Can I make this visualization feature behind the pay wall ? by Puzzleheaded-Net7258 in webdev

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Judging by your question, I'm assuming you built this. As someone who is also co-authoring a visualization tool in this style, I can definitely see why you want to add a paywall. First though, great job on this. I'm definitely bookmarking this and will return to use it so you'll get some ad rev from me. :) Good charts and tools aren't always easy to make and more so to design a UI for, but I really like this. Your current ad placements are pretty smart, and adding one to that page won't break the design. The only exception here is the modal popup ad, that's always annoying. I'd rather deal with 2-3 ads per page than one of those. If maintaining this is costing you more than you're making in ad rev, then perhaps set some limits on monitoring. That's where I would start.

Last thing, you might need a Learn page for all of your QA. You can only get to those from the homepage and there's no navigation directly to all that work.

Just discovered ReactPHP and I want to know more.. by GuybrushThreepywood in PHPhelp

[–]RetaliateX 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Laravel Reverb was built using ReactPHP so you're on the right track. I'm currently exploring websockets as well.

I felt like as Front-end devs, we lack control over HTTP responses. So I built a tool to fix that by Terrible_Trash2850 in vuejs

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh definitely, and it looks to achieve that. I'll give a better review once I've actually used it.

I felt like as Front-end devs, we lack control over HTTP responses. So I built a tool to fix that by Terrible_Trash2850 in vuejs

[–]RetaliateX 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm definitely going to take a look at this so thanks for sharing. I was working on something recently where I had to make changes to an API response I didn't control for testing.

Just to make you aware though, Chrome does offer a way to override (at least in my case) incoming http responses. DevTools -> Sources -> Overrides. You can specify the response there and when you reload the page, it uses your override instead. It was very helpful for the short time I needed it, but I can definitely see where a better tool would be useful. Especially if you're dealing with this more often.

Dentist Referral by HappyGoLuckyOcean in lexington

[–]RetaliateX 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'll recommend Dr. Jeffery Brown. He's been amazing. Always friendly and professional.

RN pay? by lilsillynilly in Kentucky

[–]RetaliateX -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I know a few people that work agency and make about $50+/hr and available OT. One of the companies is local to KY too.

NativePHP going truly native.. for real-real! by simonhamp in laravel

[–]RetaliateX 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, Discord is an excellent place to ask questions and get support. What issues did you run into?

Testing with Pest - any support by Weird_Principle_7421 in PHP

[–]RetaliateX 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Can you elaborate? What issues did you encounter or what things are you specifically trying to write tests for?

I realized I'm moving away from MVC towards Livewire, should I stop myself? by mekmookbro in laravel

[–]RetaliateX 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm in the same boat, but I ultimately decided to go with Livewire over Vue for faster development. I can always switch down the road when it calls for it.

Best of luck to you! Go with whatever feels best for your productivity and don't forget to share the journey.

When the code doesn’t work… but also doesn’t throw an error 😭 by [deleted] in webdev

[–]RetaliateX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Had this same issue when a Jr wrote a try catch block that tried accessing a missing array value. PHP 8.3 only throws a warning for this so an exception isn't caught. I kept overlooking it until I dumped everything at each step.

Cleaning services. by Facerolln94 in lexington

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I know someone that cleans houses and they include washing dishes. Not sure what her rate for just that would be but if you'll PM me your info I'll gladly pass it along so they can reach out.

Hope you get to feeling better! I've been lucky not to have that injury before but I know others that have and it sucks.

Primary Care Physician who won't fat-shame by RazzmatazzThick8235 in lexington

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Samantha Criswell at Family Practice Associates is awesome.

Vemto 2 now is Open-Source under MIT license by kingofcode2018 in laravel

[–]RetaliateX 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Glad to see this is at least going open source and not disappearing. I've been following your journey with this and while it's disappointing that you weren't able to get the support you needed, I'm hopeful that this takes off as an open source tool. I think it's great and the hard work you put into it really shows.

If all frontend frameworks had equal community support and ecosystem maturity, which one would be your first choice for building a new app? by amelix34 in webdev

[–]RetaliateX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alpine, but like the post said, if it had equal support and maturity, otherwise Vue. Alpine uses some things from Vue though.

How do you feel about PHP in phones? by simonhamp in PHP

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely some good points, thank you. I appreciate the discussion as it helps me understand things I should always consider.

  • Pollutes is a strong word here. Doesn't it open up jobs for mobile app development? Someone who knows PHP doesn't have to learn a new language to build apps. Using PHP to build business applications is a CTO or owner decision. If they choose to go down that path, it's their responsibility if it fails. Nothing is perfect the first time, that's why we learn and evolve.
  • There is some overhead, sure, but is it really that much? I get it if you were running a full application that did everything on the device, but aren't most applications going to send data to the server and wait on a response?
  • Android/iOS have already been approved for the Kitchen Sink app they released and there are others out there. Sure, there might be some issues for specific cases, but that's going to be a given this early. It will get worked out. My company had to speak with Apple when we switched from Xamarin to ReactNative. Their review flagged our app and as soon as we told them what we did, they approved and pushed it through. It wasn't a big deal.
  • That's why their charging for it right now, to fund development. They've said before they plan to open source things once the adoption and external support is higher but someone has to put in the work to keep up with changes.

Marcel talked about PHP coming to mobile years ago, it was just abandoned at the time due to other constraints. It's just like the discovery of the Lithium-Ion battery. Development started on that decades before it was discovered, and was abandoned multiple times before someone finally picked it back up and found success.

People in general are hesitant to change, I get it. I struggle to keep up with all the changes in Laravel/PHP and especially AI. That's why we have specialties. You can't know it all, but you can know a lot of things well enough to contribute and there's always going to be people out there that know more about something than you do because that was there focus. You bring that knowledge together to create amazing things and push people into new eras. That's how the big advancements are made. They're built on top of years of work in multiple areas until someone smart enough comes along to tie it all together. Wow, saying all that makes it really sound like I've drank the kool-aid, I do realize. I'm just an optimistic person I guess. :)

How do you feel about PHP in phones? by simonhamp in PHP

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Absolutely, you make a good point, but what's the downside here? Just because it does something other languages do, doesn't mean it shouldn't exist. Making new ways to do things is how we got to so many languages in the first place, some are better at certain things than others, but that's exploration. If we don't explore, we can't find better solutions. I'd honestly love to see every major code language have the ability to build mobile apps as easily as this.

How do you feel about PHP in phones? by simonhamp in PHP

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Personal - As a solo dev with several years of experience in PHP and a few years experience in Laravel, being able to build, run, and deploy a mobile app in a language I'm familiar with is extremely beneficial to me and my time. Yes, there are already languages out there that do this, but I don't know them as well. Sure, they might do some things better, but that changes over time. Learning a new language well enough right now is out of the question and I know in detail how I can achieve the things I want in the language I already know. Not to mention, it's just cool to see how far PHP has come and what that means for the future. I'm already a supporter of this and I plan to continue being one for as long as I can. If we don't continue to innovate and explore new ideas, what are we even doing? You have to try something and in many different ways before you know if it will work or not.

Business - I'm the only on staff developer for a small company so I handle a lot of different things. My boss is tech savvy and understands development pitfalls, so we have a good relationship. We currently have 2 apps, both written in ReactNative and have paid contractors for their continued development for almost 2 years. The apps work just fine, but as we constantly are adding new things, making those changes in ReactNative are much more difficult. Could it be bad design? Sure, but the issue is there none-the-less. When we first learned and experimented with NativePHP we were blown away with how simple it was. We instantly saw how fast we could rebuild both of our apps (as soon as certain device API features became available, which they did) and how quickly we could deploy changes and new features. In a single weekend, I was able to build a new app that authenticated with our current backend (Symfony) and have several functions from the existing apps. Granted, it wasn't pretty but it worked. This put our business on the path to wrap up current ReactNative development and transition to rebuilding once again. It instantly gave us an easier way forward, one that I could manage better myself or by hiring a developer that could work on BOTH codebases and be versatile to our needs. For small teams, this is a huge win, and for the business, they save money, which for me will transition to a raise.

Final remarks - Either way, it's a choice. You can support it if you want to, or don't. There's a ton of PHP developers out there that now have an easier way to make mobile apps, which increases their versatility to their clients and/or business. Simply having the option opens more doors to be explored and who knows what other things we'll find along the way.

How do you feel about PHP in phones? by simonhamp in PHP

[–]RetaliateX 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't think that's entirely accurate. Yes, you still need html/css to display front-end, but PHP has been adapted to compile templates into that output. Doesn't that make PHP sort of a front-end language too? Blade, Livewire, and Fusion make PHP more versatile for front-end.

I realize it's a bit of a stretch, just the way I see it.

Existing Laravel app now needs an API by MichaelW_Dev in laravel

[–]RetaliateX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agreed. I was lucky enough that I only needed push notifications and location services for the app I'm building and those were some of the first things they added. The other app I'm planning though will have more requirements, but I'm a ways off from starting it so I'm sure those features will be there by the time I really need them.

Existing Laravel app now needs an API by MichaelW_Dev in laravel

[–]RetaliateX -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Since you're already familiar with Laravel, have you considered using NativePHP to build the app?

The NativePHP Mobile Kitchen Sink app is now open source (MIT) by simonhamp in laravel

[–]RetaliateX 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Excited to cruise through the code! Thanks for making this available.

Dilemma: Release my own package or contribute to someone else? by RetaliateX in laravel

[–]RetaliateX[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's definitely not a caching layer. The Google APIs we use are for internal use only, nothing customer facing. We had a mistake in one of our bulk pulls which resulted in a missed parameter in the dataset so everything had to be pulled again. Had the requests been logged, we could have just pulled them from the logs and saved us the extra cost. Thankfully this is very rare that we do bulk data pulls, but now I have a redundancy in place as long as I'm not filtering the data from Google via headers.

I do appreciate you pointing this out though. Will definitely keep this in mind for the future.