Re: mysqli --- who does the switching? [message #182026 is a reply to message #181999] |
Sat, 29 June 2013 22:56 |
bill
Messages: 310 Registered: October 2010
Karma:
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Senior Member |
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Don't worry about the "bashers"; they don't know any better most of the
time. That said, if there are pieces of advice you don't wish to follow,
just say so an move on. BEWARE however, of dismissing good,
well-intentioned advice; think about WHY they "bash" you about switching
to MYSQL and respond logically and without emotion; leave emotion to the
others; it'll never get you anywhere on a newsgroup.
And returning name calling with more name calling is NEVER productive if
you're really looking for assistance.
On 2013-06-28 8:39 PM, richard wrote:
> Y'all keep bashing me about switching to mysqli.
> Well buttheads, as I see it, it ain't MY choice.
> It is the decision of those that host the servers.
> After all, where does mysql or mysqli reside? On my machine?
>
> You also say I never read the frickin manuals.
> BULLSHIT!
> I read them a lot. On practically every issue I come across.
> Just so that I can try to understand what it is I want to do.
What DO you want to do? It seems to have been trimmed from the
discussion or I just don't see it. I don't have time to reconstruct this
whole thread to see what your first queries were. Always keep your quest
visible in your posts.
>
> But there are those times when the manuals don't always cover what I want
> to know.
Not unusual: it's good to explain WHAT you've read or researched; others
may be prone to suggest other places where you could get more targetted
advice.
> I also do a ton of searching through google.
> BEFORE I post here.
> And sometimes I find what I need AFTER I post here.
No help; no details of what you did, nothing to try to add for you to
further your research.
>
> I may have been tagged as "stupid", but that doesn't mean I am not capable
> of learning.
Who cares? Don't sweat the emotional comments of others. It's not useful
and is always off topic.
>
> On my music site, I have written the scripts to make it work the way I want
> and I'd say I've done a damn decent job of it.
> And if something doesn't validate, I find out why and correct it.
> That's a lot more than what major powerhouses like Google can say.
>
> Running google.com through the validator shows 25 error and 4 warnings.
> mroldies.net validates with only 2 minor warnings.
> msnbc.com contains 140 errors and 31 warnings.
> microsoft.com contains 520 errors and 482 warnings!
>
> And these highly professional people get paid for their shitty ass work?
When you're trying to make such comparins, they will fail because you
can only scrape PART of their code to submit. You have no idea what's
missing in the sense of code because a lot of it happens server-side and
you'll never see it; that's why they're done server-side: Hacker and
Cracker protection is one reason.
IMO you're comparing apples & oranges and the oranges' data isn't valid.
I would hope you've been able to take this as the constructive criticism
it's intended to be and not in a derogatory sense, which it is not.
>
Good luck,
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