@Tiffany I've never seen a flavor of markdown that allowed you to escape it. And I've seen about 45 different flavors. I know because I had to write a parser that translated between them all and I spent weeks reading through various markdown "specs"
I remember because I had tried it once, and it didn't work, and I was showing off about how much I knew about escaping stuff in SO chat, and it happened to work that time... but now it doesn't :|
How do I escape a backtick ` within a code block?
This is probably a duplicate, since I'm sure it's a common concern, but I can't find a question that addresses this specifically.
How do I write List'1 with the "1" character still in the code-text format?
I used to work for one of the top 5 banks in the US. There was a guy there that wrote a Cobol function in 1987. It never broke once. Until one day in 2010.
So, quick poll of the room... if we added declare(target_version="8.0") and compile-errored if the minimum version wasn't at least that... how many times would Zeev try to stab me?
That logic naturally extends to saying we could never add any other declares, as they'll all throw warnings on previous versions. I think we would benefit from a "don't even bother contining" one
people don't understand computers, and that's totally fine, I don't understand how fire alarms work, but I also don't complain when the people who do understand fire safety tell me what to do.
I'd posit a more realist attitude would be to suggest that if you poses any form of intelligence you should use it to help others improve rather than assume they're incapable of improvement.
Well, you certainly imply that you are more trusting than I. I like to think that I can only trust people by witnessing their actions and that takes getting to know someone which requires some time. In the mean time I trust few and rely mostly on my self to make informed decisions. I don't default to trusting in others until I've found verifiable evidence that they are very trustworthy.
Science is all about objectivity. e.g. I am subjectively the best person on earth, and that makes me objectively a cockburger. Which one seems more likely?
I am also more than a little bit pissed
both subjectively and objectively
I am, however, at the point of pissed where I can mostly spell stuff correctly
@DaveRandom You miss half of science. You first have to start with a theory. What can be more objective than external reaffirmation supports internal thesis.
@Sherif nope, the entirety of science is about putting your data along with your conclusion, so that others can try to obtain the same data and reach the same conclusion. How you arrive at the data, or the desire to obtain it, is not science precisely because it is subjective.
@DaveRandom lol. TL;DR drugs help with my hip but I just stretched in such a way that it's going to hurt in the morning while putting sheets on my bed :S
the worst is the tea marked "english breakfast tea" in the shop ... the people who make these have never seen a real cup of tea, it doesn't even taste like tea
Configuring services, particularly for memory usage, (particularly for DB servers like MySQL) can get tricky when they're all on a single server, especially if the server is operating near capacity. With separate servers configuration is a lot simpler.
@AllenJB you mean server1 with 8GB Ram (for databases) and server2 with 8GB Ram (for codebase) isn't the same as one server with 16GB Ram (for both the codebase and databases) ?
@Shafizadeh The problem with doing it that way is that capacity planning becomes much more difficult over time as different software competes for the same resources. That and the fact that scaling vertically is almost always the way to go anyway so it makes sense to cluster servers together based on a logical domain boundary.
Indeed, but since most databases are harder to scale wide you tend to lean more towards memory optimization so that you can avoid the nuances of a distributed database solution.
At least up until you hit that ceiling and then you're forced to do so :)
@MarkR Your new RFC is indeed tiny :-) Would you be still be interested to talk about that, and also about wiki.php.net/rfc/use_global_elements (Tyson declined to talk about it)
I wouldn't be comfortable speaking about another RFC I voted against if the author has declined. Now if you wait until I RFC declare(platform_min=8) and people try to lynch me, then sure :P
A column-oriented DBMS (or columnar database management system) is a database management system (DBMS) that stores data tables by column rather than by row. Practical use of a column store versus a row store differs little in the relational DBMS world. Both columnar and row databases can use traditional database query languages like SQL to load data and perform queries. Both row and columnar databases can become the backbone in a system to serve data for common extract, transform, load (ETL) and data visualization tools. However, by storing data in columns rather than rows, the database can more...