@Darkeden Of course they will. You should take down the site from production and start refactoring. There might be a serious issue of malcompliant design, crippling and cursing your entire code.
I think the foot is a more natural measurement. It's easier to visualize, and fits inline with most real-word things we'd need to measure. Most things are small multiples of the foot (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6), whereas the meter requires lost of decimals, or swithing to CM with larger values...
Now, don't get me wrong, for general measurement I think the metric system is far more natural and easier to scale.
Umm, I have a php script that echo's out a DIV with a button inside it. I call the jquery function $('#id').button() on it to make it a jquery ui button. Problem is when the script gets called again (it's a chat application), the messages' buttons above it get bigger. So.. any advice?
Well in the local supermarket near my girlfriends parents (Karlsruhe) - the 500ml bottles are about a euro (and obviously with pfand you get some money back :))
Umm, I have a php script that echo's out a DIV with a button inside it. I call the jquery function $('#id').button() on it to make it a jquery ui button. Problem is when the script gets called again (it's a chat application), the messages' buttons above it get bigger. So.. any advice?
What is also sad is I only found out about ErrorException today, and I never thought about re-raising errors as exceptions until I saw Stans mail on internals :(
@webarto Actually, it isn't (maybe it is, but there's a font built around the 7 glyph at least). At work I had the font; I took home all the assets to get some crap done over the weekend, and go figure, forgot the font.
Forgot the font, forgot the name, forgot the letter it started with.
OK. The problem is that I was unable to find jobs in maths and now I have no proper education in CS. I'm not sure whether I might find a job on information technology. But I will try to solve problems that are not too hard but I will learn something new.
is this good way to protect a variable against SQL injection? $idog = mysql_real_escape_string($_GET['id']) ? mysql_real_escape_string($_GET['id']) : addslashes($_GET['id']);
Basically. I have a javascript loop that posts to a php script. To append on the response to a DIV in a log. The response has a button inside it. The problem is, when a new response is made and appended, the jquery button function makes all the previous appended buttons larger. (Probably because ...
off-topicI hope that Doom 4 is at least as good as Doom 3 was. Rage was a bit of a flop, but I have hope in game developers like Carmack who admit to faults and obviously want to correct them.
@Event_Horizon Doom 3 was fun, once, the darkness was a bit over the top, and couldn't see anything when played with the lights on... was lots of stuff jumping out unexpectedly, which I liked.
@Darkeden if you insist on pretending you're an SQL compiler, the first one will work. the second is useless, and the third is actively bad if you're trying to escape for SQL -- it doesn't actually escape the stuff that's dangerous in SQL
the fourth doesn't even make sense unless you have a constant named get_magic_quotes_gpc, and frankly, it's better if you just scream and die if magic quotes are enabled than try to limp along with them
In our place we're split between using mysqli and PDO for stuff like prepared statements and transaction support. Some projects use one, some the other. There is little realistic likelihood of us ever moving to another RDBMS.
I prefer PDO for the single reason that it allows named parameters for...
At 14 years of age. I like articles that are informative, yet GET to the point rather than saying like "Historeh of this word was found by the greek BLAH BLAH BLA"
I think its funny that I read that article the other day by Jeff Atwood about monitor latency and how bad it is now, and John Carmack mentions how horrible monitor latency is nowadays in his Quakecon Keynote.
@JordanRichards There are some PHP programming tutorials on YouTube for the more visual learners, even if they're not that good. TheNewBoston might be able to help some.
Stuff like 'The history of how php has changed' is fine. But when they say something that's not relevent to the actual article like.. "That reminds me... [insert off topic here]"
@Leigh No, more that I've never held that Niki is a valid shortening of Nikita. Niki is a very female name in the US, whereas Nikita is a male name in Russia (predominately)...
@ircmaxell I always inferred the camel casing of the C as a word boundry. Nicky is fine as a guys name, Niki not so much I guess, but it could be... with a russian twist... maybe (I wouldn't know)
Nikita (Никита, ) is a unisex name, historically masculine from Russian and related languages. The Ukrainian version is Mykyta (), and the Belarusian version is Mikita (), but Nikita also appears in both countries. All are derived from the Greek Niketas (Νικήτας) meaning "victorious". Beginning in the 20th century, it was adopted for female children in some countries such as France but remains strictly masculine in Russia and other countries of eastern Europe.
As an Indian female name, it is derived from the Sanskrit word "niketa" which means abode/ Earth. A similar male name is Aniket,...
they are slightly different, the API is different (the function signature), additionally, mysqli has an object oriented syntax as well (which I'd suggest)