@TaseerAhmad yeah, except flying requires a machine or some other way to redirect fall energy. Digesting diamonds requires a substance we don't produce that, for all we know, could be toxic
I lost my father at age 8, so 1 year down the road, I kinda lost interest in most things, but I enjoyed the cartoons that I mentioned, Ed, edd and eddy were the best :D
10 internet points to whoever directs me to the correct intent flag for the next behaviour: Activities A,B,C,D. A loads B, B loads C, C loads D(1), B and C die. D(1) loads B, B loads C, C loads D(2). D(1),B,C die. D dies. A remains.
You can build parent stack like this ` val taskStackBuilder: TaskStackBuilder = TaskStackBuilder.create(this) taskStackBuilder .addNextIntentWithParentStack(Account_Activity.getStartIntent(this)) .addNextIntent(SignInOptions_Activity.getStartIntent(this, EMAIL_CHANGED)) taskStackBuilder.startActivities()`
What do you guys think? Should DB calculations (such as calculating totals) be done directly in the SQL query or get the data and calculate the totals with whatever lang you are using?
Why? Is SQL more efficient at it? I was thinking that SQL should be limited to CRUD while the processing lang would do the actual processing (such as calculations) with the data.
@JBis Databases are mostly IO bound, so any operation that already requires the IO heavy lifting (SELECT) will dominate your cost factors. Any operations on that data are "free", especially for stuff like SUM or AVERAGE
they have been working on sql for almost 100 years, there is very little chance you can outperform them. That is assuming you use the db tools for what they are meant for
Plus, even for complex queries (for example, some calculation that requires sums/averages etc. from multiple tables in a way that they must be computed sequentially) will still be faster on the db since the db will figure out what parts can be done in parallel and then add them all up in the end, and you will also save on the overhead of moving data from N different tables into your application, then looping through it again - it'll happen much more efficiently within the db
You could also eventually reach a point where you are at a scale that your data is so large, that doing calculations on it in the app server is cheaper simply because you can scale up app servers more cheaply than db servers
If you reach that point, your VC funding should help you hire people who can solve it for you
I lately encountered a case where I had a query: "SELECT a, b, c FROM Table1 INNER JOIN Table2 ON (Table1.id = Table2.id OR Table1.field = Table2.field)"
it basically took forever and had to stop it
the easy workaround is to make a union of 2 queries, with each condition as a different join, instead of the OR on the join
want to capitalize toolbar title? nope. Want to center the title? Nope. Want to stop TextInputLayout hint from changing color when it loses focus? nope
In my Android application I has my service that use retrofit
static {
myRestClient = RestClientFactory.createRestClient(TangoRestClient.class);
}
public static void getProfile(Callback<ApplicationProfileResponse> callback) {
json.addProperty("locale", Locale.getDefaul...