I ran into this same problem with HeidiSQL. The error you receive is very cryptic. My problem ended up being that the foreign key column and the referencing column were not of the same type or length.
@bwoebi It's regarding the mutex thing discussed the other day. It seems to me that it would be useful to have a set of primitives for this kind of thing, was going to see what he thinks w.r.t a base interface and set of primitives that things like his redis mutex you pointed me to the other day could implement
@kelunik Yeh I'm certainly not the best person to design an API for something like that, the impl in Jeeves works for me there but I'm not married to it if it causes problems elsewhere
@kelunik Well there may be cases for complex setups like this for which a simple interface just doesn't apply anyway, and the code that's consuming it just cannot be impl agnostic. Abstractions are rarely watertight.
In cryptography, the one-time pad (OTP) is an encryption technique that cannot be cracked if used correctly. In this technique, a plaintext is paired with a random secret key (also referred to as a one-time pad). Then, each bit or character of the plaintext is encrypted by combining it with the corresponding bit or character from the pad using modular addition. If the key is truly random, is at least as long as the plaintext, is never reused in whole or in part, and is kept completely secret, then the resulting ciphertext will be impossible to decrypt or break. It has also been proved that any...
In addition to the basic assignment operator, there are "combined operators" for all of the binary arithmetic, array union and string operators that allow you to use a value in an expression and then set its value to the result of that expression.
That's the sum total of the docs on the subject apparently
I need to setup a script to call a php page every x minutes, cron jobs won't work when my mac is turned off.. could someone explain how that works to me?
my php page downloads files from the internet and puts them into a database, but i need to call it every 5 minutes or so
is it as simple as putting "5 * * * * php /var/www/vhosts/domain.com/httpdocs/scripts/example.php" in a php page and once I call it, it will call that page every 5 minutes
off-by-ones are easy. They can be trivially detected if there are tests. But if misbehavior only starts if you're off by 8 or more … the trivial tests don't detect it :x
imagine for a moment you're creating an IDE and want to support a thing like docblocks. Would you rather pick a standard and follow it, or pick one then hodge-podge it up with special cases where you think it's wrong?
@NikiC hm, well that would be a good way of supporting the correct syntax :), why would you think it's a bad idea? what if lex/parse was detached from the executor and was available as a lib that could output a serialised AST?
Hi, I'm doing a vehicle ads website, and for the Car Model field, I wanted to make a input text field with recommendations of existing values. Any ideas?
I know the php standard is no line length should be over 80 characters... but I absolutely hate this. I don't have many multi-nested statements so that's not the issue, it's just so small relative to today's screen sizes, and my programming screen is actually sideways so that I can see more of the document vertically. I like 120 character line lengths personally. Does anyone else not follow the 80 character standard?
I understand, I just try to keep all my code within prescribed standards for the most part. I'm the lone coder for the application I developed and maintain for the company I'm at... but if I were to be hit by a bus I would cringe in my grave if some other coder come in and was absolutely appalled wondering "what the heck was he thinking?"
I've learned more from developing, and refactoring than I did from the books I'd read. Mainly from Stack Overflow chat, site, and other blogs. There have been quite a few times I was in here and someone would say to someone else "Why do you do that, you should do 'x'." I would then think... yeah I do that and would refactor all my code. It takes time but I spend a lot of my downtime between adding features just refactoring.
@BruceBanEm Sure, standards are definitely a nice guide. They're a great starting point.
especially coding standards. Coding standards are important to a) not make projects look like a big mess and b) have projects largely follow the same standard instead of every line looking different if there's more coders.
If you're actually putting a { on the same or next line is subjective and you shall feel free to deviate. if you think the other way is much better in your eyes
I do have one issue with using K&R style in notepad++ when using soft tabs (4 spaces). I always like to put a space between the open curly brace and what proceeded it. As in...
However, that extra space always causes notepad++ to believe that the closing curly brace is one space to the right than it should be when it is actually aligned with the for opening statement above.
I would have to have to have the closing curly brace over 7 spaces rather than 8 to make it think it is in line... but it's just a peeve seeing that red dotted line.
If I don't have the space it is fine, but that space causes it to think it's off. Don't know if anyone has experienced this... seems most use an IDE.
I do have one horrible habit... but I won't mention that to avoid being scorned. Someone will just have to deal with it... =/
I need my Windows Task Scheduler to hit a php file and my original thought was to launch a browser then navigate to the url, but that's not very sophisticated. My second thought was to make like a .bat file and somehow hit the script like that, but maybe that's not good either. Any recommendations for something simple and easy?
Ignore what I said, I think the cmd route is my best shot.
@Waxi I was going to suggest Autoit. You could set an Autoit script to do everything you need and just have windows task scheduler run the executable Autoit file at a specific time.
I messed with Autoit at its infancy so it has been sometime since I've used it.
I've been reading the book Advanced PHP Programming. It was released in 2004. As you can imagine there is a lot of code that is deprecated, but there is a lot of really good information in it. Would anyone recommend a more recent PHP programming book that covers more advanced topics?
I've yet to use a IDE for PHP. I've used Notepad++ with a lot of style configuration, settings, and plugins. Your IDE looked a lot like the custom color scheme I have.
The major difference (and this is where PHPStorm is king) is in syntax correction. Notepad++ can only tell you when you make basic errors, like not marrying a bracket, etc. But a full IDE can tell you when you've done something more arcane, like forgetting an argument to a function
IDEs are your first line of defense against bad code
i have configured web-server for first time.I installed php,mysql and apache and virtualmin on it.. and then i put codes of first website in /var/www/domain.com/public_html folder is that right?? and now i have to put code of other website too where do i put other code...