@shasi It's hard for me to debug then, since the response XML you show contains the right result. Did you get this from a trace on your SoapClient object?
try and validate all of the columns against all of the possible data types, giving a score to each column for each type, and then giving a 'bonus' score if it had something that looked like a column header in the first x data rows. e.g. if the column contains 'First name' or any variant then give that column a bonus to it's 'firstname' validation score. Then choose the column types by choosing the highest score first,
assigning the data type to that column, and making the data type unavailable to other columns, to prevent having multiple 'firstname' columns.
how we can retrieve user's latitude,longitude? I've tried available solutions with IP address but its not accurate. Dont suggest googleGeo as there wont be user intervention 2 input address
@TheLuckyGoof That's not accurate. It doesn't even put me in the right country, because all my traffic is routed through a datacentre about 1200 miles away. IP address is the best means you have of determining a remote host's geographic location, and it's so inaccurate that it's a completely pointless exercise.
@Duikboot If you're implementing something like Salesforces' ability to add plugins to their system, you may need to do that. But if you're not writing something that needs to be that extensible, then you might want to push back against that requirement as it will make life harder for everyone. However, if you do need to do that then,
@Patrick Still useless. Everything like that relies on a) ISP's reporting sane data (not guaranteed) b) your user is not using one of a hundred billion trivially easy techniques to artificially alter that data.
@Patrick ...hence the reason I get a lot of ads in French
I'd still recommend doing something like the import I mocked up, but with an extra step that allows the user to select which row has the column header fields in first.
@Duikboot One thing that I regret implementing on the last project was the ability to edit the data being imported. I don't think this was worth the time spent. It's a lot easier just to tell the users to edit the data in the excel file and restart the import process.
@Danack I actually disagree with you on that, I used to have to do data imports of hundreds of thousands of records on a regular basis, it was really fucking irritating having the software chunter though them all (took ~5 mins) only to have it blow up because of a couple of bad records and have to do the whole thing again, it was a very serious UX issue for me.
Although I do take your point about it adding a lot of complexity to the implementation
@Patrick As someone who doesn't believe in the usefulness of online advertising to the extent that most DMAs do, I think we'll just have to agree to disagree...
@Danack I was doing it because I was the only remotely IT-savvy person in the company, it was importing transaction records in the accounts package
@Danack Then either a) your UI wasn't good enough or b) the user was one of those willfully stupid people who refuse to learn how to do it. I know how I intuitively expected the UI to work, in such a way that even an idiot could do it, but there is a certain class of people who refuse to even try to understand, and you can't do anything for them, they just need a pencil.
Possibly inserted into their eye socket at great speed.
If there's one thing I don't miss, it's providing IT support to end users
Possibly though, the process difference makes the use case different from my case to yours. The import process took about 5 seconds from importing a file to showing the errors, so starting from scratch was not an issue for my users. If the errors only showed up after 5 minutes of processing, then yeah, having to start from scratch would be a little annoying.
@Danack Sage Line 50 is the worst piece of software ever designed, coupled with the fact that it's also one of the most abused pieces of software ever designed (probably not as badly as Excel but close)
Apart from Google-based things, since they could already kill me with the flip of a finger whenever they please, so I may as well get the best experience
+1 for zip store finder, I would also never give access to the location and had to uninstall apps from my phone who sent it in the background (facebook looking at you...)
Yes, that is something I worry about. Google have managed to get a public image of a kind of BDFL for the internet, but I do worry that Larry and Sergei are sitting in a lair in a volcano somewhere, plotting the demise of mankind.
@Leri There will be a lot of legacy devices out there though, a bunch parking meters etc run on it
Which is probably the reason why there's a machine in the great northern car park in manchester where if you put a £2 coin in it, it gives it back to you and takes £2 off the amount you owe
It's been like that for years, everyone knows about it, yet no-one has fixed it...
@DaveRandom Well, parking meters and such devices are okay but mobile devices... I don't see why one should develop for them. Even getjar, which was one of the largest market has deprecated them. I hope I am not missing anything.
Hey guys, we all know echoing some HTML in an if, you just close the php tag, do your HTML, then reopen your php tag to close the if statement.
Does this work in a method within a class? You don't use an if, you type it after the method opening bracket {, do your html, then end the method with }
@Leri and no matter what's the reason: we have bitwise AND with bitwise OR (and other operators too) - working with this - so treating this as allowed, but ~ is failing. That's crap
Anyone familiar with a quick and easy tool to create UML diagrams and export them into image files? (Ideally, the service stores those files and allows sharing)
@AlmaDo Yeh but if it's not an integer or a string, how can you know what the bits are? The internal representation of a bool is not and should not be guaranteed (implementation detail) - so if you want so operate on the bits of it, cast it to something where you know what the bits actually are.
@AlmaDo Then I'm sorry, I just don't get what you are complaining about. When you do a bitwise op, you either do it string-wise or int-wise, so you cast to the appropriate type. You can't just expect the engine to magically know what you meant when you do something that's not supported...