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requinix

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requinix last won the day on April 20

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  1. It's not clear exactly what some paths are here. On your computer, does http://localhost/assets work? Does your-website.com/assets work? And I'm not sure what "private_html" is. Do you mean "public_html"?
  2. No, but you also didn't post the full code. Most likely culprit is going to be a change in the PHP configuration. Have you checked your server error logs yet?
  3. How do you "call" them? What's the rest of the code? Is script.js meant to directly manipulate index.html or is it a utility thing and index.html has its own Javascript code? Is your question about how to get those values into index.html or is it how to get those values into the HTML itself?
  4. "Absolute address" is just you explicitly telling the browser what you want instead of letting it fill in the blanks itself. There's no difference between an absolute URL and a relative URL if they're both referring to the same resource.
  5. htaccess/htpasswd stuff works as part of the HTTP protocol, much like cookies. Same-domain AJAX shouldn't know or care that it's happening.
  6. How simple and how user-friendly do you want it? You can configure your web server to do authentication with a simple list of usernames and passwords, but it's not a fancy solution: you have to manage the list yourself, and the authentication prompt is very plain. The username is available to PHP, if you want to do something with it after the authentication happens.
  7. Looking closer, 1. You only use a #MessageContainerFoot for info-level messages. 2. You repeat that for every info message, which means you'll potentially use the same "MessageContainerFoot" ID for more than one element, which is wrong. Think about exactly what you want to do, then check your code from top to bottom to make sure that it is working the way you wanted it to. Because there's clearly some disconnect between "put #MessageContainerFoot into #MessageContainerHead" and "only use #MessageContainerFoot for info messages".
  8. Have you checked for Javascript errors? Are you sure your initial function is running? Is it possible the element did move after all and it's just not displaying how you expect it to? You have a process for doing the work. Check it, step by step, to find out where it stops working.
  9. That answer also got shut down I gave up and found the answer somewhere else and there is no trickery in the question after all. Nested hints:
  10. ^ That. Once you submit your post, the forum will do a little light processing on it, and that will screw around with whitespace. Those Code blocks also provide some simple syntax highlighting, provided you pick the right language, so please do use them.
  11. Nope, a decimal point counts as an operator (apparently). Supposedly it really is just the problem at face value: those four numbers, each used once, and as many add/subtract/multiply/divide operations (and parentheses) as you want. The way that latter point is phrased is unusual. "Unlimited supply", but you'd only ever need three... So you'd think there's a trick there, but it specifically states you have to use them as binary operators.
  12. Could swear I had a book with these sorts of puzzles but I can't find it. So I'm looking through the internet for a good source to post - not original, but it is something - and I find this one: I can't solve it. Even ran a quick script to try every possible combination of ((# _ #) _ #) _ # and nothing works. So I'm figuring there must be some trick in the phrasing, except I'm not seeing a loophole in there: "each number exactly once" using the "binary operations" of "addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division". (And in fact, creating operators like negation and exponent still isn't enough to get a solution.) Non-answer: if the goal is to be legally an adult then coming up with 22 would be fine too.
  13. If you're not running this in Docker, or perhaps even if you are, it sounds like your database configuration wasn't set up properly. Check the hostname you have it using.
  14. Is that missing one? The version I know has 11 "had"s. Though 10 works too, it's just changing which boy was correct. There's also the classic "buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo" (needs punctuation and capitalization), but that can totally be stretched out further - like pretty easily to "buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo". I should go looking for some puzzles too...
  15. That wasn't the answer? No way, that totally was the answer Then I'm thinking 11 twigs.
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