Here's a quick one. Interestingly, it should still be pretty efficient, since it only iterates over the terms once. It can only work on numbers between 0 and 255...
array_shift($argv);
$str = str_repeat(chr(0), 256);
foreach ($argv as $key => $element) {
$str[(int) $element] = chr($key ...
How can I prevent variables from being declared without using the var keyword? Can I set NetBeans to warn me about this?
For example, I want a warning or something on this:
var testing = 5;
// ...
testin = 2; // Woops, typo!
Good morning. I'm using jQuery to retrieve a page using $.get. I works great, however, if the image on the page has a relative path, it tries to load the image from wrong URL. Is it possible to specify with $.ajax or $.get so that all the content on the page returned should fetch the images by some x url?
I hope my question is clear, if not, I'll try to explain better.
Hmm, the content page is within /temp/Dialog/... and has absolute path for the images. And the page where I load the content is /, so it tries to load the image test.jpg from /test.jpg instead of /temp/Dialog/test.jpg
@raRaRa Maybe you could do some clever function in jQuery that after loading the page in just goes through all the <img /> and appends the correct/absoulte path to the src.
@ircmaxell I made a new user and group with access to /var/www but when I log in via ftp with that user, it tries to open /home/username (which doesn't even exist) ... so I created the directory, and then realised that the user can traverse the whole server from FTP, but can't change any files whatsoever.
Usually, you don't want to do this. It's a problem of latency when viewing the web page in a browser. Each separate javascript file defeats caching and requires additional transfer time before a page can load. It's commonly advised to combine JS files wherever possible and practical to better ...
Usually, you don't want to do this. It's a problem of latency when viewing the web page in a browser. Each separate javascript file defeats caching and requires additional transfer time before a page can load. It's commonly advised to combine JS files wherever possible and practical to better ...
I've a bit of an odd issue with FCKEditor in my MVC project.
I've essentially got a View which renders a Partial View containing my FCKEditor (javascript, html and any other bits to make my control reusable throught my app)
I'm calling FCKEditor by doing the following:
<script src="<%= U...
I'm planning on using vsftpd to act as a secure ftp server, but I am having
difficulty controlling the linux users that will be used as ftp logins.
The users are required to be "jailed" into a specific directory (and
subdirectories) and have full read/write access.
Requirements:
- User account...
@Greg: That's a book you'll read once cover-to-cover, then reference every once in a while for the rest of your career (and re-read every now and then)...
If there was one book to recommend to programmers out of all others, this would be it
@Tek - if you get another 408 please mention it in here or any other room I see, I need the URL you were trying to hit, your IP when it happened, and the exact time (and your timezone so I can convert)
Well, the question is, how do you want it to work... There are a few patterns built around this concept.
If you want to get one:
If you have many similar things (like types of people), then you might want an Abstract Factory. In that case, you'd likely not want it to be static. But then a...
doesn't like e-reader reference/geek books. I like my e-reader for novels and casual reading, but I prefer hard-copies of reference books so I can see and feel and annotate, etc...
@Shikiryu: I'm the kind of guy that I love to loan out good books and pass them around. I have my reference library, but I also let anyone borrow whatever they want
haha @Shikiryu as people my coworkers are alright.. but I have to explain such basic things, such as basic web concepts. For instance one of our devs had no idea what ftp was.
@Raynos It's a minor distinction, but I think one worth making. Since there are plenty of non-professional developers who still could benefit from reading it...
@Shikiryu I spend about $1k per year (give or take) on books...
I read a fair bit of fiction, a good bit of abstract programming (non-language or domain specific), a lot of math (60% math), a bit of physics, and some philosophy...
And out of fiction, prob $50 to $100 per year, since they tend to be cheaper than good books otherwise
@Nyuszika7H: likely performance... And/or the fact that they just didn't include it, and it's not seen as an important enough feature to add it back in...
<table>
<th></th>
<th></th>
<th></th>
<th> // here is your content for that value
<div> // opening a div? :S ok fair enough
<table> // what are you doing?
<tr><td>
<table> // Seriously? another table?
<tr><td>
// your content
</close junk></th>
</table>
The size of the app may warrant an OOP architecture, but I know from the offset that no one else will be extending this code and that it will be a 'closed' project once I've finished it. As such, it seems that setting things up for the future, and creating those sort of protections and contrac...