@Aaron 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.
@Freak_Droid 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.
Personally, I think cryptography is perfectly fine to do if you understand what you're doing :P Which is less than 1% of web developers... probably less since the Math involved is usually pretty hard.
I like cryptography, it's a lot of fun algorithms that make studying things like Mathematical groups feel worthy very early on.
It's a very nice way to justify the usefulness of abstract Math to students.
The hard thing about crypto is that often people - me included, use "standard, well known" schemes without understanding the underlying algorithms and the mathematical properties of everything, which makes even the slightest deviation very easy to attack.
The problem is - because of the Math involved, it has become acceptable to use complicated schemas without actually understanding what they do. We often like to joke about jQuery people who don't know the DOM or framework people... but most developers (me included from time to time) are those people when it comes to Crypto. Given the slightest deviation - I'm likely clueless, the only difference is that I'm shit scared :)
In 99% of cases they do, sometimes you need something slightly different and you're screwed :)
Even if they work nicely, there are often implementations I don't really trust implementing known schemes.
Now, I've studied (in Uni) about most of the common algorithms that are usually used for Cryptography (in "Crypto 101") - but that makes me one of those people who have some theoretical background but no practical understanding of how to correctly implement and test it, and the scope of attack vectors I know is also very limited.
Most of the security is that there are a lot of people who make mistakes that are a lot more obvious. Like Ruby people who love storing their DTOs in their database directly (So you could send "role":2 in your JSON :P). Or PHP people who love them SQL injections.
If I may suggest a traditional approach, I'd do something like this:
var group = document.createElement("div");
group.className = "btn-group";
var btn = document.createElement("button");
btn.className = "btn dropdown-toggle";
btn.title = "Manage";
btn.setAttribute("data-toggle","dropdown");
va...
@user2550807 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.
@Retsam 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 reading through the "pseduo-rules", and came across "3. Do you believe in the philosophy "Just use jQuery"?", under "Are you a help vampire". I'm curious, what does jQuery have to do with being a help vampire?
hey there when i type the query string at the end of my asp.net mvc project, like this: localhost:3456/home/applist?apps=nba&dinner it just get the string nba in my action how can i get the full string "nba&dinner" in my action?
Even though my web app is primarily in PHP, the concepts are really the same compared to JS. I have been developing a web app in PHP (and JS, HTML, CSS) for quite some time now and I have stopped and asked myself: Should I have built this in an object-oriented approach? So I thought I will ask the experts here too. Should I have built it in an object-oriented design? Is there any benefits/advantages in doing so compared to non-object-oriented design?
Well here is the actual reason I ask, in school, they teach you OOP in programming. So now I question myself whether I should follow the correct way instead of just putting out all sorts of code.
@TheGuyWhoCouldn'tTalkToTheGirl Seriously, look into MVC, it's a pretty neat (if not universally accepted) way of structuring your code when it comes to web developement
In reference to "OOP is the only way to program", I'll throw in for saying, no, that's not always true. I've recently been looking into functional programming (inspired by John Carmack's recent quakecon talk), and there are a lot of benefits there.
A point is that things are in their own little world, only dealing with the things they are concerned with thereby not clashing with anything else and very orderly. I don't have a problem debugging anything because I find the thing that isn't working perfectly labeled and structured. Just like looking in a nice filing cabinet. Procedural is like throwing all of the files into a fire and then trying to read them while hopping over it screaming.
What are the differences between these programming paradigms, and are they better suited to particular problems or do any use-cases favour one over the others?
Architecture examples appreciated!
I am reading an answer from stackoverflow about POST vs PUT. I sort of understand the problem. There is 1 thing I can't understand though: They say, "If the request is not idempotent, use POST". I mean, is there really a situation when you send request 2 or more times and the effects stay the same?
Well, you brilliant people taught me separation, encapsulation, inheritance and probably some other good stuff and OOP is the only thing I've seen handle it
@Jay 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.
OO may be the right decision for the project at hand, but you should KNOW that's the right decision by understanding the alternatives, not just making that decision because that's all you know.
//javascript (ES6):
var op = function(a,b) a+b;
//java:
var op = new BinaryOperator<int,int,int>{
public final int calculate(final int a, final int b){
return a+b
}
}
@suczker 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.