The number type has a step value controlling which numbers are valid (along with max and min), which defaults to 1. This value is also used by implementations for the stepper buttons (i.e. pressing up increases by step).
Simply change this value to whatever is appropriate. For money, two decimal...
> The number type has a step value controlling which numbers are valid (along with max and min), which defaults to 1. This value is also used by implementations for the stepper buttons (i.e. pressing up increases by step).
@FastSnail you can configure multiple WP instances to share the same DB with table prefixing, but that would require that you copy the sources; did you try searching/asking in the WP community on SE?
@HabibRehman Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
@Hevlastka Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
@KeirDavis Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
and @Neoares I've been catching a lot of low level mons (pidgies, weedles, etc) when I had a lot of them on the weekends I've turned my lucky egg on and evolved as many as I could. I've been walking around town as well to find pokemon that I didn't have already (with lucky egg that gives around 1.5k exp)
@FilipDupanović They're still trying to roll with the 'soft release' but the pokestop/gym points have been ported from Ingress so the lack of spots is not the reason why they stagger it so much
so no Pokemon Go for the Balkanks yet then... well, I'm at a farm, lured in two kittens, one is chewing at my laces, I guess it ain't so bad even without augmentation
Work is pushing me down a SysOps route but I'd love to start writing real time apps. So I'm guessing a bit of both but swaying more towards client for now.
my PC address is 192.168.1.100 my devices are 192.168.1.101 192.168.1.102 etc can a website know some way thats we are acessing from different devices from same IP adress ?
@Neil officially I'm a python developer however out sysadmin left and no one wanted to pick up the slack so I had to pick it up. Now they're persuaded that I'm the "sysops" person even though I have probably as much if not less knowledge as my other team mates.
@Hevlastka be careful being typecast into that role. It will potentially occupy all of your time, which is fine if that is what you want to do for a living. Otherwise be careful
@Hevlastka that exact thing happened to the now systems administrator where I worked. The guy only wanted to program but ended up being forced in that position by necessity
and (maybe out of spite?) I wanted a challenge and picked up Salt. Once you get through the docs, there is a steep learning curve; it is worth it. The event engine is awesome
@Hevlastka I didn't have much luck with any of the deployment tools... takes a lot of effort to ensure remotes aren't left in an odd state when you keep updating the sources; I guess someone that's being paid a lot for ops doesn't mind, but I only care for having my apps up-to-date and running perfectly
It is like people just want a guy that lets the employees do whatever they please, and take whatever system related blame comes their way. It doesn't work that way. .
If I had to build a development platform for a software house today, I would rely as much as possible on cloud services, or barring that, virtual computers
@FilipDupanović I've asked for a raise but I think they're more likely to get rid of me before I get one. The dream is Google - at least for few months so I can drop that on my CV but I doubt they'd hire someone with my skill level or for that matter bizarre skill set.
It's not going to go away. It will be useful for client-side development, and possibly for server-side development, too. More companies are starting to use nodejs, after all. For server-side, I think ASP.NET and Java are still strong possibilities, with ASP.NET Core on the rise. Alternatively, PHP is popular but on the decline, but isn't going away soon. TypeScript is also interesting but not too many jobs using it, yet.
Because many PHP developers are switching to NodeJS/Java/.NET/whatever, and when you're learning a new programming language, you absolutely don't pick up PHP. It's not an opinion.
Since there are still many established code bases using PHP, it's not going to go away soon. There will be jobs for it. But like COBOL, they'll become more and more of the legacy-maintaining nature jobs.
Once more Scientia Mobile sent me their Android WebView stats over the first quarter. I edited them slightly and put them online. All in all Google’s promise that they’d make sure the WebViews are up-to-date is being kept; well over 60% of the phones run the latest Chromium WebView (which went from 49 in April to 51 in June). 11% of users are still on Android WebKit; the rest is…
If all cars and their drivers in the world lined up on a oneway street across the equator and started accelerating at the same time, would earth's rotation be significantly affected?
@FlorianMargaine Ended up reading man path_resolution while ignoring my teacher in class today. That's what you were talking about when you asked how chroot works, right?
(Also, I think I might be able to shoehorn the extended attribute reader program you suggested I make into one of the assignments we'll have in class this semester!)
@MikeVinyl 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
guess the OP has an issue that he has to catch errors while setting up the promise chain within the execution block and things can go horribly wrong if he forgets to
async functions will always return a promise, so you can let errors bubble up to the caller
Hey @copy I tried console.log(JSON.stringify(thing)); it still gives me the opposite value. So in Safari only console.log(thing); on the actual object gives me the correct value for "done", but any others like "thing.done" give me the opposite value...
If I send html to javascript like this <a onClick="someFunction(this)"></a> How can I access the object property of the html I send on the javascript side?
I have an a element that when is pressed calls a javascript function, like this: <a onClick="someFunction(this)"></a>. Then on the javascript side I want to do something like this function someFunction(value) { var data = value.Object; //wrong syntax}
@DomenicDatti Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.