@MadaraUchiha I mean I can't improve myself within my organization. I need to look outside like SO. And for a while, I didn't know where to look. I was afraid of joining SO for fear of being judged because my code is generally shit.
I don't have the self-esteem to be yelled at and take it positively. Though, it does depend on my mood. I can take the criticism and go, "okay, this is what I need to work on," and go from there. Today hasn't been one of those days.
@Danack I meant in the context of the organization I work for, not in the context of improving myself in general. There's no one within the department I work in that can help me improve my programming, I have to turn to sources like SO, Sitepoint, etc.
Hopefully that lessens the intensity of your drinking, but if you're wanting to drink, then ignore above :D
I used to work with another lady who was generally better at coding than I was. For quite some time, I felt like I was living in her shadow when she was laid off.
And she helped me improve tremendously.
...I still feel like I live in her shadow, actually.
@Tiffany have you tried instead "doing stuff your own way" rather than expect to be told / look up what to do. practice is a good way to learn even if you write code wrong. equally valuable lessons are learned in defeat and victory (quote from enzo ferrari, the creator of ferraris)
Yes. I've had this discussion before in chat. ๐ TL;DR: I don't know LAMP yet. I've actually made it a goal on my evaluation for this coming year to switch our web server environment from WIMP to LAMP.
npp was my first code editor, and I'm just used to it. I've tried Sublime Text and others, but ended up going back to npp because I know my way around it and can get shit done.
we use this paid-for SSH program called Reflection, but I'm literally just sshing into a linux box, there's no reason why I can't use PuTTy for that, where I'd have better syntax highlighting in VIM than I do in Reflection.
@MadaraUchiha when I can motivate myself to dink around with programming and Linux and not play video games, I plan to set up a VM on my home box with Linux
actually, since I'm waiting on my boyfriend to finish whatever he's doing, I can start setting up the VM now
Especially if it's every month and you get innocent email receipts that stab your soul once you realize you've burned money this month while doing nothing.
A team he used to work for that was going to be rewriting their ERP, he was trying to push them to use PostgreSQL just so they wouldn't/couldn't say "sequel"
The only reason PHP and MySQL get clumped together so tightly was because in the early days of PHP, the maintainers decided that MySQL is the best for their needs, and so they added functions for it into the language
The very same functions that got removed from the core lib when PHP 7 happened.
Honestly, the only reason I use the tools I currently do is because I'm used to them, and I need to take the time to get used to other tools that are better now.
And generally when I get home from work, I don't want to look at anything programming.
@Tiffany you didn't met many programmers, right? :B i think recruiters know by know that most of programmers are in some way crazy. in fact skills and craziness are directly proportional :B
When the Debian installer asked me if I wanted to set up predefinitions, I picked debian desktop environment. There was an option for web server. Should I have picked web server, or is debian desktop environment fine?
I was in .bashrc and saw the command I wanted to alias commented out, so I just removed the comment for it, but if I try using the command, it says it's not found
or do I have to use .bash_aliases?
I feel like I should join the linux chat so I'm not bombarding php chat with linux questions, rofl
@Ocramius why would i ever need to use ghost objects? the only use case i think is letting the objects to pass through type hints against a specific class rather than an interface. am i right?
eg function foo(SomeClass $class){} class WhateverProxy extends SomeClass{}
@Trucy I'm a grammar nazi. I don't blame them, but inevitably I edit ESL posts because the grammar and spelling is usually atrocious and I can't let it stay.
I can't believe I've been clickbaited by a "marriage blog". The title read "Setting up a marriage with a paraplegy". It sounded interesting because I wanted to read how one can organise a marriage with a (pretty severe) handicap (I love organising events). I wanted to learn about logistics, about the venue, everything practicalโฆ But the whole story turned out to be "I'm not paraplegic. I'm plannig marriage. Accident. I'm paraplegic. I'm planning marriage. Marriage occurs. Happily ever after."
error occur like this:( script timeout passed, if you want to finish import, please resubmit same file and import will resume.) while importing sql(732kb) into phpmyadmin
I've created a fedora live usb stick. Booting from it gives me a grub cli screen. Is there a standard way to actually boot into Fedora from that or do I need to rtfm.
guys is there any limit in number of updates on a field in mysql per second ?
lets consider the case of facebook like button.if there are 1000s of likes in a second and i need to update the like count on a particular field with respect to the likes
@neo there are limits based on exactly what queries you're running. but it's a difficult problem. Facebook and other large scale organisation have hundreds of people working on making their systems scale. I'd suggest reading a lot of highscalability.com
Also - you're not actually going to make the next facebook. I'd suggest just making anything and worrying more about scaling when you have some users.
Not sure how weird this sounds, I'm looking to run a cron job to php, but don't want the script itself running as root. However, the user I want to run it to won't have access to /var/log. Reckon I could run the cron as root but su as the user, then redirect the output of the su the /var/log location?
Don't think it's particularly possible. Being in the log folder pretty much everything is root:adm, and I don't want to give the user access to any of the other logs
@Sean Not sure what you've tried, but you'd need to create the log file first sudo touch /var/log/myapp.log and then allow user that will run the script, like sudo chown theappuser /var/log/myapp.log