@JoeWatkins Stupid EU exhaust, but still pretty loud, and sounds bloody lovely, like a real throaty growl, not like an inline 4 sports bike which is like a bee farting
@Leigh Nah, it just DL's the code, loads a whole load of variables in from files, places that in some JS, loads the template and the JS replaces all the template variables with the client settings.
@MattCowley theoretical scenario. Hackers manage to get into your clients edge network and want to elevate to a web server to provide malware downloads. They set up some dns entries on the router to point cdn.unreal-designs.co.uk to an attacker controlled IP address. Your client now downloads code from that attacker controlled IP and runs it
@JoeWatkins They had the underslung one which looked lovely, but had to put a side mounted dual exhaust because of the new shitty EU emissions standard (EU4 or something?)
@MattCowley btw, you probably want to turn error reporting off, on your public facing web servers... Notice: Undefined index: small in C:\wwwroot\cdn.unreal-designs.co.uk\cont\consoleTitle\index.php on line 70
basic precautions do not tend to protect anyone from the kind of actor who just took control over a large part of a network, just in order to exploit a single machine ... if you find yourself in that position, basic precautions are worth precisely fuck all ...
I have a scenario where a customer will select item and set a date and after submitting a list of items will appear.
CODE:
$connection = database_connection();
$table= "cement_weekly_item";
$query = "SELECT * FROM {$table} ";
if(isset($_POST['item_name']) && !empty($_POST['item_name'])){
...
@MadaraUchiha I would say it isn't true, lots of cases where you actually care about types. In other languages they usually can infer types and that gives them a way to not write redundant type information on closures, but we don't have this ability yet. In any way this feature (to use types in short closure) is opt-in, you're not required to use it
@nikita2206 Other than interfacing (that is, requiring a parameter of type callable Event->bool), in what case would you, as someone creating the lambda and passing it around, would want to have typechecks?
@salathe I think it's better to use CVs (just because it's shorter). The only case where autocompiling scoped vars wouldn't work is where you use variable variables and in that case you could just use long syntax
@MadaraUchiha only in that case. I have one RFC waiting for me to finish it exactly about what you just said (e.g. requiring a callable that returns specified type - function (callable(): A $a) {})
@MadaraUchiha you're talking about generic types/type constructors. Yeah that would be awesome if that would work, but it's pretty much out of scope right now
Hello friend i got this error
Fatal error: Call to undefined method Class_Main::Getdata1()
The Main function is this:
<?php
require_once ('config/config.classlib.php');
require_once ('config/config.classdep.php');
$objectClass = new stdClass();
$objectClass -> TEST1 = new Class_...
I have created the below function in the script editor of Google spreadsheet,
function newfunc() {
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSheet().getRange('F2').setValue('Hello');
}
function doGet() {
return HtmlService.createHtmlOutputFromFile('Index')
.setSandboxMode(HtmlService.SandboxMode.IFRAME...
In computer science, pattern matching is the act of checking a given sequence of tokens for the presence of the constituents of some pattern. In contrast to pattern recognition, the match usually has to be exact. The patterns generally have the form of either sequences or tree structures. Uses of pattern matching include outputting the locations (if any) of a pattern within a token sequence, to output some component of the matched pattern, and to substitute the matching pattern with some other token sequence (i.e., search and replace).
Sequence patterns (e.g., a text string) are often described...
it's one of my favourite Haskell features and it can make some types of code really elegant
When comparing secure strings, why is it important to return false as soon as the lengths do not match? For example, if comparing a user input string to a secret key. Wouldn't it be more secure for me to ignore the length difference and continue with the comparison function (knowing that they don't match)?
Hello friend i got this error
Fatal error: Call to undefined method Class_Main::Getdata1()
The Main function is this:
<?php
require_once ('config/config.classlib.php');
require_once ('config/config.classdep.php');
$objectClass = new stdClass();
$objectClass -> TEST1 = new Class_...
Just out of interest, has anyone had an interview where they ask for "data structures and algorithms" knowledge? Anyone have any tips here - links, sites etc. I have not once had to worry about this sort of stuff in 5 years
i mean let's say i need to save a username inputted by a user. which is right by the mvc concept (codeigniter): controller/login `$uname = $this->input->post('username');` `$this->login_model->insertUname($uname);` or i could just directly access the input `model/login_model` `$this->login_model->insertUname($uname);`
@RidleSambow I would consider: controller performs checks that input (post) contains expected values and grabs those values out. Then, you pass that $username value to the model layer, which then does whatever else with it
@RonniSkansing If they figure out your encryption or just enter garbage, it means your app will start behaving differently because of something the user has done.
You're pretty much giving the user ownership of their account data (albeit encrypted). That's just not a good idea in general. What would your use-case even be?
Admin Name: joseph kony
Admin Organization:
Admin Street: if you're reading this your
Admin Street: children have already been kidnapped
Admin City: uganda
@RonniSkansing No, but if for some reason your encryption method gets cracked (which is unlikely, but not something you should ignore therefor), the user can promote themselves to admin without having access to your server.
@RonniSkansing Storing the user state on their side is insecure by default. It's like putting the key to your car in a lockbox at your neighbours house and assume he's not going to crack open the lockbox and steal your car.
@JonClements Somebody pointed out to me that somebody was a proper asshole in here when I was asleep. I wanted to find out exactly what happened so I can take measures
@PeeHaa ahhh... we get to see exactly the same thing as ROs do re: deleted messages - I think the only thing we have on top of that is that we can see them in the transcript (or in user pages) rather than directly in the room itself.
Encrypting and sending to the browser doesn't necessarily mean insecure (you're going to encrypt then mac right, and verify the mac before decrypting on the receiving side).
My main objection would be to the size of the payload, how big will the state become? People use "cookieless domains" for a reason
That state will be sent on every request, (images, js, css, etc.) which is an unnecessary overhead