@War haha :D sorry that the answer is unrelated. I just shared an extra information with you that i am reading and making changes in jquery-ui.min.css (helps me to learn how to code jquery)
How I read your reaction there ... input with date aint formatted correctly when converted from object to string ... I know i'll edit core framework script from jquery, surely the guy that wrote that knows less about css than I do and that has to be the problem
I have a table called projects in taskManagement database this table contains project_id as pk Project_start_date and Project_end_date fields How I can normalize it to meet 5 and 6 normalization states
@Shaneis Ok, but when you signup, is a dabase user created or what? also why you need anything when you can alreeady connect to the server and insert a row in users table?
@JavaFan then 3rd NF is fine, unless you have some sort of retarded school assignment that specifies you need 4th, Boyce-Codd, 6th, up to the yet-to-be-embraced 7th NF
Nnnn, I should understand the logic here cause I don't face something like that Look @Shaneis Let's say you decide to join SO today (you don't have an account)
When you fill all the fields needed to SignUp, and click SignUp, what's happen? How the row can be inserted in Users table while you don't have a login account in the server?
When you fill all the fields needed to SignUp, and click SignUp, what's happen? How the row can be inserted in Users table while you don't have a login account in the server?
How the row can be inserted in Users table?
Are you the Guest in this case?
I suppose you don't have access to the database, and the server neither
Potentially! you can check the database for them though. The website could also do some sort of insert itself if it's checked the database for this user and never seen anything
@JavaFan to make their database faster on huge (and I mean huge as in billions of rows) tables, when partitioning didn't seem like a viable alternative
@JavaFan it's fine, also normalizing beyond that will destroy your index and force you to set a greater fill factor... I assume you don't even know what that is, but feel free to research around
@ARr0w the problem is you need to understand it before you can apply it, otherwise you just look at the screen with a poker face and your brain suddenly combusts
@ARr0w Brother, In algeria we do't have uni as under the world yes, we don't have a half of what for example UK have, but yes I'm trying to do the best to be good in my specialty, and why not the best
Quick question: I've got several tables, each holding the "posts" on some forum. Let's say each table represents a different thread on the forum.
Does it make more sense to, instead, keep all posts in *one* table, where said table just has an additional column which specifies which thread a post is in?
I'm trying to set Windows authentication for a postgres server.
The process is not well documented and makes the whole thing, obscure.
I'm using this doc.
In the necessary steps, the doc says that you need to create a domain user. Yet in the screenshot, it says DomainServiceAccount
Once, yo...
@AndyK Ah! Good. I'm updating something I wrote a while ago, and figured there must have been a reason I wrote it that way—what are the reasons one might keep each table separate (even though the tables have the same columns)? [sorry if this is a newbie question; i'm pretty bad at this]
Ah! Ok. I'll definitely keep the tables separate then (the forum is used as a large laboratory's logbook, and there's a lot of different looking up and organizing based on which experiment is being looked at)
posts can range from a few characters to a few paragraphs
@WhatsThePoint that returns the count. For an array that goes from 0 to 9 it returns 10, which is the item count. The problem is arrays are declared by convenience starting from 1, not from 0, no idea why and I don't want to learn why
@AndyK I've resigned before, and that was a good decision for my conditions back then. I haven't had a girlfriend so I can't say anything on those grounds though... but go with the wind unless you are like 40 or older
@WhatsThePoint that doesn't matter, even if it returns "Hello World" it's good
the problem is I get the exception I said before when I pass an array, but it doesn't happen with previous calls