Can someone help out understanding how to get the email from a JSON whose structure is as below: {"xyz@outlook.com":{"quantity":1,"joined_on":"17/May"}}
is there somewhere else in Wordpress that the siteurl is set other than in the wp_options table? ... my dev server keeps redirecting to my prod server when I go to it from web browser and I can't figure out why
@FahadUddin try PeeHaa's solution, but I will suggest, that if the json strings are being generated dynamically, then please, try to change the logic of how they are generated.
@FahadUddin doesn't seem like a very good idea
@Tiffany check the server config file, like .htaccess and make sure there are no hard-coded links inside the code(custom theme, custom plugin) or posts or pages etc
Here's the source for today's comic: AT&T promised lower prices after Time Warner merger—it's raising them instead (Ars Technica) As with any news-based comic, this is a much more nuanced and complicated issue than can be summarized in 4 panels. While I welcome the challenge from the Justice Department,... [read more]
@Wes I put it to a vote because the discussion had died down, and it's one of those RFC's that no one should need more than a week to read through and have a strong enough opinion to vote.
I don't believe that it's on the same scale as typed properties, and shouldn't need months of discussion. It's been under discussion for years, technically, but maybe not this exact approach.
Something went wrong while processing command message #43205738 (event #87728868): Room11\StackChat\Client\MessagePostFailureException: Got a 500 response to an Action request in /srv/www/Jeeves/vendor/room11/stack-chat/src/Client/ActionExecutor.php:72
@LeviMorrison we talked about this before, iirc we were talking about: - minify urls - if still too long, replace the last char of each title with U+2026, remove 1 char from each title until one title reaches len == 1 - if still too long, use numbers as titles with original URLs - if still too long, use numbers as titles with minified URLS - if still too long, you're dead
the ERP they use, my current employer uses too, and I'm the maintainer of in-house modifications/in-house packages. Give me about a day, and I could get around PL/SQL pretty well.
shrug, loads of colleges/universities looking for a Banner dev, based on the amount of job postings I used to see from their vendor forums. I used to receive emails when a job was posted on their forum, but I think they got rid of it, probably complaints.
I found a list of all of the community colleges in CA and started going down the list looking for open positions associated to my skillset. I figure if anything, I can get a job working at another community college since I've worked at one for around ten years.
My current position is "web admin," which is a very wide umbrella of job duties. If I find a programmer job at another community college, at least the duties are narrowed.
Imagine a dict type where null is a valid key, and find(v): k returns NULL if a k could not be found for the given v. That's ambiguous because NULL is a valid k. The only way to make it non ambiguous is if NULL is not a valid k.
Good afternoon! Does anyone have experiencing with creating a SSO? Maybe implementing a standard such as OAuth - but I’m doing research on the best way to secure a session so a user can login without a headache (like not requiring the user to sign in more than once, approve access, choose what is shared, etc) but that mitigates security threats.
My biggest concern is Apple’s new OS is releasing a version of safari that blocks “tracking cookies” and makes it very difficult to get specific information from the user machine. My fear is the entire user experience concept would be destroyed by something like this.
Yeah just seems like people see magic and that's an auto-no.
I would like to ask what exactly is so bad about magic methods for this proposal, I just want one good answer that isn't "it doesn't feel right" or "i want less magic" or "because magic is bad". >:
__invoke is terrible because not all objects are callable, but no one complains about that. Other cases like __toString doesn't have a Stringable interface, and no one complains about that either.
But present something for which magic methods make sense, and instant no because magic.
I think this is really unfriendly for users and causes issues that a non-overloading simple implementation wouldn't have. $a->equals($b) is super simple to understand where that equality is being solved
The internal equivalent for `==` for objects (is_equal_function) effectively does `<=> == 0` though. Believe me I don't like this either. I would have loved to follow D instead and have == never call `__compareTo`.
The documentation would state that "NOTE: You should also implement __equals if equal ordering does not imply equal value". Easy work.
I didn't want to break things that use compare_function, which is used universally by extensions to test for both ordering and equality. It's just the way it was done that restricts the amount of change we can make in one go.
@rtheunissen that would solve half of the problem. for me allowing different types and, by extension, allowing ($a == $b) != ($b == $a) is also problematic.
I regret not doing a double vote now for magic/interface/neither. It didn't come across in the discussion that magic is where the decisions will be made. Or maybe it isn't and wouldn't have made a difference anyway. :'D
I’ve been overdoing things lately, so I’m giving myself a break. No screens after work, no tv, no phones, and I’m even cutting back on reading. Rather than engage with family, friends, and other fellow humans, I’ve found myself indulging in a lot of audiobooks. In that last few weeks, I’ve listening to Slaughterhouse Five (the classic book I started reading several times but never finis…
@rtheunissen finally I think that coercing the return value is also bad call. people will write things like: function __comparesTo($b) { return $this->prop == $b->prop } and be surprised when $a != $b. Sure they should read the docs, but failing when they do that would give them a hint something is wrong earlier
Sometimes I love just getting away from PHP and doing something simple like creating scripts in VBA for generating reports. Spent some time yesterday creating a VBA script that will reconcile and close our books for a couple of departments against our bank data. It used to take me 2-4 hours at the end of the month. Now I can just hit a button and it takes a few short minutes.
They can be tedious. Especially when the data is all over the place and some of the sources are broken and have to be parsed and fixed before using.
I've created a lot of these scripts that save me so much time. I just hate I take so long to finally break down and do it. Allows me to be more "productive." Press button, watch youTube videos.
@pmmaga You still working off site at the place with the crazy architecture?
@StatikStasis You know, when I started learning programming, I started with VB, because my father was a programmer, and he was an expert in VB ND whatnot. But I soon gave up on it after 2 months. and started learning C# a bit and then moved to web entirely.
@StatikStasis I used to have to manually export the website database daily, probably for a year or two, before I finally took the time and wrote out a batch script to do it for me, every day, and copy the backup to three other locations in case a server fails. Manually doing it was the bane of me because I could never keep myself focused long enough to do it daily.
caused a lot of friction between my supervisor and I, because I wouldn't stay on top of it
@FélixGagnon-Grenier You know, I agree with his whole point. I mean I am all for liberty and freedom, but wtf is up with is up with weaponizing words like "racist", "homophobic", "sexist" etc. These words are often used to criticize things that are either satire or just not meant in any offensive way. And very often these words are also used to get unfair advantage by shaming a person into thinking that he/she might be one of these things etc
I searched for php motivational, the guy is very right , "it doesnt matter where you commin from, what coultry are you commin from, what language you speak, you can become successful in PHP" youtu.be/0h3ELcrcZkg?t=1m33s
@Sherif haha for sure, nowadays anybody really is doing PHP, also those momas and popas
@mega6382 take for example, my dad. he believes all muslims are bad. you and I both know that it's incorrect, but he still believes it, and has told me to cut ties from my muslim friends. I guess I'm not sure what you mean by "weaponize."
but I don't want to drag chat back into a political discussion... it tends to become unpleasant
okay, my cats are being flipping adorable right now. they're laying on the floor next to each other, and cleaning each other.
@Tiffany I mean, certainly there are real problems of this sort, people who really believe these things and are bigots. But there are also some other people who are not bigoted at all, but are confused for bigots because they either made a satire joke of such nature or didn't know something and asked a question about this, and then some people will weaponize these words like "ugh, you are such a racist, no, not all asian are good at math" etc
So, what I am saying is, that when you assume and seek out a problem where it doesn't exist, you are actively preventing the actual problem from being found.
I think it's a matter of perspective. Take for example a newcomer comes into chat, asks a stupid question that's easily google-able. We get irritated with the person and tell them to RTFM or google it. Actually, that's not a comparative example...
I was going to make a comparison to how we get upset at newcomers who ask dumb questions because of the frequency of how it happens in chat, compared to an Asian who interacts with someone who's surprised the Asian person is bad at math, because of the frequency they encounter those questions.
This might be a fair example: a woman is in a CS program, but her male peers treat her like she doesn't know anything about computers because she's female, and she's a minority in the program. However, it isn't true, and from her perspective, it's frustrating because of sheer number of her male peers explain stuff to her like she's five, but hypothetically, she knows more about the subject than her peers, she was only confused on one specific part and wanted clarification.
That was long winded. And no, that's not personal experience. I haven't gotten that far into a CS program.
well sure, but that is just the thing, we don't know where the other guy is coming from, but we in our prejudice assumed that it is just another dumb questions like all the other dumb questions that have been asked in the chat, and the OP is just as noob/dumb as all those others that asked. But what happen with this is that we over-generalize and maybe the OP is quite experienced in the field but just didn't have much knowledge in this particular aspect of it, and need more clarification.
calling someone an "-ist" can have negative consequences, but if the person being called that is a reasonable person, they'll take a step back, ponder on the situation and what they said, and realize "oh yeah, I was in the wrong"
Well yeah, but I am not talking about the person who is being called "-ist" but the person who is saying it. And nowadays these words are being used like they are some sort of "trend"
too tired to get involved in that conversation but youtube.com/watch?v=b0Ti-gkJiXc it's better to say "what you said is -ist" rather than calling someone "-ist".
I think in the case of asking someone a question that you're genuinely curious about, and want to learn something that the other person would have experience in (e.g. asking a gay person a question related to their sexuality) it's a matter of how the question is posed, and being respectful while asking the question.
@Danack that's true
there are some people who are flat out over-sensitive about shit, "tumblr snowflakes," but that's not who I'm talking about
hmm, Actually, I believe that I completely missed the main point that I wanted to make. Because what I wanted to say was that there is a "spectrum" of "bigotness", and there is a high-end and a low-end. Like KKK, ISIS etc on the high-end and a comedian or a curious person on the low-end. So, what I am trying to say is that when we hold all these people at the same level, it doesn't really help and actually takes the focus away from the things that are actually problematic.
argh, can't find a video of it. Main female character is recorded throwing coffee on a homeless woman (accidental, but not obvious in video), and it goes viral, but her identity isn't apparent in the video. Later, she's exposed, and she tried to make a joke of it on twitter, but it was taken out of context and people thought she was a misogynist.