Guys I need some help, and my rubber duckling is not willing to help today
It's really weird this one, let's see if someone has come across it before.
I have this web app deployed that works flawlessly when deployed in my own computer
but it doesn't when deployed to production
the problem is about storing the password and retrieving it, it's stored blank and retrieved blank too
it works during login, i.e. it checks the password correctly at login, but not in the user password edit screen
the database works fine, I can call the encrypt function from the database assembly directly, logs tell me the encryption went right... but it's not being stored
is it possible that an IIS setting is blocking this request?
the server has frameworks in every language to do it for you, but the client is always fucked up
in simple terms, you could rely on your json serializer to have the same algorithms as the framework you used on your server and use it's deserialize methods to do it
which ussually works, but when it doesnt, it can easily cost weeks of time without any improvements
in this case, you definitely want to have a class that you can deserialize to
> GO is not a Transact-SQL statement; it is a command recognized by the sqlcmd and osql utilities and SQL Server Management Studio Code editor.
> SQL Server utilities interpret GO as a signal that they should send the current batch of Transact-SQL statements to an instance of SQL Server. The current batch of statements is composed of all statements entered since the last GO, or since the start of the ad hoc session or script if this is the first GO.
> Applications based on the ODBC or OLE DB APIs receive a syntax error if they try to execute a GO command. The SQL Server utilities never send a GO command to the server.
Do not use a semicolon as a statement terminator after GO.
after converting the file consisting of a particular lanuage "à¤à¤• संघरà¥à¤· but locally I am getting it on that specific lanuage only what to do?
Castling is a move in the game of chess involving a player's king and either of the player's original rooks. It is the only move in chess in which a player moves two pieces in the same move, and it is the only move aside from the knight's move where a piece can be said to "jump over" another.
Castling consists of moving the king two squares towards a rook on the player's first rank, then moving the rook to the square over which the king crossed. Castling may only be done if the king has never moved, the rook involved has never moved, the squares between the king and the rook involved are unoccupied...
my heart goes out to all americans, we live in sad days, where US is already dead, lost in a coma, i say in a coma because it's what Trump make it look like, a leaderless body, that can do nothing to stop the decease that has infected it. I am very sad :-(