@Danack that applies for me for just about every other thing in ImageMagick... they have 9 or 10 options for practically everything and they're only subtly different if at all
for merges I've basically stuck to flatten and it's served me well
I don't get these NoSQL kids these days, with their key=>value stores stored entirely in memory... IN MY DAY, WE CALLED THOSE SCALAR VARIABLES. AND WE LIKED IT
Question, when receiving a http response using file_get_contents('php://input'); is there a possibility for a buffer overflow exploit if one were to send an extremely large POST
@underscore there is both certificates. One for PHP. One for ZF. They are just offered by Zend (the company). That's why they are both Zend certificates.
I initially needed to do simple queries like
$sql = 'SELECT * from users WHERE username = "' . $_POST['username'] .'";';
but now I do it with prepared statement, not for efficiency (I only have to to do each query once), but because data that comes from $_POST['username'] can contain escaping ...
@Basj In the end it's a matter of preference and application structure if you want to use the OO api or the procedual one, the OO one is just more natural to me. Anyway, I would always prefer $stmt->thing over mysqli_stmt_thing($stmt), if not only for typing less with no cost
Just a general question: when you have to do queries, do you copy/paste these 10 lines (prepare, execute, store, ..., free, close prepared statement) ..... Or do you write a helper function that does your query in 1 single line ?
What did you learn about this? (I had no CS course, so I want to take the good habits)
What I need to do is : foreach person build up an object/array of all the information from person_field and field. Using safe-name as a key from field and using value as the matching value to the field. Linking through the ID's in field and person_field together. Also matching in the ID for the person in question
@Fabor UPnP is kind of ironically named, because it's anything but universal. That said, I believe the majority of xbox applications are designed in such a way that they don't need port forwarding most of the time.
But I'm not overly familiar with the nitty gritty of how they work, it may be the case that putting some static port forwards in will help, and it may also be the case that the router is trying to be "too clever" - look to see if there is an Application Layer Gateway (ALG) service you can disable in the router config.
Some routers let you disable it for specific applications and some have this very muddy "disable ALG" setting (which does fuck knows what)
I actually had a good internet day yesterday. Speeds are good but I was getting d/c a lot from xbox live. So I switched to my old crappy bethere router. And I haven't been d/c since. We'll see how it is tonight.
I would guess that the majority of "live" services use UDP, you may simply be suffering from lossiness, in which case putting it into a more stable (i.e. slower) DSL mode might help
srsly though @JustSteveKing... generally we consider it good practice to just ask a question rather than asking for someone to help before they even know what they are helping with ;-)
@DaveRandom Basically I have never worked with a normalised database within PHP and am not sure who I can construct my queries and functions to best get any results. I am more than happy to read a long and boring article/tutorial on it should anyone know of any lol!
Although you probably won't have any issues with it, table names are generally contextually unambiguous and the parser will just deal with it, it would be a column you would have issues with
Just something that's not a reserved word would be a good start. But be descriptive, I somehow doubt that field is a good name regardless of that, it doesn't really explain what the data within the table is (what the "fields" are associated with).
btw... what does "normalised" even mean? Doesn't seem like it's a specific thing, just sounds like something a DBA would say to make it sound as if they do more work than they actually do...
From what I understand it is where data is split over multiple tables. This way in my example I can have multiple instances of "occupation" for one person - say they had 3 jobs.
@PeeHaa Disagree, I think that the definition of "data redundancy" is subjective. The way I would design/redesign a schema may not be the same way you would do it, it implies there's a single "right way" to do it, which is not only wrong but also a harmful attitude. IMHO, YMMV, interest rates may go down as well as up, etc etc
@PeeHaa Yeh that works fine for stuff like unicode (scalar, unambiguous), not for a database schema (vector, optimisable in a 1000 different ways depending on how the application is using the data)
I'm dubious of the generalised usefulness of this practice. Seems more like a teaching tool than a thing with rigidly defined real-world practical applications
@JustSteveKing you want to get a person and all related person_fields? Then it's the subject for two queries. It can be done with joins but you will have redundancy in the result set then.
@PeeHaa True, but I do it subjectively. When it comes to complex data structures, you and I may make different decisions about how to best "flatten" them into a series of tabular structures. And neither of use would necessarily be wrong.
@JustSteveKing generally the approach is like this: SELECT * FROM A WHERE A-related-predicate, and then SELECT B.* FROM A INNER JOIN B WHERE A-related-predicate (where A has many B's). Try to extrapolate it to your use case
@JustSteveKing the way you asked nobody could understand what you mean. next time just write a db structure and what you want to get as a result, or better experiment and get it all yourself, here's a good read about norm forms btw bkent.net/Doc/simple5.htm
@nikita2206 Perhaps I was getting confused as to what I needed, and that came across as a badly asked question? I have tried multiple ways but failed lol. Thanks for the link - will read now