Not sure where to ask this, but is there any commonly used spec for entity/database? We have OpenApi openapis.org for API specification. Is there any for entity/database model?
@Danack something like: I would share this spec to different ORM-aware framework, and then (with code generator I built, specific for those framework), scaffold the required Model class.
I wonder if there already a standard for this, rather than building my own syntax
@AdhikaSetyaPramudita although it's attractive on the surface, this turns out to be a 'bad idea'. The time take to write the model classes by hand is small compared to the limitations enforced by using code generation to have them automatically built.
I have kicked around an idea with traits and interfaces in PHP, may revisit it at some point
@Danack yes and no. The main "no" is that it's simply not practical with autoloading, and also I have come to realise over time that it's not totally stupid to separate the type and the implementation like that... a trait should always be accompanied by an interface (imo) but it's not completely ridiculous to do that in such a way that the trait is not the only implementation
scoping in traits is weirdunintuitive tuitive though
From a technical standpoint, I don't think partial is practical without AOT compilation, it certainly isn't sanely doable with a dynamic on-demand symbol loading model a la PSR-4
Related: I am serious considering adopting the IFoo naming scheme for interfaces in PHP. The number of times I have spent ages trying to come up with a non-horrible name for a class because I have given the actual correct name to an interface...
@Danack don't see how those are any better tbh, just moving the problem somewhere else. I also quite like the quick visual indicator when reading method signatures on MSDN that an arg type is an interface.
...Impl is horrible, and Default... implies the existence of another implementation within the same scope (which is often not the case). Standard... isn't as bad but it's visual clutter, I... is less so
and I'm used to it in windowsy things
@Stricted FooImpl would be an implementation of the interface Foo
sure, the difference is that when you fuck something up in C you basically have to hold the entirety of everything you have ever know about computer science in you head at once. In PHP you just add a liberal sprinkling of var_dump()s :-P
hey its fun fetching ~2k dns entrys from a mysql database, storing everything in a json json file, pushing that into a git repo, using gitlab-ci to process that json file with php and writing the zones files, pushing them into yet another git repo so that the slaves can fetch changes :D
Before I write anything else, longtime reader/friend Rene Rosa (aka Evil Adam) is doing a marathon Twitch stream tomorrow (June 22nd at 12pm EST). He will be playing the game Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night and performing crazy stunts and actions as the day goes on. This is to help raise money to care for his father who has brain cancer. Rene is a super talented musician behind the band E…
@Shafizadeh it's "haha" then. Talking to an Arabic player in a game. The game automatically translates most stuff okay, but that one it didn't. I made a kind of joke.
@Wes I figured out the reason: I was trying ot run an android emulator, but had Hyper-V enabled ... for some reason Hyper-V interferes with emulators/virtualization, so I had to disable it temporarily
hmm... when I removed the vendor prefixes the gradients went all crazy
Where you see TDG, PD, etc. Those will be icons representing some metric that the associate will see. Below it will be data pulled from a database based on their personal numbers/metrics/productivity.
lol, with the added twist that the array passed to ? parameters is 1-indexed! (in this current case)
also... reopen-pls stackoverflow.com/questions/2518354/…, that question is actually not a duplicate of the other one? Or we leave it be, since it will be fixed eventually?
@DaveRandom do you know how to install the php sdk if that's a thing, in a idea plugin?
ah, looks like the sdk is included with the plugin itself :B
@StatikStasis how do you call that scroll thingy in music and video industry that speeds up audio/video playback, that resets back automatically to 1x speed when not touched
How do you determine if that's the maximum range? If I query for the metadata of a field using mysql's API, I only know that the field type is a double, not if (m,d) parameters have been specified. Since the maximum value depends on those parameters being there, it's not really possible for me to determine that maximum size then, right?
For example, I see length=22 and decimals=31 in the field's metadata when the data type is just double (not double(m, d)). That doesn't make any sense because you can't have 31 decimal places while the maximum length is only 22. Interesting thing is that I can insert a number that is far greater than 22 digits in length into this column.
@Wes There is a shuttle and a jog wheel on video controllers that allow you to go back and forward. I'm sure some of them will go back to regular play after letting go of the wheel.
One more thing I noticed, if you insert a very large value into a double field (2.2250738585072014E+9999), it will accept it without throwing an out of range error.
@Tiffany OK, so I was on phone earlier and just checked from my laptop now, and it seems that it is not an "m" at the end but another "h" because the loop is facing left rather than up or down(could be either depending on the font) which would indicate an "m". Also, the thing is that I haven't ever read Arabic without the accents(which indicates how you pronounce a consonant, either "AA", "ee", "i", "u" etc).
Because in Arabic, depending on the context vowels themselves are often ignored and the pronunciation is based on the sentence structure. Unlike in Urdu(my native language), where there are no accents and the pronunciation is entirely based on the vowels, which caused me to make my earlier assumption.
So, it is entirely possible that the sound made from all those consecutive "h"s is "hahaha..." or whatever.