But here for a country drop down i used values like afganistan =1 and the data stored in database is values but in excel submitting as country name instead of value how to write
@Petah I'm just talking about the page cache, there are other caches here, but the whole box doesn't have 12gb of ram. It only has 2gb ram, and 32 gb of HDD...
@IndianGirl , if you are deciding what language/framework/OS/phone/whatever to use , you should go to the people who use/like that one thing , and ask them what are the flaws and problems with it
if you are choosing between java and c++ , you go to java IRC channel and ask them about problems in java , and then you go to c++ channel and ask about problems in c__
@HarryBeasant are you upset because no one is jumping at the bit to help your obviously moronic question? go post a question, you'll get attacked by repwhores waiting for your checkmark.
still, while you can't compare php & asp.net as platforms (completely different ideas, principles, implementation) you can compare them as tools for web development
you already see them used for "how do i inherit stuff from two classes at the same time" .. instead of fixing the broke object graph , people think that traits is the solution
e.g. static methods where good for doing things like: File::delete($file); rather than $file = new File($file); $file->delete();but now you can do (new File($file))->delete()
I agree 100%. Look at the really popular applications out there. How many of them have clean code? Very few. Functionality, business use and time to market matter FAR more than clean code. The trick is to balance the 4 so that maintenance can be cost effective as well. But a working application with technical debt is far better than a perfect application that doesn't work
@tereško Disagree 100%. Most of my applications have intentional technical debt. I also intentionally build time into the schedule to rectify that. I'd rather take some technical debt for a problem I don't fully understand, and correct it after launch, than constantly spending cycles trying to perfect something I don't understand
The key is to embrace technical debt, and use it wisely, while remembering that it needs to be repayed at some point...
if you create technical debt to do the last 10% of the application , it will not be a problem , but if you start out by making the mess , you might never get to that "last 10%" mark
@ircmaxell I'm not against routine chaining, by the way. If it semantically is okay for the routine, that is. Often, the routine has to return something, so you can't chain anyway.
@LeviMorrison Functions are either accessors (setting or getting state) or routines (doing something with that state). Routines shouldn't be chained as that's starting to muck up what's happening with the object...
They can make it harder to go forward, but only if the change required to go forward is directly tied to the debt. Often, the debt could stay there forever without affecting the application (if it's in a side module that doesn't get developed). That doesn't mean it shouldn't be repaid, but just that it isn't the god-aweful thing you're trying to make it out to be
@Gordon Initial implementation was thought-up and coded after I had been awake for over 24 hours . . . It's more of a working proof-of-concept. All official HTTP 1.1 methods will be supported. If PATCH isn't in HTTP 1.1, it will also be included anyway.
* Should read awake, not away. No mouse, can't fix. (Nevermind, figured out how to do it sans-mouse)
Yes , while that is true, @ircmaxell , at the start of development you usually work on modules that are critical for whole applications , which is why you should do everything to avoid it. The "leaf modules" you talk about is the "last 10%" i mentioned.
@tereško Eih, I still disagree there. Technical debt is good, and can help launch an application. But it's just not something to throw around, it needs to be used carefully and with respect
with PDO::lastInsertId if I use INSERT INTO ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE ... how do I know if the row was inserted or updated (hence no insert ID)
user895378
@Petah I don't believe you can. I believe that if you want an accurate lastInsertId you'll have to insert without ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE because that's a MySQL-specific feature
I have 2 keys, one for low priority stuff (like github) and one for high priority stuff (root access to my servers, etc). So I use the low priority for github, and all the other services like that, and the high priority for other things
@ircmaxell I've meant something more powerful, like object-closure. But yes, being able to return custom and fine-grained object without need for defining its class.
does anyone here use git? I have an open pull request on a repo, and the code in that request needs some corrections. After I have made these corrections and merge them into my repo, how do I update the pull requests with my new changes?
@ircmaxell now I can see your point, that could work too, but from my experience, if such mechanism is hard to use, nobody will do that - compare java and javascript - both of them have support for anonymous "callbacks", in java it's ugly and also very rare, in javascript its ugly too, but still enough short.
Anyone know if it's better to store data in a separate DB table within the WordPress install? Or is it fine to just store everything as an option name? I'm just curious if storing a TON of data as option names, will slow down my blog more than if I just stored the data in it's own separate DB table within WordPress.
Basically, we're looking at 3 or 4 different possible DB tables, VS just storing everything as option names.
user895378
@JoshuaJohnson I just added a phonebook answer to your question. Also, a word of advice: listing the name of a popular PHP framework in your question title leads to many of the smartest people avoiding your question altogether. In your case, the question has very little to do with the Symfony event dispatcher and everything to do with the merits of the Observer pattern versus other strategies for event management.
If a man doesn't take any risks with his opinions, either they are no good, or he's no good...
user895378
It's better to be spectacularly, publicly incorrect and learn from it than to withhold an opinion forever and never discover you're doing something wrong.
Well, if anyone was curious about the answer to my question, I found a link on the WordPress Codex which undoubtedly answered my question. Link: codex.wordpress.org/…
@MichaelEcklund that's the least of my worries right now :P Some clients of us use an 'older' version of tinymce webeditor and all of a sudden the phone doesn't stop ringing because it doesn't work anymore :P
luckily I found a workaround, but I wonder whether I will run into more issues
@MichaelEcklund It happens. At least we have a workaround :)
user895378
16:57
php.ini recommends error reporting settings of E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED & ~E_STRICT in production. Does anyone stick with just E_ALL and silently log strict/deprecated messages?
user895378
Or do you just expect them to be weeded out in development (what I usually do)?