it's actually quite easy to that, or easier than you might think anyway
you fork off a child to manage the active connections, then once you've brought up a new host process you pass the handles back across a unix socket and Robert's your mother's brother
@Tiffany If you're using putty, you can configure it to not close the session window after connection termination. Switch on verbose mode and have a look at what's happening
Not sure. I personally don't think it's worth abstracting libdns away if it exposes all these structures. However they've decided to have their own Record class...
only this time I spent fucking ages reading RFCs and working out what's actually been deprecated, and marking them
@Danack :-P
eh, this needs fixing anyway so I will just include it in the patch
I feel like this is not going to cause many real world problems, if people were actually querying stuff with vector record data then someone would have complained by now
but regardless, is there actually any benefit to that?
feels like it would just be slower (because userland) and not solve any actual problems
I obviously could write that myself, but I generally just use serialize() in those cases, because it would change the format of the JSON in order to do that, in such a way as you can't really expose it publicly, so why bother?
Examples: • !!reminder foo at 18:00 • With timezone: (ie. UTC-3) !!reminder foo at 18:00-3:00 • !!reminder bar in 2 hours • !!reminder unset 32901146 • !!reminder list or just !!reminders • !!in 2 days 42 hours 42 minutes 42 seconds 42! • !!at 22:00 Grab a beer!
:S. I have a coupon on my desk that I keep forgetting to bring with me, and it expires in like three days, and I forget to remind myself. When I was driving by Wendy's earlier, I decided to use Jeeves as the reminder.
i had no idea. but san pellegrino is not great. look for cutolo, felicia, itala, gaudianello(my pref), sveva(my pref), toka(my pref), acetosella, ferrarelle, san ciro, appia,
cutolo and ferrarelle are also good-ish
we got a fuckton of water yeah
i doubt they export them to the us tho. again exporting water seems a really stupid thing to do
s.pellegrino is an italian brand but chances are the water is from the us
> Parent company: Nestlé
that almost for sure means it's not actually italian water :P
what was that story that coca cola once tried to sell tap water
I blame my paranoia on my cats and dogs. The dogs bark for no reason, and the cats stare at empty corners of the room. All the more reason to go live in a cave and avoid people.
@Darius why would you use /{username} ? it would match sooo many other pages and also forever limit what usernames and page names you can use because they share the same path.
do /u/{username} or something along those lines.
namespace the paths per controller or you're just going to get conflicts.
Trying to make it as easy as possible to reach user's profile. I agree it would try to match too many routes :\ Should for user's sake switch it to {user}.site.com then?
on a side note, how does Github do it? Are they really maintaining a giant list of all Github site pages and then blacklisting them when people choose a name, and what about vice versa? Say I make a username called "foobar" and you have the need to create some informational page called "foobar" how do you handle that?
They may possibly also pre-reserve certain usernames in case they need it for a future page. Support, help, contact, etc... I just think it would be a nightmare to have to think up a new page name because someone happens to have the same username you need.
They have a mix of things, I think maybe they were using your method of /usernamer /pagename and then realized fuck people keep taking names we need, so let's start using subdomains?
Another think to consider is logs. When you see in your access logs /foobar how can you easily tell if it's some info page or a user's profile?
So as long as I indicate what resource I'm going for, it should be ok. Because then it'll just skip through to check if url I'm visiting is part of the static url's, and if it's not, it'll go to search for a user.
As far as github is concerned, it's kinda funny you brought it up, I do see a "ah fuhh.." moment haha
But that still doesn't solve the problem of adding more static routes in the future. You will have to always make sure a new static route does not match a current username. Soon you'll be making funky static routes just to make them meaningful because the ideal one has already been taken as a username.
if there in change in form fields or even there we can add or remove question from template,question then how can i incoperate these changes from database and api's.
so i read that static methods shouldn't generally be used as they're not testable. however i wrote a class that doesn't change state or anything. is this proper usage of static? pastebin.com/qc4AYkgp
@Gordon the LatLong class just stores the latitude and longitude. i'm just taking those values and turning them into a object so i can reduce the # of arguments in these functions.
instead of (lat1, long1, lat2, long2), it's just (coord1, coord2) etc.
@tereško i cache the results i get back from the API in the DB
i'm unsure what you mean by "using runtime memory seems misguided"
are there recognized formats for paths pointing to a specific line and column of a text file, like, this works: /my/path/file.php:23 is it possible to add the starting column too, for example?
because summing and multiplying a value object might need special handling for the value when the unit is different. for instance, you might have a Money object and try to add euros to dollars.
Value Objects are really nice to represent your business domain in code