That would destroy all uncommitted changes and remove any and all untracked files, so all the dists and builds and bins and all those other things that are in .gitignore.
I have prepackaged code from a vendor to where our college can deploy mobile apps using their code, we just have to change the branding and stuff. I'm trying to remove a few of the extras that they've added from the project so I can just get the fucking iOS app deployed to Testflight.
Xcode keeps complaining about WatchKit Extension... I've deleted it in every fucking place I can find
I want to read a book about PHP Web Services and it covers topics like HTTP. But I'm not sure if I'm able to understand it. I haven't taken the Network course in the university yet(I may take it in the next semester). What would you suggest?
I don't plan any videos or content. I want to do more, but it really depends on the inspiration (I am a very muse-driven author). I want to make many more videos, but haven't been inspired on what to do them about
@Allenph I have no idea why you're comparing me with someone else. My English is not good enough to understand your intention. But please know that I always try my best to not spam here.
@tereško How is that so? I have an interface for all my data mappers that work with the same entity. They all return the same entity regardless of data source.
The different part of an entity thing makes sense though.
as a pull-out-of-my-ass example, you can have a user profile, that you usually need to partially initialize (to show the user-card and avatar), but in profile edit page you need to load also the extended details
that would be an example of having two mappers loading same entity
as another example (from actual code), I had to work with a remote API, which was terrible
it had option to retrieve user's "wallet", but to populate that wallet I had to make 2 separate requests to a slow API
so, when user opened his wallet, the service first tried to map it from runtime (and, when it failed - from remote) and then load additiona lata from mysql (and, if failed, load it from remote)
all four mappers used the same Wallet entity
basically (code comming):
$wallet = new Wallet($id)
if ($cache->fetch($wallet) === false) {
$api_1->fetch($wallet);
$cache->store($wallet);
}
if ($sql->fetch($wallet) === false) {
$api_2->fetch($wallet);
$sql->store($wallet);
}
the real code was a little bit more elaborate, since I had to deal with an eventuality of API going tits-up, but this was the main idea
That's kind of how mine works too. The difference is that there's a third mapper called "cacheMapper" or something similar that takes two arguments. The first argument is considered the cache and the second is considered the source.
The main male character was a general for a Korean army, and was betrayed by his king. "God" resurrected him as a "goblin" which is something different in Korean mythology, I guess. He becomes immortal and occasionally can perform miracles. After like 800 years, he's trying to die, but can only die if his "bride" pulls the sword out from his chest.
I need to test that a a dependency has a method called with a method (callback) as the second argument. This method is then stored by reference by a mediator and called when an event takes place.
Problem is the method that should be the argument does not exist at construction and therefore I can't grab it so my mock has something to test against.