@tereško I need to move away from mysql's fulltext search. I don't have time. It's a shared hosting, I think I could get a sphinx package. Is 10 hours overly optimistic to replace an acceptably decoupled search service in an existing codebase?
It's mainly a single query, that needs to accept several client requirements, but I'm starting to have trouble tweaking mysql's fulltext to solve them all.
There's always riots. The murder, thievery and oppression will continue no matter which head of the snake is the one the camera is currently pointed at.
@PeeHaa Hmm, I dunno. Our current webpack config is a bit complex because our goal was feature parity with, and I shit you not, a custom, in-house written, build system.
But most of the projects I have don't end up being very complex in terms of build configuration
And if you're like me and use TypeScript, the editor will even autocomplete what's missing and what options you can pass.
Let me ask you this @PeeHaa
In Composer, say I have a package A, and a package B. Both of which have a dependency on package C. Only A depends on package C at version 1.0, and B depends on package C 2.0
How (if at all) does Composer solve this conflict?
@PeeHaa vOv I have a project with like a hundred direct dependencies, and I don't get warnings notices or deprecations, but I concede the point that it's easy to fall down that path if you aren't diligent about it, which is not a good thing.
@MadaraUchiha Best case scenario is that Package A and B have some version that depend on the same version of C. Then composer will install the newest, compatible versions.
@pmmaga I've never used Jenkins though I know a lot of bigger (more organized) companies do. Stupid question- do you use this along with GitHub or one or the other?
if any of you have excess hope in humanity, here is something to cleanse your palette: youtube.com/watch?v=E16iLA4d32Q //cc @FélixGagnon-Grenier, @MadaraUchiha
@StatikStasis along with. although they can interact. you can build based on listening to changes on github and in reverse, you can post the result of your jenkins run in an open PR
@tereško Oh, man- sometimes it just takes the person's voice for me not to be able to enjoy the content. There is definitely a value in narrative voices such as James Earl Jones, Morgan Freeman, David Attenborough, etc. Depends on the type of show- but there have been some documentaries I could not finish because of this small, but important, element.
@StatikStasis E_TOO_BROAD :P But hm.. It depends a lot on how useful you want it to be. For example, I have a public instance to test php itself. Maybe that can give you a picture: codejenkins
Take five chimpanzees. Put them in a big cage. Suspend some bananas from the roof of the cage. Provide the chimpanzees with a stepladder. BUT also add a proximity detector to the bananas, so that when a chimp goes near the banana, water hoses are triggered and the whole cage is thoroughly soaked....
@Andrew You gotta set it to something. Why not a nice, clean, and very round power of 2?
Until recently we had 2, or 4 DIMM slots per CPU for RAM, and RAM sticks had capacity of powers of 2, so setting your limit as a fraction of a power of 2 (which is also likely to be a power of 2) makes "sense".
I believe 6 DIMMs per CPU is now common, which breaks the powers of 2.
Also, my previous strategy is too simple. The issue is that zend_do_implement_interfaces and friends, which get called by zend_do_link_class, eventually call do_inheritance_check_on_method. That piece is what I need to delay, not the linking, and not necessarily the "verification", which turns out is more of a "did all the abstract methods and whatnot get implemented?"
Or I need to control some state on whether an error is produced when the ZCEs are not found based on if this is the final runtime check or not.
I've found the following picture online. It is about the moral/paradigm behind consistent behavior.
Click to enlarge.
The image text says
A group of scientists placed 5 monkeys in a cage and in the middle, a ladder with bananas on the top.
Every time a monkey went up the ladder, the...
Potoooooooo or variations of Pot-8-Os (1773 – November 1800) was a famous 18th-century Thoroughbred racehorse who won over 30 races and bested some of the greatest racehorses of the time. He went on to be an important sire.
== Background ==
Potoooooooo (also spelled Pot-8-Os, Pot8Os, Pot8O's or Pot 8 Os from various sources) was a chestnut colt bred by Willoughby Bertie, 4th Earl of Abingdon, in 1773. He was sired by the undefeated Eclipse. He was the first foal out of Sportsmistress, who was sired by Warren's Sportsman and traced to Thwaites' Dun Mare from family number 38 on her dam's side.The...
@Alesana The horse was originally named potatoes, but the stable boy who registered him to the race misheard it as pot-8-o's, and so, wrote down "Potoooooooo"
@Alesana its annoying, if a co-worker interrupts you while you are in the middle of a task or something, then the annoyance caused is greater than the benefit achieved, but if it is during free time or you are not focused on anything then its OK, still annoying but ok.
I have a coworker - he's been with the company longer so his title in the company is higher than mine. But, he doesn't know anything about programming. For example, he asked me what the || operator is for.
And he asks the most easily googleable questions all of the time
Does anybody aware of any credible source where listed OS used to a)host b)develop PHP projects? Curious what "market" share has three most popular OSes mac, windows and *nix (*bsd is optional)? W3tech doesn't seems to be provide OS distribution for PHP, only versions
Linux likely has most of the hosting market. Not entirely sure about Mac and Windows. Judging by trying to find answers to WIMP questions though, I'm guessing Windows is a small amount.
@pinepain at work we're a Windows shop, so I develop on Windows, production is Windows. At home, my host OS is Windows, but my guest OS is some distro of Linux, usually debian or ubuntu. I don't really have any production projects at home...
I have a VPS that I've installed debian on, and I help my dad with his website which runs on CentOS
@pinepain not really... originally, I inherited the Windows servers from the previous webmaster. I wasn't familiar with Windows or Linux servers at the time, so I kept it as-is. I've since received training for Windows/IIS, but that was before I started hanging out in here. I've been working on my Linux/nginx skillset so we can maybe, hopefully, switch to that.
I can't comfortably argue for switching to LEMP until I understand it a bit more. I've improved quite a bit with Linux though, and almost comfortable enough with nginx.
Probably not as interesting as you were hoping for, sorry
AC_MSG_CHECKING([Check for supported PHP versions]) FOUND_VERSION=`${PHP_CONFIG} --version` FOUND_VERNUM=`${PHP_CONFIG} --vernum` if test "$FOUND_VERNUM" -lt "70000"; then AC_MSG_ERROR([not supported. Need a PHP version >= 7.0.0 (found $FOUND_VERSION)]) else AC_MSG_RESULT([supported ($FOUND_VERSION)]) fi
it's cool, i'm not quite fussy about technologies as long as tools do the job well, maybe i have to receive some windows trainings too (last time i studied windows was a lab work at the uni, 2h work, i guess) maybe have to google more about the matter
@pinepain I'd advise against it just cause I doubt there's much of a market for Windows/IIS and php. IIS used to be terrible to host a PHP site on, but it has improved. I can't accurately compare my experiences to how it is hosting with Linux though.
@Tiffany for the past at least 10 years i was using php twice on windowos (i guess first time it was between 2004-2005 and then in 2008-2010), and it was never a pleasant experience, but i'm not a window user, anyway, without clear numbers it has a good chance to turn into holly war, not sure i want to go that route
would still appreciate link to stats or maybe vote results
Something I find a little quirky with Windows/IIS is that there are two users - IUSRS and IIS_IUSR - IUSRS is used for like anonymous visitors, and IIS_IUSRS is what IIS uses to do stuff, like uploading files into a directory from a webpage. There's probably a way to add additional users for IIS to use, but I haven't looked into it. Compare that to Linux and Apache/nginx where you can create a user, and assign the rights to that user.
The control over the web user in Linux is more obvious
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I'm guessing they started building a version for PHP 6? and then abandoned it? Or it's a joke, or they're serious and have no sense of humor.
So I made the move to PC after my mac started driving me nuts with random bugs/crashes due to hardware failing I think. I noticed I'm on windows 10 home edition, should I upgrade to pro or workstation?