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[-] undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch 1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

As a developer, users doing dumb shit like this really makes me question why I’m trying to help make life easier for them in the first place.

I have a shipping web application with fields that every shipment should have, for example “tracking number.” These people will prefix the value with “PRO#” or “#” as if the field isn’t already labeled correctly. I’ve fought for years with validation, sanitizing, etc. because having this junk data causes issues further down the line.

The same goes for other similar fields (reference numbers for example); they’ll also do everything they can to fuck up the address as much as possible so that it can’t be validated (unit number first, completely mismatched city and postal code, putting the street in a field that doesn’t belong to the address, etc).

I always try to give them the benefit of the doubt—they’re not developers. But is this something like, hard to understand for normal people? I’ve talked to them several times yet they can’t be fucked with to change their ways.

[-] SquiffSquiff@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago

Cuts both ways however:

It's common to encounter, especially HR Portals, trying to enforce a 'valid' address. Trouble is it's often an American developer and they have no idea about other countries. Here in the UK they like to insist on a 'county ' field for postal address, despite it being over thirty years since postal addresses here even had counties (which didn't match the actual counties but anyway). The drop down list they like to give isn't a list of counties either, it's an out of date list of local authorities, which were never part of anyone's address.

I worked at a place once where we had to use an internally developed form to order supplies. Form checked user name against company active directory (fine) but also checked that surname+first initial was at least 6 characters. No idea why and very resistant to changing it but my surname is 4 characters and a lot of Chinese ones are only 2...

[-] undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch 1 points 5 months ago

Luckily my application only has to work in Canada and the US.

Sometimes one of my customers will ship to Mexico, and I just don’t validate those addresses because they’re a nightmare.

Do you know of a great validator for the UK? My validation provider offers international validation but I just don’t trust that it’s accurate and take it on a country by country basis.

[-] glimse@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago

From the sign, I'm guessing this is a single location restaurant without the money to spend on AV. There is no digital signage system to update, it's just a USB with a jpg plugged into each TV and the owner would need their nephew's help updating them.

I work in commercial AV and my old company was often the first people the restaurants worked when they could afford it. I replaced several "systems" exactly like this.

this post was submitted on 23 Jan 2025
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