There are two *slightly* tricky things: 1) you can use regex at a tree node to match dynamic parts of the url (normally \\d to match ids 2) persist sets the title in case of an exact match, and persists can overwrite each other
uh that should say "persist sets the title in case of no exact match"
@rlemon I have a feeling it's still going to be an issue so I'll gather the two codepen attempts for your perusal. Thanks. https://codepen.io/michaelrwiley/pen/pOGGKL https://codepen.io/michaelrwiley/pen/rZPReE
@user1575229 Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com, pastie.org or a demo site like jsbin.com
> To make enabling image upload in CKEditor 5 a breeze, by default all builds include the EasyImage plugin, which integrates with the Easy Image service provided by CKEditor Cloud Services. Enabling it is straightforward and the results are immediate:
So wait, jwts are basically there as a standard for Auth without cookies, for more functional networking on the client?
Also makes sure things aren't "plain text" over the network, which is kinda bs because it's mostly b64 encoded
The backend guy at this job said we're going to do Auth via just, and asked me to look into it. All I could think of was that it was basically a more accessible alternative to stuff like express-session
so I had an interview last week that I think I failed and I've been thinking about it
was with a small local company so it wasn't a big deal but I was thinking about the question I was asked
I was asked how, using Java, I would go about finding which lines in a file appear the most times
so I was like, sure, grab an InputStream/BufferedReader/whatever, and each time a unique line is encountered, add it to a map; each time a dupe is encountered, increment the map's value
and then the guy was like, "ok, what if this file is huge, like, several gigabytes"
and I try to think of some way that I don't have to store this data in memory and I end up going for a database, and he's like, "there's no database"
and so then I settled on clustering or something stupid like that, and he was clearly unimpressed and we moved on
I thought about it a little bit afterward and I'm like, maybe if I hashed each line and used that instead? but that would have its own problems. So I think this is an algorithmic thing that's just flying over my head
that's exactly the problem; I'd have to scan the file over again to find the phrase. But the second scan wouldn't need me to keep anything in memory so that wouldn't be a big issue, it'd just take more time.
Right, he definitely seemed to be looking for something in particular and I did not have it
I am facing a task which is generating 900000 random words and then print out the most frequent one. So here is my algorithm:
1. move all number into a collection rather than printhing out them
2. for (900000...){move the frequency of Collection[i] to another collection B}
** 90W*90W is too much...