So essentially what's going on here is all the major browsers are gradually crossing out the word "Chrome" and writing in their own names and hoping no-one will notice?
@DaveRandom The catch would be another bit down, it's the Router:route() method which throws the exception. It's all perfect exception I decided I wanted to experiment. I am testing out putting all the assets in the private non accessible via url part of the site. So if I have moduleA and all it's templates, translations, controllers I also put the assets related to that module in there instead of in the public web folder. I'm not sure if it's a good idea but worth experimenting with.
I like a lot of the Googlification though, being signed in everywhere means loads of stuff that I'm reasonably certain is actually magic just seems to work. And I resigned myself to the idea that Google knows more about me than I do a long time ago
The thing I'm worried about is performance. Every request for a css file, js file, images etc will not actually go directly to the resource via url but instead goes through my PHP app and eventually the presentation layer does a file_get_contents on the path to the resource in the non public part and sets the response headers to to whatever resource type it is
It's just when Ive multiple modules like frontend, admin, members area, all different designs/themes it can be annoying storing all that stuff in some public assets/modules/modulename/css
How do you go about organising all the assets for multiple different modules?
@David Yes, especially with nginx you will see a huge perf improvement under load, because there's a mem caching layer and a thread pool emulating nbio on the filesystem
if you do it in PHP, you're doing blocking IO and you're reading the file from disk every single time you serve it
for a few KB CSS/JS resource, you are reducing your potential perf by at least one order of magnitude
@DaveRandom Ok thanks. What way do you normally deal with an application with many modules and each having multiple assets, programming is easy compared to coming up with a good structure to organise all the files
@David I tend to treat things like that as separate applications. If there are any shared deps, try to lift them out into standalone modules that can be included in each application as a submodule
@DaveRandom Do you like to keep assets out of the public directory and contained with the rest of their modules files or do you put them out in the public directory?
@DaveRandom Before I started messing around with them in the non public directory I used to organise them like web/assets/modules/module-name/css etc, Is yours similar or?
I'll most likely pick this up at work. I can do it in the name of 'R&D'. Plus better broadband. Take in external and copy over what I need. Not that i'll ouch it for a week.
As for Starbound. If you like Terraria, this should be pleasing too. Easy to play in groups too but makes levelling weird.
FTR last I knew the coordinates of chests aren't unique per player. Everybody has the same special chests at the same coordinates. So if you aren't feeling the desire to hunt for a specific one you can google around for it should you want to.
As it's not launched they infrequently reset characters on update too.
Typically enough to progress quite far but not so much to make it too annoying.
@bwoebi I'm not even sure whether I could do that any more. The closest I come is having to resist the urge to write one-shot procedure scripts in classes (which I sometimes fail to resist) but even then the classes I write tend to make sense and the wiring is done in the top scope
There's a guy at our work who I assume used to be a C++ dev who writes function main() { /* outer logic here */ } main(); which pisses me off a bit
Somehow I wouldn't mind so much if it was written as (function() {})(); - I do that in JS all the time, although that's more necessary than it would be in PHP (not much)
There's another guy at our work who has epic JS paranoia and wraps everything in (function(undefined) {}()); as if some bellend is going to actually assign to it in our codebase
It just bugs the small part of me that hates defensive coding. If you assume everyone is a dribbling idiot you never get anything done. Sometimes you have to accept that if someone does something stupid, they will break the application.
It doesn't have anything to do with defensive coding. Many other things can be overwritten too (and not even restored), what is special about undefined?