@Worf Feels like that's the situation my "teachers" from the last course I took are in. 4 weeks late they began grading projects, their deadline was 3 weeks :P
@DarkAshelin I'm surprised no one is doing anything about it though. I mean, either everyone are getting paid a crapton, or I honestly don't know why people stick around in a place like that.
(Context, I can't merge to master until all tests pass, great idea. Crappy implementation, especially with randomly failing tests all over the place XD)
Not much knowldge in JS room, so ill try here. Can anyone point me any simple "Upload, Crop, Resize" -javascript lib that handles all of those actions and does not require much time to implement to my site. Lib should support all modern browsers.
I could make 3-4 sites a year and earn as much as my dad with three degrees whose chair of an entire college department. Magento must be really hard, or the clients really stupid
When all of the commits of branch A are contained within branch B, when you merge A into B, Git will automatically fast-forward (move the master pointer to the same commit as wes-dev without creating any new commit objects..
@Worf the general approach is, you each work on your own branches
You push your own branch to origin alongside master
And you use pull requests to code review one another
And by the way, the concept of "pull request" can also be "Hey, can you review my recent work on branch X and merge to master if you think it's good?" by mail
Then the other guy is "Hmm, looks at changes, yeah man, looks good! git remote add wes URL; git pull wes-improvement wes; git merge wes-improvement master; git pull origin master
GitHub simplifies this process greatly, which is awesome
But the whole idea of Git is it being distributed. You can work, you and your partner, without going through to any sort of server.
@SecondRikudo Yeah, it is just hard for me to learn because there are zero comments and I don't know the language or the philosophy behind what goes where, so it's just slow going
Like, okay there's a .aspx page, that's basically where the presentation happens, and there's a .aspx.cs page for "code behind" the presentation, okay that makes sense still I guess, but there's also some "displaydata.cs" file like wait, why are there two .cs files? One of them appears to be just creating the DataTable dump from the SQL database and nothing else
so I dunno why that couldn't just be put in the other .cs file with literally all the other code
Their original business model was control the market, force everyone to code for IE, which forces everyone to use IE, which forces everyone to use Windows and all other services.
That business model fell apart when IE stopped being the dominant browser