After I was done with the MD5 function I realised that MD5 is outdated, and has been compromised... So I needed to switch to sha256 but it works the exact same.
@Mango Actually, for the purpose of checking file duplication md5 is fine. It's just really bad for password hashing, because it's quick to calculate and has some other issues I don't know because I don't do tons of crypto.
After all these articles circulating online about md5 exploits, I am considering switching to another hash algorithm. As far as I know it's always been the algorithm of choice among numerous DBAs. Is it that much of a benefit to use MD5 instead of (SHA1, SHA256, SHA384, SHA512), or is it pure per...
I think @thesecretmaster is correct here. On the other hand, I don't think there's a big cost to using SHA1, so it's probably just as good as MD5 for doing duplicate checking. So... pick one :)
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/42347640/facebook-redirect-url-not-redirecting-to-intended-url-from-facebook-app?noredirect=1#comment71846736_42347640
Any One ?
well, I'm trying to insert about 2000 rows into a table
so I'm benchmarking - here are the results for single inserts (MyModel.insert hash) vs a single insert (MyModel.insert rows.first.keys, rows.map(&:value)) on 2000 rows
right now there's only one I'm interested in - it's an entrypoint to the whole script, getting objects from db, conditionally updating them and inserting another associated objects, called 'process'
I'd rather call it MyModelUpdater.process or MyModelNotifier.process
I have another funny problem - I want to have a 'number' of length, let's say, 4, starting from 0000, so that I can increment it, like 0001, 0002, .... 9999
@Anwar How would a scope method work when the model isn't related to a database table? I thought that scopes were ways of defining queries, or parts of queries, but what is there to query if there is no database table?
I've created a jQuery plugin for you:
(function($) {
// the string plugin object (NOTE: this can be extended)
$.string = {};
// "create" a new string
$.string.new = function(str) {
return str;
};
// test the string for a regex match
$.string.test = function(string, regex) {
...