It might have been 10 years ago, but not anymore. There are better options now, and the best option: Learn how to use nginx/Apache and deploy stuff yourself.
What about performance? There is nothing inherently slow in cpanel and if you care about performance don't use the LAMP stack anyway or solve performance issues at the caching level.
@GabrielTomitsuka you should really stop listening to people who drank all sorts of cool juice and feel smart because they know how to edit a configuration file.
@BenjaminGruenbaum : i'm sure that they have googled these stuff if they wants to do something. Using cpanel doesn't require searching because of it's nice UI
@asendia Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@Mosho since we both edited the same apache configuration files several times - are you telling me that you actually understand everything there? Can you actually tell me how Apache's pipeline works from end to end and where to configure each part?
@Mosho Compare how easy it is to use an automated tool like an Azure website to what we had to set up on a vm with apache for SA and AR - which was easier? If Microsoft weren't retarded with their optimizations we'd still be using a website instead of all that configuraiton, and backups and all that.
@GabrielTomitsuka sure you do buddy, I'm sure you know exactly how nginx works from the ground up and so does everyone else who needs to upload a website.
@copy because it's annoying when people claim "people using tool X" are stupid or that "tool X" is retarded when it solves a big use case for a lot of people - setting up a server is not trivial and there are a ton of things people can (and do) get wrong.
@copy I've seen people fuck up configuration files for apache/nginx so many times. People don't understand what the different modules do or why - most people who do web development don't understand HTTP to begin with and certainly don't know what an handshake is.
Hi, I have a suggestion for an edit in the OP of a question I answered... but I do not have enough reputation to make the edit. Would anyone be interested in looking at it?
@JacksonHunt Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
I'm sure @GabrielTomitsuka has intimate understanding of what the different configuration options in nginx and apache mean and so does @Mosho but I on the other hand am shit-scared when I mess with our servers and configuration files because every option has a lot of implications.
Lots of things are turned on by default for development and you need to turn them off for example.
Rails was infamous for this. FFS GitHub got hacked (twice I think?) for a misconfiguration in their rails setup.
Now I'm sure everyone else here is much smarter than me or GitHub, but I just don't think that saying a tool is terrible for making developers not make these choices :)
They wouldn't use cPanel to begin with because it doesn't do what they need - but for most people making small websites for Boyde's Toast it works just fine.
Of course, except @Unihedro who obviously is a 1337 hacker who knows better™ than to use tools.
@BenjaminGruenbaum That (the second part) kind of goes without saying, not that I am one to assume.
I use the term "coding" in this case because I'm building with a structure defined by a programming language specification, unlike activities likewise such as programming (the umbrella term for making things work) and debugging (fixing things).
@connormartin Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
I saw a video from Mozilla in which the guy used get method on FormData. Although he was using the latest snapshot from the trunk so maybe it is coming? @Zirak
I'm having an issue with getting a Chart.js chart to display data. I want to assign something to variables in Twig and use those variables as the data source for the chart but I'm not sure how to do it correctly. Does anyone have experience?
What I meant is, open the console, and change the inspector frame from the frames dropdown to your iframe. Then execute the commands there as if you had opened the iframe in the tab.
@AwalGarg well thx for help. Ill drop this advanced idea, since $('iframe').contents().prop('designMode','on'); works, and on all iframes.. ill go from there. Ive no time to learn devTools, for know. And i just understood, youtube-edu might be for losers -> time wasting, you must take what youve been given. Faster is reading and parsing needed in brain than skipping spooned videos.
@SomeKittens Famous ones (and less so) by Asimov, H.G. Wells, Philip K. Dick (I still can't get Ubik out of my head), I don't think I can enlighten you in that department
@SomeKittens If you want to be a better human being I always recommend "The Little Prince", "Catch 22", "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" and "Sputnik Sweetheart"
The Circle is a 2013 novel by American author Dave Eggers. It chronicles tech worker Mae Holland as she joins a powerful Internet company which starts out as an incredibly rewarding experience, but as she works there longer things start to fall apart. It is Dave Eggers’s tenth work of fiction.
== Plot summary ==
The book follows the story of Mae Holland, a recent college graduate who lands a job at The Circle, a powerful technology company run by the so-called "Three Wise Men." Mae owes her job largely to her best friend and college roommate, Annie, one of the forty most influential people in the...
@AwalGarg I left it undefined, it's up to you to decide how you'd like to improve; the books I mentioned are tools to help you decide what that means and how to do it.
Say I have a quaternion rotation q and a vector v, and I want to animate q such that the forward vector of q gets closer to v and the up vector of q stays fixed. I'm a bit lost as to how to achieve this. Halp?