@Ekin previous sysadmin had a nightmare one time, an ex help desk tech gave him this huge evil grin before going into the server room with scissors and cutting all the fiber cables
@Gordon damn. Long time ago I wanted to get New Relic but they didn't support WIMP at the time either. Maybe I should just switch it to WAMP or maybe WEMP
@Tiffany I am obviously biased when it comes to answering that. I'd say we are much more convenient to use since we are zero config. you just download our agent, run it and it will discover all the things we have sensors for. same for tracing.
@Tpojka previous web master had the option to switch to LAMP, but she chose to stick with WIMP "cause she already knew it" and I inherited those. At the time, I didn't have knowledge of either Windows/IIS, Linux/Apache/nginx, but then eventually received training for Windows/IIS and became accustomed to it.
@mega6382 IIS isn't too bad. Though, I admit it does some weird stuff. A friend has told me stories of how his employer would have weird ass issues with IIS and PHP, and they all went away when they switched to LEMP
@Tiffany It can be disrupting... any communication line can be. We use it internally because there is a different frame of mind you have when answering an instant message versus an email. If I am working on something and I have an email come in- for me to go check that and respond I completely lose focus on what I am doing because my mind goes into a different mode.
But an instant communication, like a text in many cases, I can answer something simple and quickly without taking my mind off what I am doing. But it can be disruptive.
In fact the last 15 minutes of my day yesterday we had a group of 4 sending "One does not simply enter Mordor" quotes about what one must not do at our company. It was fun but I was useless the last 15 minutes of yesterday. =)
yeah, I can see how Slack would possibly be more productive and encourages collaboration between multiple users, since it's more like a chatroom. I doubt we'd ever adopt it anytime soon though.
I have 5 departments and one of them is an hour and a half away. It's easy for us to communicate using Slack so it feels like we're one cohesive team and many of my staff can answer questions other staff members have without mu involvement.
dir=$(cd "${0%[/\\]*}" > /dev/null; cd "../symfony/phpunit-bridge/bin" && pwd)
if [ -d /proc/cygdrive ] && [[ $(which php) == $(readlink -n /proc/cygdrive)/* ]]; then # We are in Cgywin using Windows php, so the path must be translated dir=$(cygpath -m "$dir"); fi
$query = 'INSERT INTO `groups` (id, group_id) VALUES '.join(', ', $values); working on converting this to a prepared statement, but I feel uncomfortable using the join function in a prepared statement. Should I move this outside of the prepared statement, and bind the joined variable, or is it okay to leave it?
one other question, and this is probably just lack of understanding of SQL, but why does it have (id, group_id) and then only inserts one variable? granted it's an array, but I don't see how that works... two columns but one variable? Or is it assumed that one column is auto-increment?
so it would be like id, group_id [13, 12] is inserted into row one [22, 23] is inserted into row two (without brackets of course) ... This example isn't exact, but I can't explain it well ...
@Tiffany you could make that code easier to read by replacing the join with $values[0] and $values[1]. I misread the join as an sql thing, rather than a PHP alias to implode
and I'm starting to get sucked into the "refactor all the things" hole ...
the function does a check to see if the property group_ids is a string, and if it is, group_ids is initialized as an array. then it does a check to see if group_ids is an array, and if it is, that's where the rest of the code lives. It seems like this would be a whole lot easier if there was type-checking in the constructor and if the properties were passed into this function, then using conditionals to type-check would be unnecessary. ... I think.
@Tiffany (I don't mean this in as much of an "I told you so" way as this might sound, I can't seem to figure out the words to make it nicer) I say again, just make it work on 7. You aren't making it worse by doing the bare minimum to accomplish this - the awful legacy code can still be refactored tomorrow, but the dependency on an insanely legacy PHP version affects new code as well.
Muddling the refactoring and migration tasks together is a sure-fire route to nothing ever making it to production, the most elegant code in the world is worth nothing unless it makes it out of dev.
@StatikStasis I might be able to wiggle it... I told my supervisor that getting it on 7 is my priority, but the code needed a lot of extra work to make it not-vulnerable to other threats
Oh I agree with Dave completely- just making a general statement how refactoring code after it's out of dev just rarely gets my top attention. On to the next thing.
@StatikStasis indeed, but I'll take the ability to write new code without needing to dumb it down to 5.3 with legacy code that isn't any worse every time
It's extremely rare that I would describe migrating to parameterisation as priority #2, but this is one of those rare occasions
@Tiffany sure
@Tiffany n.b. I'm also not saying you shouldn't try to do the refactor before release, but if you turn master into "works on 7" first, then when you get half way through the refactor and hate it (which also is almost guaranteed at least once in my experience) you can throw it away without going all the way back to square 1
@Tiffany When doing dynamic queries, there comes a point where you need to join parts to make a query. Dynamic being variable number of arguments, that you can't know in advance, such as in a mildly complex search system.
@azamkhan it's an object that's typically mostly composed of common forms of water ice, usually in a wide eccentric orbit of the sun. Many large ones with orbital paths crossing that of the earth are visible to the naked eye, due to streams of vapor produced by surface warming caused by the sun. A common misconception is that the visible tail indicates the direction of travel.
In Unix-like operating systems, /dev/random, /dev/urandom and /dev/arandom are special files that serve as pseudorandom number generators. They allow access to environmental noise collected from device drivers and other sources. /dev/random typically blocks if there is less entropy available than requested; /dev/urandom typically never blocks, even if the pseudorandom number generator seed was not fully initialized with entropy since boot. /dev/arandom blocks after boot until the seed has been securely initialized with enough entropy, and then never blocks again. Not all operating systems implement...
oh, I guess /dev/null and /dev/random are different
I thought they were the same ... that could have been awkward
Comet is a web application model in which a long-held HTTPS request allows a web server to push data to a browser, without the browser explicitly requesting it. Comet is an umbrella term, encompassing multiple techniques for achieving this interaction. All these methods rely on features included by default in browsers, such as JavaScript, rather than on non-default plugins. The Comet approach differs from the original model of the web, in which a browser requests a complete web page at a time.The use of Comet techniques in web development predates the use of the word Comet as a neologism for the...
guys, i have a problem trying to access 'filters' values from the request object in laravel 5.6 codeshare.io/jGzQ9
i wanna add,remove or update inside the filters array
if i unset($request['filters']['leasestar_property_id']); i get a "Indirect modification of overloaded element of Illuminate\Http\Request has no effect" error
I have to bring my cat to the vet, she's having trouble keeping food down, and she has a rash. I'm guessing the rash is an allergic reaction to something in the air/environment this time of year, because she had it last year around the same time, too. But I have to be careful with food for now :/ I'm a little afraid she's become allergic to the type of food I've been feeding her.
If I still allowed myself to open the production web server in phpstorm, I would've just took down the website for a couple minutes. Thought I was editing a file on one dev site, but I was editing the same file on a different dev site. Woops.
> Felix, all signs point to "YES!" Based on your purchase history, we think you're really going to love these new additions. Check it out and see for yourself.
That honesty right there.
The best in that situation, is that I really like the mononoke princess t-shirt they are trying to sell me
> Felix, all signs point to "YES!" Based on your purchase history, we think you're really going to love these new additions. Check it out and see for yourself.
Sometimes... I just loathe people. Trying to hire and fill positions only to have the people not show up for interviews makes me want to build robots to do the job... and I have never done anything with robotics... but I am tempted to learn.
Just the boss having an extremely immature argument with a fellow employee who was quitting because of disorganization. The boss was telling him he was a bad designer anyways, he wouldn't want to keep him, etc.. Then they called me in on the conversation telling me that we're changing the way we do everything, that we need to record our screen when working, etc... Then my other manager tells me to ignore what my boss is saying and it's all for show.
Then my boss calling me and telling me that we can't use Javascript on websites anymore because Google hates Javascript
Jobs - can't live with them and can't live without them
I actually was really happy to get a salary job doing something I love doing - but the job turned out to be way different than the job description and I'm barely doing programming