Show Navigation
Notices tagged with php, page 2
-
Ran updates on the $EMPLOYER iPhone and laptop. Did not log into #LinkedIn / #LockedOut Learning (so no #PHP or #PowerShell today), too much was going wrong ... did not want to add yet another factor.
-
One of the things I like about this #PHP course is that he talks about some of the real-life issues that one would face in building a site ... and things like using helper functions placed in a separate file (and using require_once to import those functions into each page) and using PHP's built-in authentication functions for logging in / out.
-
Also logged into the $EMPLOYER paid #LinkedIn / #LockedOut Learning account. I am watching #Bash and #PHP videos today.
-
What I didn't do today:
* call to have my $EMPLOYER cell phone replaced
* log into my $EMPLOYER laptop to run updates
* log into #LinkedIn / #LockedOut Learning to complete some #PHP and #PowerShell training
-
Today was supposed to be $EMPLOYER day ... log into the agency laptop, connect to the network, run updates and attend to all agency business, take #PHP and #PowerShell courses on #Lynda.com —> #LinkedIn / #LockedOut Learning. It is almost 11:00 PDT and I have started none of that yet.
-
@musicman Oh, wow! I remember learning to install #Apache and #PHP from source 20+ years ago. Can't remember whether we actually compiled #MySQL or just extracted a precompiled tarball. On pre-RHEL #Red_Hat Linux and #FreeBSD.
.
Was fun, but upgrading could be tricky.
-
Updates finally installed. I did not log into #Lynda.com / #LockedOut Learning / #LinkedIn Learning and watch #PowerShell & #PHP videos today.
Speaking of PHP videos, does anyone have a recommended video series for PHP and the frameworks CodeIgniter, Symfony, Laravel ?
-
Finishing today's #YoCo ( #yogurt and #coffee ) and preparing to log into the $EMPLOYER laptop to install updates and go through some #PowerShell and #PHP courses on the #LinkedIn / #LockedOut Learning (former #Lynda.com) site.
This morning is the 2nd consecutive upweight (2lb in 2 days), despite getting nearly 10K steps in the various stores that I visited yesterday.
#TZAG everyone.
-
Now watching some #PHP videos on the former #Lynda.com site ( now called #LinkedIn / #LockedOut Learning ) before I go back to the #Lua videos.
I had to take a time out from Lua because none of the (book and video) examples of "first class functions ... pass the function to that one" were working for me and I could not see why.
The odd thing is that the weird issues with scoping that I saw the past few days are gone today. Lua 5.1.5 on #Win10 1909 and Lua 5.2.4 on #Kubuntu 18.04, #Linux kernel 4.15
-
10 things not to do in #PHP 7. https://kinsta.com/blog/10-things-not-to-do-in-php-7/
-
What version of #CentOS is that? On #Debian 10 (I think it is “Buster”, but I’m not sure about the codenames), #PHP is at version 7.3. I think Debian 9 may still have php7.2.
-
!fnetworks !fnetworks I have noticed some excessive slowness since the server move. It appears to be partly caused by some change in #PHP and partly by a more complex database query. Currently investigating, but ping me on #XMPP when it get really bad. If I'm home and near my computer, I can restart #PHP-FPM, which speeds things up considerably.
-
@musicman Is https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.get-included-files.php enough, or were you wanting something outside of #PHP?
-
@musicman is https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.get-included-files.php enough, or were you wanting something outside of the #PHP?
-
@musicman I don't really have any #Java language thoughts. In the late #1990s and early #2000s, I enjoyed the courses I took which used Java (and also the courses which used C++, #Perl, #PHP; but I disliked #JavaScript, and really disliked #VBScript and #VB 5 / 6). But especially since taking this job 15 years ago, I've barely touched it.
-
That’s interesting. There’s a 3rd party #PHP - #MySQL connector library called #MeekroDB. http://meekro.com/
I have no opinion about it.
-
We're hiring on my team again!
https://nu.federati.net/url/249865
Responsibilities:
Represent Perforce as the first point of contact for customer’s technical requests.
Review and research customer issues to determine and provide the best resolution.
Develop and maintain technical expertise in assigned areas of product functionality and utilize it effectively to help customers.
Resolve database and performance issues.
Research, document, and escalate cases according to procedure.
Provide customer driven feedback to functional areas in order to influence process/product improvements.
Author technical documents on common issues and solutions in order to build the knowledge base.
Positive attitude - Support engineers are required to be respectful, fair, gracious, and knowledgeable.
Create and set up test environments to reproduce and resolve customer issues.
Recreate customer environments to reproduce issues and experiment with possible solutions.
Requirements:
Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science or similar or relevant work experience
2 or more years’ experience providing technical support directly to enterprise customers
Knowledge of C/C++ and #Java and experience with #PHP/MySQL
Knowledge of Unix & #Linux
Basic networking experience
Experience with Perforce, #Git, or other version control software is desirable
Experience in customer support or customer-facing role
Strong analytics and problem-solving skills
Strong debugging skills
Ability to work in a team environment and contribute ideas and improvements
Able to work well under pressure and prioritize accordingly
-
Taking a brief time away from learning !Dlang and #PHP to go through a couple of #Ocaml tutorials before I return to $EMPLOYER's garbage training courses tomorrow.
-
I haven’t really touched #PHP since around 2004, but the current course series has rekindled my interest.
-
#jobposting
My team in Minneapolis !minnesota is hiring. There is nothing public yet, but if you're looking, hit me up.
A bunch of our stuff is #opensource (BSD two-clause for just about everything...maybe everything), and all of it has free trials, so https://www.perforce.com/downloads and https://swarm.workshop.perforce.com/
We support products on Windows, Mac, and #Linux. Occasionally, you might see some old Solaris or BSD servers (or some other random stuff), but that really doesn't happen much.
We support #git and #Jenkins integrations, as well as #maven and a bunch of other stuff I don't ever touch, but people on my team do.
Apache knowledge would be useful, but not required. My colleague who started the same day I did doesn't really do any scripting. He's pretty much a pure server performance guy. That said, we support APIs for #ruby, #python, #js, #groovy, #perl, #java, #c++ and #php. Also, #C knowledge would be useful
Basically, if you have any cross-platform experience at all, and are technical, you'd be a good fit.