Does anyone know how to investigate exactly what is eating CPU on a web page. e.g. For bootswatch.com/cerulean/#forms and using the built in profiler in Chrome shows that the page is eating 20% cpu usage constantly, of which 97% is in "program" and not javascript.
@DaveyShafik Remembering to patch both is something people fail at.....and no, just because it's possible to remember to do one thing, doesn't mean people can remember to do everything they need to. That was just my opinion though....I don't exactly edit that file much....
@JoeWatkins my biggest professional mistake ever :-P I tried to have it all in one machine without dual boot, impossibru. OSX is not far but no me gusta compared to Linux.
@JoeWatkins The device sends the geo data from within the browser, the company that need it used some app maker online to make their app, so the only way i found was to use webview and embed it then use the html5 geo
not familiar with html5, I don't really do stuff you look at ...
it would be better if you could send complete data, with calculations done, it's going to scale better if those calculations are done on the users hardware ...
or write a microservice in another language maybe, if that's an option for you/your team ...
@MadaraUchiha Well I know you can handle those with ease.. As long as I'm not around ^^ but to stay in reference, I think you did a fine job with those evil shinobi ^^
in this programming world, two things must be done immediate
1- fix that fucking tag so i wont waste time for nothing 2- js needs to start understanding a month as a month, not as a month-1, everytime i work with js or jquery and i have something to do with date, i have to put month-1
i think people who do mistakes like this are stupid, even if they created programming languages and hold multiple Phd and have an IQ of 1000000+ they are still stupid, mistakes like these at the programming language level are unacceptable
@nikita2206 i'm undecided if i should differentiate between generic types and parameterized types. since i have bounds definitions, they could be the same thing... class A<$T is B>{} new A() // would be equal to new A<B>() opinions?
@Lynob - If you're going to have a rant every time you find something you dislike in a programming language (any programming language) I suggest you find a different line of business, because otherwise you'll simply spend your entire life ranting
@MarkBaker it's not something that i dislike it's something that is stupid, i dislike many things in java but don't get angry because they are not stupid, i just dont like them
So basically Java core developers aren't stupid, but you come here to tell PHP core developers that they are stupid...... that is a pretty stupid thing for you to do
Clearly, by your own definition, that makes you the perfect PHP core developer
i think people who do mistakes like this are stupid, even if they created programming languages and hold multiple Phd and have an IQ of 1000000+ they are still stupid, mistakes like these at the programming language level are unacceptable
Referenced both PPHP short opening tags, and js dates
After years of being battle tested, we've more or less reached the conclusion that they're bad.
But that's very easy to say in hindsight.
It's classic P vs NP, ranting about features being bad is easy. Coming up with good features and making sure to get the API right in the first place is hard.
And due to the very nature of programming languages (i.e. people use them), it's very costly to make breaking changes to the API, however justified they are.
I don't think it's necessarily true, it happens to be true, but doesn't have to be that way ... if the ecosystem were more able to cope with change, we could move on a bit faster ... maybe we're moving towards that ... people seem to care about php7 ... which is really odd ...
I don't see people caring about PHP7 as that odd.... I think PHP devs have spent so many years taking s*** from devs in other languages saying the language is bad, and PHP7 is seen as a big jump to throw in the faces of those critics
Alot of companies are behind on php versions.. Simply because it's costs them money to upgrade, not just for the servers, but for the code refactoring aswell..
Composer install of frameworks/libraries helps, because it warns you if minimum PHP version isn't met.... that's always a good prompt that you should be upgrading
Wondering how easy it would be to take something like the PHP CS compatibility tool, and add in NikiC's parser to do a first pass at fixing version issues.... probably not all that straightforward though
Could probably address some problems, but only the small issues..... something like MySQL to MySQLi would take human intervention
A lot, just look at the number of questions from users here on SO that are using it.... and as they move on from college to start work on building web pages for clients, they'll still be using it
It's like asking how many sites still rely on unnormalised databases, storing strings of comma separated ids in a table column rather than normalising it
@Naruto I think a lot of the problem lies in the schools, they seem to be worse offenders than businesses for not upgrading
And certainly the teachers don't seem to keep up-to-date with SQL access and the better options like prepared statements
@MarkBaker I think he want order them like this: first priority for those numbers which are daplicate (as descending) and then sort other single numbers (as descending)
So I'm using apigility/zf2 for an api, and it seems to use json/haljson. Does anyone know if there is a strategy for csv format? or would i need to write my own?
Hi, can someone suggest me what could be wrong? I used: $flds[] = "datum=NOW()"; where NOW is generating the current date but since a few days it's not it's generating dates from a while ago :D
@tereško you mean like if LAN range is from 192.168.0.1 to 192.168.0.255 and my ip is 192.168.0.190 then that remote will be replaced with 192.168.0.190 ?
does anyone know if FF stores history of forms somewhere? Like - drafts or so. Case: this fng sht crashed when I had typed 300 lines of text in the form. My bad I did it not in external editor - but that's because formatting which was in that form :\
NOW() returns a constant time that indicates the time at which the statement began to execute. (Within a stored function or trigger, NOW() returns the time at which the function or triggering statement began to execute.) This differs from the behavior for SYSDATE(), which returns the exact time at which it executes.
Could that be the source of the problem?
Is this some weird long time connection holding issue?
@John Check the /etc/ssh/sshd_config. Check to see if any specific "ListenAddress" is set. (If not, it should be fine as it will try to bind on all interfaces).
@John As for the firewall, on the application server, run sudo iptables -L -n. See if any rules exist for tcp dpt:22 or anything from source 192.168.0.0/16 or alike.
Should tell you if your firewall is playing nicely on the LAN.
But if your SSH is on 0.0.0.0, the firewall is most likely the problem.
Traits are a mechanism for code reuse in single inheritance languages such as PHP. A Trait is intended to reduce some limitations of single inheritance by enabling a developer to reuse sets of methods freely in several independent classes living in different class hierarchies. saywhut
@Duikboot - a trait is a block of properties/code that can be "copy/pasted" into multiple class definitions automagically by using use when defining the class
@Duikboot A trait is essentially copy/paste for code. Any class that uses that trait will get all of it's variables and methods. But Traits are for edge cases. You should stop before you use one and think "Is there a better way to do this" before using it