my table name is books and my column name is book title but when i am trying to fetch the record from the table then it shows me error #1054 - Unknown column 'Book.book title' in 'field list'
Did anyone see that newspaper article about the guy who got pastafarianism as a real thing, and was allowed to wear a pasta strainer on his head for his passport photo?
Oh, I was just implying that you don't even need to write PHP applications in a special way to have them be usable for large sites, that relatively 'slow' things like drupal are usually good enough.
@FlorianMargaine not because shared nothing is more efficient, it's not "easier" in the sense of "easier on hardware", it's easier in the sense that there is less to worry about at scale in terms of the complexity to setup, all it takes to scale is adding more machines no matter whether you are using drupal or some fancy framework or whatever ... easier in that sense ... and I agree ...
@JoeWatkins I don't really agree in this sense though. Complexity to setup is the same in any other technology: in java/nodejs/whatever, you have one app per server (i.e. apache), and the rest of the stuff is the same (load balancing, session sharing, db sharing, etc)
@FlorianMargaine by the time you are adding machines, you already have that stuff worked out for the first (set of) machine(s), so scaling is literally plugging in a few more boxes and setting up your software, at no point should you have to rethink your architecture, if it works on one or two machines it should work on 1000
not really, if you take java, what works in 8 threads on one machine might not be so easy to setup on hundreds of threads spread across hundreds of machines ... because of the nature of the language itself ... it's different software though, if you are expecting to run on 1000 machines you need to know that at the start of the project in most cases ...
andreas-air:~ ajf$ php -r 'class Foo { function __construct() { $this->__destruct(); } } $x = new Foo;' PHP Fatal error: Call to undefined method Foo::__destruct() in Command line code on line 1
Fatal error: Call to undefined method Foo::__destruct() in Command line code on line 1
@AndreaFaulds and it's beacause JS doesn't have objects, it has functions. There is no constructor, you're just returning the instance of a function call...
> I'm a prototypical language! Oh wait, shit, classically trained programmers might not know how to use me. Better throw in a few classical idioms. But let's not have enough of them to make useable as a classical language, we want them to learn how prototyping works.
@AndreaFaulds you're missing my point. You create "userland objects" by calling a function and using the instance of the function call as your object instance
oh yeah know how it works but haven't used it in the real world, so can't comment from experience ... lets pretend for a second it's okay to take a prototype to production even just during startup phase of an idea, I'd rather take a prototype php product into production than a java one, because a php one won't need changing if the idea takes off ... of course I wouldn't do that, and of course there might be exceptions ... oh and, I'm always wrong :D
I'm saying that the entire constructor model is, where you don't create objects, you call functions. And the function just so happens to return an object. Yes, they have a new keyword. No, that doesn't mean it's an object in the traditional sense.
@AndreaFaulds Anything declared as an anonymous function has an anonymous type, which leads to code like namespace.Foo = function Foo() {}; - it totally makes sense from an impl PoV, but not a usage PoV - one might expect that if you did new namespace.Foo the ctor would be bound to the target, but no.
@ReeceCottam "I have a question but I'm too lazy to actually formalize it in words unless there's someone who promises to try to answer it." aka don't ask to ask
@ReeceCottam "I have a question but I'm too lazy to actually formalize it in words unless there's someone who promises to try to answer it." aka don't ask to ask
urgh fine, I have a form located in a view as detailed; form action="{{ action('RemindersController@postRemind') }}" method="POST"> <input type="email" name="email"> <input type="submit" value="Send Reminder"> </form>
@ReeceCottam No, it means that the template isn't rendering "action('RemindersController@postRemind')" to a path, but is instead just rendering that as text.
@ReeceCottam yeah....the issue is that the blade template isn't picking up that the action thing needs to be processed. That's something you're going to have to figure out yourself, as you haven't given enough information to allow other people to figure it out.
"I understand that this book is the first in a Trilogy. The second and third book, "There's Fluoride in my Water!" and Where's the President's Birth Certificate" are due out before Thanksgiving."
> This educational book is a great resource for explaining to my friends and family my reasoning behind my delusional behavior. It's so comforting to know that there are others who are just as paranoid, delusional, and armed as I am. Hopefully I can outdraw all of them should I need to when I'm out running errands. If not, at least I have my high-capacity magazines and body armor. To freedom!
@Ja͢ck Seems to be OSX specific, seen a couple of things saying it's most likely a failed assertion
Although I'm sure you already know this as you have Google too :-P
Joe's life is a series of unfortunate events. Seriously if you ever go to a casino, take Joe. Anytime he comes off a machine, use it after him. It's like a multiplier for good luck.
user895378
Lusitanian's mom's face is a series of unfortunate events.
BTW guys. Let's say I have a script which I need to run on a server a few times (at the same time). The control of this process would ideally be handled by 1 singular script. Any suggestions on what I should be looking at to achieve this kind of functionality?