*I favor the KISS principle, and I don't see who would need to fine-tune which parameter can be saved by user, or not.
Keeping things more simple means less documentation to write, less parameters to worry about for sysadmins, etc. Not to mention less code bloat which leads to slower performance.*
Sure, sounds like a good idea. Let's keep it super simple. :)
-------------------------------------------------- Best regards, Zeeshan Mughal Email: zeeshanmughal@ieee.org Web: http://www.zixan.info
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 4:02 PM, Marc Delisle marc@infomarc.info wrote:
Zeeshan M. a écrit :
/ I'm not sure we agreed on the list that there was a need to enable/disable each setting one by one. / Allowing sysadmins to enable/disable each setting does not make code either more complex, or trivial to write. I think that it would give them more options certainly; do they really need these options or not differs from person to person. What are your thoughts?
I favor the KISS principle, and I don't see who would need to fine-tune which parameter can be saved by user, or not.
Keeping things more simple means less documentation to write, less parameters to worry about for sysadmins, etc. Not to mention less code bloat which leads to slower performance.
/I agree with Herman's reaction, so it could be $cfg['Servers'][$i]['//userprefs']['enable'] = true|false;/
Sounds good. May be $cfg['Servers'][$i]['enable_userprefs'] would be better since enable is the only sub-array of "userprefs"?
Ok, especially if there are no other fine-tuning user prefs parameters ;)
Best regards, Zeeshan Mughal Email: zeeshanmughal@ieee.org mailto:zeeshanmughal@ieee.org Web: http://www.zixan.info
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 12:58 PM, Marc Delisle <marc@infomarc.info mailto:marc@infomarc.info> wrote:
Zeeshan M. a écrit : > Hi, > > I added configuration vars for all the settings currently under > consideration. Please let me know if I am following the
convention
> correctly, and/or if there is anything else. > > I decided to get this done first as I would need to access these
vars
> for user interfaces. Zeeshan, I don't understand why you are using a syntax like $cfg['perm_storage'][$i]['font_size'] = TRUE; As you are using $i it means this is a setting per server, right? So it should be, IMO, something like $cfg['Servers'][$i]['userprefs']['font_size']; which would follow the other $cfg['Servers'][$i] settings. And perm_storage is not meaningful, again IMO. I agree with Herman's reaction, so it could be $cfg['Servers'][$i]['userprefs']['enable'] = true|false; By the way, I'm not sure we agreed on the list that there was a need
to
enable/disable each setting one by one. -- Marc Delisle http://infomarc.info
-- Marc Delisle http://infomarc.info
Enter the BlackBerry Developer Challenge This is your chance to win up to $100,000 in prizes! For a limited time, vendors submitting new applications to BlackBerry App World(TM) will have the opportunity to enter the BlackBerry Developer Challenge. See full prize details at: http://p.sf.net/sfu/Challenge _______________________________________________ Phpmyadmin-devel mailing list Phpmyadmin-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/phpmyadmin-devel