In order to allow predicates (trailing if/unless/for/while/etc), a lot of things are expressions. This allowed a particularly untalented coworker to write something along the lines of ($a && $b ? return 3 : return 7)
@MadaraUchiha The way you talk about this makes me not want to ask you what the right way is, but if I don't I won't learn your thoughts. What is the right way to do that?
Also, don't be taken aback by my aggressiveness in arguments, it's my way to invoke some subset of Cunningham's law to get people to voice their opinions more freely
Feel free to call me out if I'm being too blanketing with my statements, I'd appreciate it.
Because each client had about a thousand rows to inhale, and suddenly you have 50 million records you need to put into memory
The company kept increasing the machine's power instead of fixing the root problem (mostly because everyone were too afraid to touch the admittedly fragile PHP code that powers about 70% of the company's income)
When normalizing a relational DB if two domain objects have say 3 columns that the other does not have, but share 10 should there be a table for each domain object with the three unique columns in it and a table with the 10 shared columns, or should there be two tables, one for each domain object, where each shared column is a reference to a type table?
lets say you have a list and when you have no filtering you can get 20 post by loop through start point and end point but with filtering now only one post can be shown.