I was almost sure that they do it client-side for a joke, but if you check the browser console, you can see that they actually make a request! You can even make the same request with curl and it works!
Although, making an HTTP request manually is quite inconvenient, so I'm waiting for Python SDK.
Well the all only has 77.7% uptime maybe it just returns wrong things while it’s down, that’s probably it. Try upgrading to Enterprise that’ll probably fix it.
BTW: For a tool that actually legitimately does this, look at Semgrep. Their playground example literally assigns 1 to a variable x, after which searching for "2" finds the expression "1 + x" in the code: https://semgrep.dev/playground/s/5rKgj
That documentation is woefully inadequate. It provides only one example request, and then it shows two separate responses, and it doesn't make clear which one is associated with the request. It doesn't even describe the individual request fields, nor does it provide any response codes or a list of error codes/messages. How am I supposed to develop with this?
I do, however, appreciate the seven figure SLA. My service requires at least five nines of uptime, and seven figures is definitely more than five.
https://www.unicode.org/Public/17.0.0/ucd/extracted/DerivedN...
(Viewable / copy-able version: https://pastebin.com/fNRv3wD6)
Although, making an HTTP request manually is quite inconvenient, so I'm waiting for Python SDK.
kinda: seven
false: siete, 111, VII
Giving GitHub a run for its money, I see.
This app is ngmi
70/10, 7.1-0.1 and srqt(49) also do not return true.
Is there a published SLA for the free version?
I do, however, appreciate the seven figure SLA. My service requires at least five nines of uptime, and seven figures is definitely more than five.
Ldo.
looks like one 7
But their feeling hurts, especially primes.
- No Soc-2 compliance
- No sso support.
We asked if we could host on-prem or even byoc but that seems an impossible dream.
Smh