Well, I'll try investigating by myself some more. Yesterday, I was slightly confused and slightly frustrated (oh, and sleepy) so in the end I just came here and posted my question. If it still doesn't work, I'll post a working example.
I really shouldn't do things first thing in the morning as I even failed to ask the question that I actually wanted to ask and now I know the answer myself :I
I'm thinking of a theme for my thesis paper and need some opinions. Would writing a CMS that always generates static files upon every update would be actually beneficial? It would be aimed at people who update their websites rarely (about once a week or less) or to people that have, let's say, 5 static pages and they would like to have the ability to change their content in an CMS environment without fiddling with HTML
Well, I gathered a lot of useful information today. I should probably rest for today and have a go at optimizing my little tool tomorrow. Thank you for your input everyone c:
Yeah, I'll use a query like that for creating a temporary table with the new data and then compare it with the existing on the backup database. Though that's the one query I can't think of. I mean I have to compare if it exists, if the "likes" and "source" are updated and update them. Same for new or deleted tags.
I just can't wrap my head around how to properly write the SQL queries I need. We had like a full year on databases, half a year dedicated to SQL and all we did was SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, INNER/LEFT/RIGHT JOIN, ORDER BY, GROUP BY and that's pretty much it
@ThW oh it's not an app, just my blog's backup tool. Though it takes 10 minutes to fully resync all of the data so I was wondering how could I optimize it
I wonder what impact rate would have using single quotes instead of doubles on something like a Raspberry Pi. Though I use new lines and color codes so I can't switch to single quotes probably :/
It's just that I see double quotes used when there are no variables nor new lines or other things that can be used and that somehow doesn't go well with me...
@Tsea did you try $array = json_decode('[{"name":"Penguins.jpg","featured":"0","category":"0","caption":"","alt_text":"","blog_ide":"ugNQpbo6G7E"}]'); echo $array['name']; ?
I think that they probably silently sign you up for some "special services" that bill you annually. Now that I reread the Privacy Policy it only talked about email and credit cards and no mention of a phone number nor anything related to it
I just randomly discovered it through stackoverflow and that massive discount really interested. Not in a way that "I want to buy it" but "what's the catch?"
I tried accessing the same website through a proxy and it doesn't show the offer while when I access from my IP, it shows that the offer is limited to my country