you will end up with a pivot table with just an ID and shared fields, and then sub-tables with other data, and then triggers to verify data integrity @_@
I tend to like to arrange the data on disk with the ways it's mostly queried. I love composite keys. Because you can take the left parts and get a good slice on a table.
So with BC, people on one side may be filtering the data differently than the other side
I think it's fun though to (every once in a long while) create a crazy function and just comment it as // magic
Honestly though....at the molecular level....magic is happening. The communication is magic. We never experience those things touching (like we do in the rest of the larger physical world)
I want the cache on, I just want to see the response headers for the not 'modified 304' response. Instead of showing that it's showing the response headers of the original 200 response.
I love chrome dev tools. I remember I switched to it from Firebug long ago when something happened with Firebug (it would go incredibly slow!). I think Firebug is better now though.
@Ocramius yeah... it is? Request sent to server, I'm generating a 304 response with some other headers (which I want to check are sane), and then when it gets back to chrome it's then that it's using the original 200 response.
@tereško I agree, Windows really is designed by people who do not know what they are doing, given that almost every change made since 95 was clearly done with complete and utter disregard for usability and user experience.
Microsoft did usability studies. They saw how people used Windows. They radically changed the UI to make it something effective for both novices and power users
@Ocramius say I have an address Value Object. I have a property on my user entity called $address. How do I denote it is a Value Object? If I don't use setters, and I don't require it on entity constructor?
They're user-base has the money to start fresh more often. Also, Apple is more for creative things (not infrastructure stuff). If you are playing around, get an Apple. If you need stuff to talk to stuff and get stuff done, get a PC.
I'm coding very effectively on a PC. Virtualbox and all. Shared mount works great. It was a little tricky, but it's working great. Oh, and also I can do some hardcore gaming at the end of the day on the same laptop PC (muhahah)
Where would PC gaming be without windows?
I don't mean PC gaming yesterday, I mean even today
Apple = nope. Linux = under construction
Not that I'm a big gamer (no time really) but just to support that you are going to introduce a lot of problems in your architecture
I think it was more consistent and had more consideration for usability. Was it good? Eh, no, it was bad in many ways. Some of those ways have been fixed since.
But Mac OS was never the dominant OS, so it's not going to matter gaming-wise anyway
@DavidGraham OS X. I got fed up with Linux due to driver support and horrid user experience for things other than development, and with Windows due to a horrid user experience for development
@DavidGraham well… 16 GB becomes more and more standard today… and 32 GB is also already quite common for desktops… laptops will have that in 1-2 years.