hal56

joined 3 months ago
[–] hal56@programming.dev 1 points 2 months ago

Whats the best alternative that you know?

[–] hal56@programming.dev 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

true, but I don't think it's that alone, there are lot of other providers on there that don't get anywhere near the same number of bad reviews or intensity of reviews as CF. There are people really hating on CF there.

 

I recently stumbled across Cludflares trustpilot page and the reviews were completely mismatched from the way I have experienced people talk about them on forums. The reviews on trustpilot make them sound awful, but I have only seen recommendations for them on forums, often people say they are the best DNS provider.

Whats up with that? Does anyone know why there is such a disparity.

[–] hal56@programming.dev 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Where did you learn TDD. I mean I know the concept, but are there good courses for how to implement it into modern web stacks like React, Svelte etc

[–] hal56@programming.dev 2 points 3 months ago

ok thanks, that's very helpful.

[–] hal56@programming.dev 2 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Since they have access to their DNS records via their domain registrar, they can set up the necessary MX records to make Gmail their mail exchange right? And then get rid of the web hosts email

[–] hal56@programming.dev 4 points 3 months ago

ok thanks, that what I thought, but just want to be 100% before my friend starts changing setting's that could affect his business email

[–] hal56@programming.dev 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

thanks for the info, I've updated my posted with a bit more info and why we are asking on here

 

A friends business email goes through to his gmail account, but he also pays for an email account with his web host. Is it necessary to keep paying for this email account, does he need it if the email goes through to gmail?

EDIT: What I know is, they both receive and send emails from @theirdomain.com via their Gmail. They have their domain registered with a seperate company than the web host and have access to their DNS records there. With the hosting company they pay for email in addition to their hosting plan.

My friend wants to avoid the extra cost of the email account if possible, and I thought it wasn't required to have an email with your your webhost if setting up the DNS records properly, but not 100% sure. We wanted to get independent advice before proceeding, since the host has an incentive for my friend to stay on the email plan.

 

I am really struggling to include proper testing practices into my code and would appreciate any advice on how to get going. I work in web dev so my I am interested in how to properly implement a suite of tests for websites and incorporate into it a CI/CD pipeline.

I find a lot of tutorials teach the most basic types of unit tests, 90% of the time most instructors teach how to write a test to sum two numbers, but when it comes to writing real unit test I find it hard to know what I should be testing. I learnt some cypress and have gotten better at including end-to-end testing because that makes more sense to me, but I still feel I am way short of where I should be.

How can I move forward? Did anyone else find themselves in my situation and find good resources to help them learn? Thx

[–] hal56@programming.dev 1 points 3 months ago

Yes, the price and eventually I would like to get a reseller account to host more sites.

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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by hal56@programming.dev to c/webdev@programming.dev
 

Hi, I am looking for a WordPress host in the UK (or europe) and I have been researching them extensively, but would appreciate hearing people's experiences.

My research has led me to a Kualo (www.kualo.com), they offer free SSL, unlimited bandwidth, have good reviews on TrustPilot, provide cloudflare CDN, and have a faily decent knowledge base.

Has anyone used them and can offer personal experience? Or any other hosting recommendations? Thanks