omg, I mentioned generics ... brb, whipping myself
although maybe it could happen before generics ... generics is a vastly complicated topic, but there are a few places we could implement quite simple stuff, like ^^ and then full blown generics feels less alien, less complex ...
it isn't really less complex, but it feels it ... and we all know programming is about feelings ...
@JoshCaswell: I can confirm that the rollback war is not the whole picture. Suffice it to say there were other circumstances and a history. — Martijn Pieters ♦yesterday
@JayIsTooCommon undisclosed affiliation with something you're directing someone to offsite = spam. (oddly enough you can get away with a lot of actual spamming simply by disclosing your affiliation)
@Sean @PeeHaa 2 things w.r.t the external module for plugin APIs: yes I think it's a good idea in principle, no I don't think it's a good idea right now. I think we should have a future scope discussion where we determine how viable it is to break plugins out into their own process space (Uncle Gordon suggested we could use Docker containers?) because if we did that there would likely be some breaking changes to the API.
Well I only recently learned anything at all about it, and I must say I do like some elements of it. It certainly does make sense for the lxr use case.
not everything needs to be a container ... where container means a virtual machine ... virtual machines running inside virtual machines, that may even run their own virtual machines, this is a terrible idea, I don't care what anyone says ...
@Sean very much so. My Dockerfile had roughly 1trn iterations, and every time I rebuilt it after realising some new thing I had to go through a huge apt-get routine. I still do not fully understand the point of VOLUME or EXPOSE, they are a total mystery to me.
also, like many modern projects/companies, their imagery is quite disconcerting. whales are fucking terrible transport devices for shipping containers, mostly because they tend to spend most of their time underwater.
twitter.com/_DaveRandom/status/833423382708363268 (thread) @Leigh in particular I would like your thoughts/opinions on this, but anyone else who has something to say is welcome to chip in - subject is handling unicode in passwords
Come to that, and here I am definitely exposing my ignorance about front-end-y things, how do I tell the browser what charset I expect a form to be submitted in?
This is a *very* interesting question. I guess not well, none of my apps ever have done unicode normalisation on pw… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/833423382708363268
@JayBlanchard For the same reason you want to apply NFC - it's not always clear to a user that, for example, their phone's on-screen keyboard might be sending different codepoints that just happen to look the same as what they send via their laptop's keyboard. For a more visible example (and reason to apply NFC normalization) one might send ά as U+03AC while the other sends it as U+03B1 followed by U+0301. — Paul CrovellaApr 27 '16 at 20:10
@DaveRandom if you don't normalize the password you end up teaching users to limit the characters that they use in passwords to one that work the same for them across all devices (basically ascii). you limit their keyspace. this is bad.
@kelunik If you want to turn it into analog, sure, but we're talking about digital here. Everything is a sequence of bits - the correct sequence of bits unlocks something for you
it's not just about encoding. you don't need encoding to change in order for a user to put in U+03AC registering then later to log in U+03B1 followed by U+0301. the user has no idea there's a difference, or likely even that they're doing it. not to mention the wealth of whitespace codepoints available
@PaulCrovella I understand that, but specifically in the context of password the "correct" behaviour is not obvious to me. Although I will read the RFC you linked earlier.
@PaulCrovella No, if you teach your users that you can only rely on ascii for their passwords it's a major win because you imply you've taught your users what ascii is.
... and here I am, looking at two tables holding admin pwds in plain text, where pwds are mostly 4-5 letters long,.. this monday couldn't get any gloomier
@KuKeC. As an additional info..All the "href"in details page are href="<?php echo $category; ?>/<?php echo $new_friendly_url; ?>">. I added "/" to remove the second appearance of some value, say $category.