too. But downside is that it's extremely cliche story-wise.
We have the same goody-goody MC who is almost powerless and yet somehow manages to beat monsters that can quite literally tear the planet in half.
Language design philosophical question (cc @ircmaxell): Would it make sense to save numbers which are not integers ("floats") as a number and the remainder, and then when asked for a floating point with certain precision, you can calculate to whatever precision you need and maybe cache the result?
@SecondRikudo Floats and decimals have different use cases and the performance can differs per operation. Splitting a float for some reason seems like a bad idea to me
Seriously, every tutorial is basically the same thing; enable NAT so the guest can get out, use Host-Only so your host can get in (to your guest) I did that, even set up DHCP for the Host-Only adapter... I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong.
I'm using PHP for my website. I've an dynamic associative array which may contain any no. of elements. Each of the elements in this array is another array. In order to limit the no. of array elements to be shown to the user on single page I wrote a pagination funtion. It's working fine and return...
# Enabling DNS proxy in NAT mode
vb.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--natdnsproxy1", "on"]
# Using the host's resolver as a DNS proxy in NAT mode
vb.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--natdnshostresolver1", "on"]
Or the equivalent options, if you don't want your DNS lookups to randomly start failing from inside the VM.
Anyone know how to make any start up warning be an error in php? In particular when I get "PHP Warning: PHP Startup: Unable to load dynamic library blah blah blah" when running some PHP tests, all the tests should be marked as failed rather than skipped.
Hey guys - when you create routes for your web application, do you store all possible routes that your web app will accept in a data structure? Like /posts/p/{post_id} and /posts/new/ etc?
If I do $n = 2; for (;;) for (;;) break $n; I get an error reading “PHP Fatal error: 'break' operator with non-constant operand is no longer supported.” What were the semantics when it was still supported?
@NikiC So I tried building PHP with CC="g++ -std=c++11" CFLAGS="-fpermissive" and it fails. Have you successfully built PHP with a C++ compiler with any standard before?
@DanLugg It has phone numbers in the same table as people - in almost every example. That is just terrible design. It means you can't list multiple phone numbers for people, or keep a list of previous numbers.
@salathe I've been very busy getting ready for my trip to Switzerland in September; I should have some time this week to work on php.net though. That means perhaps I'll revert the menu on the right side.
I open 300 streams to my server. Then I create a thread which write data to each stream, and an other stream which read data. Normally (my server is very fast), I should handle 300 datas per second, but I'm stuck at 250. Why ?
Main program :
$streams = array();
for($i = 0; $i < 300; $i++)
$...
I closed the account there ... Amy Stephen tweeted encouraging people to donate to me using gittip (which was super awesome of her) ... it became apparent quite quickly that it's useless
I imagine that's enough ... there is mention that paypal doesn't officially support donations, so they are worried about tax or pp policy, not sure ...
that issue is two years old, so doesn't look like it's getting solved either ...
that does suck though, still, you can't consider a project like gittip to be FOSS really, it's open source but it's a business, businesses need to afford lawyers and should be able to if they are making money, if they aren't making money then it's not sustainable and they aren't really doing anyone any favours ...
Huh, apparently CIBC closed my account as delinquent because it had a balance of -$0.04, which is interesting since they never gave me an OD or any form of credit being that I was on a temporary visa when I opened it
@JoeWatkins Yeh but paypal are actually evil and would ignore someone like that who is trying to do something useful and not bastardish
The data URI scheme is a URI scheme (Uniform Resource Identifier scheme) that provides a way to include data in-line in web pages as if they were external resources. It is a form of file literal or here document. This technique allows normally separate elements such as images and style sheets to be fetched in a single HTTP request rather than multiple HTTP requests, which can be more efficient.
Data URIs tends to be simpler than other inclusion methods, such as MIME with cid or mid URIs. Data URIs are sometimes called Uniform Resource Locators, although they do not actually locate anythin...