« first day (1267 days earlier)      last day (3695 days later) » 

11:08 PM
You didn't change much but the titles and the breadcrumbs ?
 
@LeviMorrison new one
 
I like the titles and breadcumbs of this more. But that site need a whole redesigning.. its very ugly.
 
It's not meant to be pretty. It needs to be readable.
 
@Ibra038 Feel free to create a design that matches specifications.
 
True, but it doesnt make the content attractive to read..
 
11:14 PM
People will read it whether it is ugly or not ^^
 
@webarto Is there a chance the owner of the website will even look at it? I guess its just wasted time?
 
For most intents and purposes I am the owner ^^
 
Wauw, nice to meet you then! (:
 
Yeah, Levi is the Supreme Leader of php.net design.
Just hacked university website, poor people using ASP.NET and such.
 
Technically nobody owns the data on the site, not sure who owns the domains (I think it is Rasmus though).
But yeah I do most of the work on the PHP.net designs.
 
11:20 PM
Am I missing something, or does this question make no sense?
4
Q: Allowing Norwegian and special letters when validating email

kanarifuglWhen using the following PHP to validate emails, is there any way to allow Scandinavian vowels such as Æ, Ø and Å? if(!filter_var($email,FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL)==false) They are rarely used in domains, but sometimes it would be beneficial to have the functionality.

 
> Admin Email: Email Masking Image@lerdorf.on.ca
 
why would you want a function that validates "nearly valid e-mail addresses", based on a tiny whitelist of allowed non-ASCII characters?
 
@webarto That's a fail copy-paste
 
Wonder who is that Lerdorf character that registered php.net in 1997.
Oh, right, it's Rasmus.
 
@IMSoP Depending on the rfc you follow those emailaddresses are 100% valid AFAIK
 
11:29 PM
@PeeHaa Really? I thought everything was ASCII up until E-maill Address Internationalization
at which point, why limit yourself to those few characters?
EAI makes most sense for languages using completely different alphabets
 
@IMSoP As I read the question it is not just about those characters, but OP added them to the question as an example
 
@PeeHaa That's not how the accepted answer interpreted it
 
Nope the answer doesn't really make sense
 
it works only with a limited, hard-coded, list of "additional characters", where what is actually needed is a brand new filter, surely
where do you stop with the "additional characters"? if you can route any EAI address, why accept Ø but ban é; or accept greek letters, but reject cyrillic?
 
Hey don't look at me I didn't write that answer :)
 
11:35 PM
sorry, misread your last comment
 
;)
 
sadly, I can't find anything gentler than the RFCs to know what an EAI-based validation rule would even look like
given the complexity of e-mail address regexes, I dread to think
 
:P
 
otherwise, i'd propose one as an answer
 
Emailaddresses were already insanely impossible to correctly validate. Throwing more rfc at it doesn't really help. No wonder mail clients and servers all just do their own thing
 
11:39 PM
yeah, and rather than coming up with a backwards-compatible encoding like IDN, EAI seems to just go "meh, shove UTF-8 in there and hope it works"
 
Pretty much yeah :P
 
so now we have all the complexity of SMTP addressing, plus all the complexity of Unicode!
 
Go to bed @IMSoP :)
 
@webarto LOL
 
:D
 
11:41 PM
you are, of course, quite right
thank you, and good night :)
 
Mind if I ask a Java/Maven question (the Java room is full of lurkers)?
 
Doubt anyone will know the answer.
 
Especially if it is about Maven.
 
@BardiHarborow Just ask, don't ask to ask. We're pretty relaxed here.
Also Maven is horrible, and I deny ever using it.
 
11:53 PM
I have two Maven projects and one of them depends on the other. I've compiled the first on with Jenkins but am baffled how to compile the second one. I need to tell it where the first one is somehow. Does that make any sence.
 
@BardiHarborow Yeah, you ought to build a Jar from the first project, and then put it where the second project can find it.
J2EE?
The alternative to using a Jar is having lots and lots of classpaths, but that's not a great idea.
 
I have a jar from the first one, but i don't know how to tell Maven where to find it (I'm a maven newbie, but have been using Java for a while).
Does it help if I give you the URL of a Jenkins server that does exactly what I want? build.technicpack.net/job/TechnicLauncher
 
@BardiHarborow I think when you build the first jar, there should be an artifact (or something) that causes that Jar to be added to your local Maven repository, to then be available for other projects.
 

« first day (1267 days earlier)      last day (3695 days later) »