me got some question: what are files named that some persons created in the past with prefixed, perhaps a date, to "snapshot" some version of the file (those who do, would perhaps call it version control)
I mean those duplicate, outdated files that can be safely deleted (often) when you use git or other means of real version control.
Is there a name for these cruft files? (doing some cleaning up work here)
@Gordon I take the existence of that character as evidence that unicode may not be all it's cracked up to be. At some stage someone clearly thought "this is so complicated that no-one is ever going to do this correctly, no-one is going to get this far through the spec, let's see what I can get away with"
As I learn more and more about OOP, and start to implement various design patterns, I keep coming back to cases where people are hating on Active Record.
Often, people say that it doesn't scale well (citing Twitter as their prime example) -- but nobody actually explains why it doesn't scale well...
The DataMapper is not more modern or newer, but just more suited for an ORM.
The main reason people change is because ActiveRecord does not make for a good ORM. An AR wraps a row in a database table or view, encapsulates the database access, and adds domain logic on that data. So by definition, ...
@Fabien The only negative point I saw in there was:
> Code:
person = Person.find_by_sql("giant complicated sql query") This is discouraged as it's ugly, but for the cases where you just plain and simply need to write raw SQL, it's easily done.
The Doctrine Project (or Doctrine) is a set of PHP libraries primarily focused on providing persistence services and related functionality. Its prize projects are an Object Relational Mapper (ORM) and the Database Abstraction Layer it is built on top of.
One of Doctrine's key features is the option to write database queries in a proprietary object oriented SQL dialect called Doctrine Query Language (DQL).
Usage demonstration
Entities in Doctrine 2 are lightweight PHP Objects that contain persistable properties. A persistable property is an instance variable of the entity that is saved i...
> Entities in Doctrine 2 are lightweight PHP Objects that contain persistable properties. A persistable property is an instance variable of the entity
Isn't ActiveRecord used both in Doctrine 1 and Doctrine 2, according wo the wiki - aren't they the same? The only difference being that you don't save an entity from within itself and you have a 'manager' for that instead?
Rahil.... come meet me for coffee.... you pompous little prick... So what if im wrong... do you have to be such a little prick about it??? Ever get kicked in your face for talking to people like that??? There is a first time for everything ;) — user100585859 secs ago
Hey guys, ive got a bit of a complicated wordpress/php problem at the minute, would be great if anyone has any ideas to help me solve the problem. Would massively appreciate it stackoverflow.com/questions/23675032/…
foreach always resets the arrays array pointer. You just can't do that the way you imagine.
You still have a few ways. The foreach way is just skipping everything until you found the key once:
$start_key = "yy";
$started = false;
foreach ($my_array as $key => $v)
{
if ($key == $start_key) {
...
If you're looking for support with your software product, please make use of the vendors support forums: wordpress.org/support - That site has also documentation of the features you're trying to use, the wordpress documentation is called "Codex". — hakre48 secs ago
There are additionally better chats for sure as well than this one. Just saying.
@Fabien C should have a cedilla on it, but no-one has that key on their keyboard. Although tbh the fake-aid pronunciation is probably a better pronunciation given what it actually is...
@bwoebi Absolutely agreed. Yours is the only O(n) answer, which is the best you can hope for here without something that uses the hash to advance the pointer to the start position.
@SecondRikudo Yeah, got it. In my browser (probably because of the screen resolution), only two messages are displayed in the star widget on the right sidebar, so I didn't see what was happening there. @CSᵠ showed it just now and I got it :)
@SecondRikudo that will work without dupe-hammer because now in close-votes review queue all listed questions already have 4 closing votes, so.. reviewer vote will always be last => question will be closed in any case
@AlmaDo We've already burned through 4 votes and 3 votes, I think it's back to everything, because I got some with no closevotes at all (where the question reaches review via flags)
the close reasons were gutted, deletion of bad posts was artificially made more complicated, posting links to google in comments was removed and now this
> This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.
oh, that. As I've said, I failed when they asked what's the difference between stack & heap storage (in memory). Since it's a very basics (not for PHP of course) - I think that's main fail reason. The didn't ask me anything about algorithms or some interesting questions. Instead I was re-coounting HTTP request standard fields and explaining what's the difference between HTTP 1.0 & 1.1 (lol, wiki page) .. Sad..
@DaveRandom Yeah, I wrote array_seek($array, $position, $whence) which currently doesn't support string keys ... would be an interesting feature to add, though :) //cc: @bwoebi
@Leri I'm not sure that environment is bad. But I'm sure that if questions on the interview were about stuff that may be found in manual or wiki with one search -& company is making decisions based on that knowledge - that's odd (I may be good programmer, but no idea what's exact name of HTTP content-length response field)
@Fabien I am also unsure what I'll do at interview... I have done Android development and java me but never did anything enterprise. I am not familiar with spring, etc... I hope my good understanding of OOP and general computing, intermediate app-architecture skills and familiarity how networking works will save my a**.
java isn't fun to work with at all, it has the stupidest problems at scale, those things that we really like about it, like exceptions everywhere and the type system become quite horrible in large applications, the type system is not clever, and a single exception can bring down entire systems
@JoeWatkins Thanks. Yeah, I've already faced all those restrictions (especially with that type-erasure thing). The base and main reason is my salary and loads of work that burns me out mentally.
well in java, we use exceptions properly, that means no catch all, but some fall through, you can't help it ... you can't catch all, the idea of exceptions breaks down if you catch all ... they aren't useful anymore for their intended purpose
@Leri I don't find PHP stressful to think about, I find it an antidote to thinking about java, where you don't really have any freedom of thought, whole systems are made up of a sizeable collection of libraries (written by someone else obviously), they have a single API, it's usually the exact same one or as you expect it, which is boring, doesn't let you try anything new .... god I hate java ...
oh you didn't know, there's a NullPointerException ?
I find java to be extremely powerful language, and writing little projects in it can even be a bit of fun, but when you have so much java weighing down on you, soul destroying is the only words I can find to describe it ...
@JoeWatkins My stress comes from the fact that I am the only dev at the company ad need to do all the thingz. Honestly, I find myself more comfortable with strictly-typed languages.. but php is my love and it can't be changed! :D
Jetblue's password requirements specify that, among other stringent requirements:
Cannot contain a Q or Z
I can't fathom a logical reason for this, unless it were say, extremely common for the left side of keyboards to break, but then you wouldn't allow 'A' either :)
What would be the reas...
@Fabien Replacement would be quite hard. I don't want to sound like saying I am cool.. but IT staff here is really low-qualified. And who is not already has descent job.
no, I don't forget, faces, names, places I have been and dates, I forget, but the syntax and basic operation of the languages I actually use, I never forget ... I've never used ruby in anything at all, but have known it ... forever I think ... if I have to I can still write in ruby and comprehend most of what I read ...
0 is not indicative of failure for the vast majority of C API's, it is synonymous with "0 errors occurred" which is the exact opposite of false, so it can just be a matter of clarity ...
I don't think that's true. Java doesn't separate headers. And the result is incremental builds are basically impossible. As are shared dependencies (dynamic linked code)