@AlmaDo: I have no idea where you got the impression I downvote them. I usually reserve my downvotes for incorrect-but-lazy-to-fix, or blatantly wrong, or copy-paste answers.
> Asking normal developers to choose between several competing libraries with different interfaces, vulnerabilities, performance characteristics, etc. would likely result in carnage. We know that developers, when asked to chose cobble together cipher primitives are basically pants-on-heads retarded, why would they be in a position to make those kinds of decisions on a larger scale?
The "pants-on-head retarded" pretty much made my day.
@JoeWatkins Everything seems to be working now with the latest pthreads changes. I'll be using it most of the day so if there are any issues I should be able to find them. Thanks again!
Okay, try this $pdo = new PDO('mysql:dbname=your_dbname;host=your_servername', $username, $password);
Where your_dbname is the database to which you want to connect; and your_servername is the server name you posted, but you don't want to use the http protocol.
And obviously, the $username and $password are... well yea.
I have something very special to show you today. In this box here, is the internet. It's on loan to us from the Ministry Of The Internets, just to show you today!
@ircmaxell good lord. I loaded it with noScript and thought: "what's the point"? Then I pressed "temporarily allow all scripts on this page". Now I know what does it mean to be punched in the eyes
How come certain random strings produce various colors when entered as background colors in HTML? For example:
<body bgcolor="chucknorris"> test </body>
...produces a document with a red background across all browsers and platforms. Here is a Fiddle.
Interestingly, while chucknorri produces a...
I'm looking for Chuck Norris Facts style answers. In case anyone is curious, this question was inspired by Jon's own comment to this question.
EDIT: If you're into cryptography, you may enjoy these facts.
Now with official sanction from the powers that be!
Just out of curiosity, is there some reason that MySQL/PHP developers couldn't have extended the MySQL library, updating the code behind existing functions and adding new function (including OO), all the while maintaining upward compatibility? Was that simply impossible to do cleanly, or they didn't want to bother? There's something to be said for maintaining upward compatibility, so existing applications don't break. — Phil Perry37 mins ago
@PeeHaa I still don't think that belittling people on the intarnet and watching pr0n all day can be monetised. I just don't see it as a viable business plan.
@DaveRandom I talked to an ex colleague a while back from when I was still at a print/web combo shop and he was finally going away from there. He is a very good sales person (a.k.a. horrible person) and I am a mediocre developer. So basically we are going to do what that previous company is doing only I have the sales guy now :D
If you ask me there's a fairly open market for something similar to digital agency but on a more back-end perspective. A person with a keen business sense who can look at a business from a developer mindset and suggest ways to save money/time by building systems. From small to large.
Couple this with digital agency and you've got a fairly flexible stance to help many people out.
@PeeHaa Well you know where to come if you have some code that you can't be bothered to write and you want someone else to write 75% of it and then start the whole thing again because it was shit and then write 75% of it again and then lose interest
@Fabien The only difference clients understand is the price tag. It's an unfortunate truth that if the client isn't overly worried about the price, they'll probably have an in-house team :-(