@tereško Well at some point, yes. But for starters it is good to know the principles of how those problems are solved. I might come acros one and knowledge of a pattern for such type of problem can be usefull.
@tereško I have a confession to make, I have sinned :) Currently I do use singletons. Since I see it like that at the moment. I see that I need them for a correct work. I might be mistaken, but I will rethink after application based on my framework is complete. Knowing pitfalls of your work is a good thing I think, since no one uses it exept you I see no harm.
im gonna take another stab at my Factoritis problem ...
btw , @edorian , i need your opinion : would you say that basic MVC components have the same lifetime ( and thus could be created by same factory ) or not
said components being : domain objects , datamappers , views , controllers and maybe request objects ( i still think that this is a mistake )
I just saw someone - really this is not a joke - recommending the use of chr(15).chr(10) instead of "\r\n". And if I understood correctly he does that because \r\n only works in double quotes and he doesn't use those as they slow.
I have a little pet project, for a school group, not storing any important data. I do however want to protect the passwords when they log in(people reuse passwords and whatnot). How would I do this without a self-signed ssl certificate that pops up and asks for an exception?
@teresko I want to protect the passwords as they are sent over the wire to the server when logging in. They are already hashed and whatnot on the server side.
> Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning.
remember, the weakest point is the strength of the entire application
user406009
@ircmaxell It is only a small project. All the data on it is worthless, the only thing of worth is the user's password which he/she probably uses on every single website out there ...
@teresko Oh shoot you are right. "Access rich user profile data
Accepting OpenIDs gives access to a rich set of user data that would otherwise require the completion of lengthy registration forms to obtain. Many OpenID providers collect and share a wide range of demographic information, including name, date of birth, location, gender and an email address. This data allows you to optimize your marketing efforts and tailor your website to better target the needs of your core audience."
@NikiC Well, it may not be truely no-op. It could be there to be a CPU bound timing structure (to make sure code isn't executed for so many cpu cycles)
I’ve been working on developer-facing software and SDKs in PHP for nearly a decade, and through the experience of supporting these developers, I’ve learned something interesting about the PHP community at-large. The majority of PHP developers have a very good understanding of native types (e.g., strings, arrays, integers, booleans). Since they’re the lowest common denominators of the PHP langua…
im going to create a new web application that is very customized.
it will contain images, that are fully searchable - in a very, very customized way.
when you click on the pictures you can add comments and so on.
it requires users to be registered, but the registration/login process will be hi...
so how to print out utf -8 chars in browser with php? I keep getting stupid letters although I am adding header for UTF-8 content type and also use utf8_encode function
Do I need html code in th php file in order to see UTF-8 chars?
try dropping the utf8_encode function and make sure that you are using utf8 everythere. I.e. your files should be saved as utf8, your databases and tables should and your database connection too
@tereško well it was Unicode UTF-8 and when I changed to cyrilic -1251 I got the right output in the browser. Why it is not working with UTF-8 Unicode?
How should I save text with arbitrary encoding to db If I have to change each time to differenet code page?
I use Notepad++, the encoding which the file is saved with is UTF-8 without BOM. I enter the text with unicode chars by changing the locale on windows with al-shift command
@tereško u are rigth. Anyway when i enter UCS-2 to the header like this header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=UCS-2'); FF finds that it is win-1251 and shows me the right chars
posted on December 11, 2011 by Mayflower Blog - PHP
html5 is one of the hottest buzzwords in the web and everyone is using or talking about it. Google is ahead everyone else for sure with Google Docs, their web based office suite and with Chrome OS, an operating system which only needs a browser (from the users view). But also Facebook, they working on their own application platform codenamed Spartacus is based on html5. Even classi…
posted on December 11, 2011 by Federico Cargnelutti
Last year Zone-H reported a record number of 1.5 million websites defacements. 1 million of those websites where running Apache. When it comes to configuring a web server, some people tend to turn everything on by default. Developers are happy because the functionality that they wanted is available without any extra configuration, and there is a reduction in support calls due to functionality …
@ircmaxell Could you tell me what the alternative servers are? On my DreamHost hosting, I'm offered Lighttpd and nginx. Are those the two big other ones or are there even more...?
Well, there are plenty of Windows hostings out there, but not many Node.js hostings... so someone who wants to host Node.js apps, can just use one of those Windows hostings...
I mean.. if you do development with node you kinda should spend the 5$/month for a virtual server
Then again everyone should do that instead of working around hosters that don't even offer custom build php versions.. but thats another rant for another time
I'm currently paying 10€ for the one box that does all the money-relevant-stuff and the rest is hosted at a friends basement with a 100Mbit up/down stream
If I'd need a real box somewhere I'd go with co-location or spending some more money but thats not the case atm :)
yeah, I've got a pair of dual xeon boxes with 4gb ram and hardware raid 1 2x147gb SCSI U320 drives. a fairly beefy box circa 2006... Does my uses quite well
It's good enough for a machine in a friends basement where I've got at least half the bandwidth for the server ;) But actually it's quite a whole lot :)
I have a site running on a pair of servers in Russia and pretty much all visitors coming from Germany, so I have pretty high latencies and the bandwidth isn't nice either ;) But I haven't yet seen someone complain about that.
You serve 5% of your static asserts from that line at most (caches) so that's not all that much and with an average of 100kb per page (which is a lot) you can serve 128 requests per seconds
The truth in my eyes is that performance is a nice feature if you need to compensate for something else ;) If you have very good content the performance aspect isn't of such importance anymore ;)
so that regex would report pretty much every utf-16 file as binary
@edorian I would stick with only allowing utf-8 encoded strings or providing some way to specify the encoding. Because you just can't make it "work" with every encoding
Or even better provide a different comparison function for binary content ;)
Because I don't think that you can really safely recognize that by yourself. Even with printable chars the content might still be meant to be binary and only by chance is printable ;)
@ircmaxell So you got any better idea for the regex without using mb_ functions? Because It kinda works better than what's there for all the test cases and I'd really like to get rid of that :)
@NikiC Yeah, and thats ok normalisation too. If you don't have an ö using oe is totally ok. Banks do it too
@NikiC That's an option too but not breaking cli output when comparing something with normal string assertions is always a good thing. And once that doesn't work out for a number of people that's something that should be done, yeah
@edorian Well, if it's only about not breaking CLI and not about semantics, then it would be good to find out which characters break the commonly used clis and only block those. It's probably only a few, isn't it?
Here you go (In PHP's PCRE syntax):
^(0*|(1(01*?0)*?1|0)+?0{4})$
Usage:
preg_match('/^(0*|(1(01*?0)*?1|0)+?0{4})$/', decbin($number));
Now, why it works:
Well we know that 48 is really just 3 * 16. And 16 is just 2*2*2*2. So, any number divisible by 2^4 will have the 4 most bits in its b...
$ and ^ are zero-width meta-characters. Unlike other meta-characters like . which match one character at a time (unless used with quantifiers), they do not actually match literal characters. This is why ^$ matches an empty string "", even though the regex (sans delimiters) contains two characters...
Use dark magic (demo):
$array = preg_split('~\\\\.(*SKIP)(*FAIL)|\|~s', $string);
\\\\. matches a backslash followed by a character, (*SKIP)(*FAIL) skips it and \| matches your delimiter.
Inspired by NullUserExceptions answer (which he already deleted as it failed for one case) I think I have found a solution myself:
$regex = '~^
(?=(a(?-1)?b)c)
a+(b(?-1)?c)
$~x';
var_dump(preg_match($regex, 'aabbcc')); // 1
var_dump(preg_match($regex, 'aaabbbccc')); // 1
var_dump(pr...
The comments are technically valid, but only a very small minority is able and willing to take this sort of "brutal" criticism. Most people (and non-engineers even more so) care less about the technical holy grail than being nice. IMHO @tereško is correct in content, but very wrong in presentation. You don't talk to a complete stranger like that and be surprised when they become hostile.
@tereško low-hanging fruit first: lose "learn how to"
@tereško makes you sound like a smartass
@tereško wording like like "while this does the job, it would be much more useful if..." and "the preferred way to do X is Y, so this code would benefit from an upgrade" wouldn't hurt
you get the idea
it can be hard to come out kind when you 're looking at crap code I know, but in the end you are not targeting people that value technical excellence here -- those people would not be using that class anyway
Yes, it is. But people just don't like to hear that. If you tell them it's a good start, but ..., then they naturally are more willing to cooperate ;)
You know, it mainly depends on your intention. If all you wanted to do is bash some beginner for being one, then your response is perfect. If you want to help him improve, then it is not ;)
@tereško maybe you in his place would have found the exact same feedback as invaluable and even said thanks for the pointers -- but you cannot assume the world shares your views
@CharlesSprayberry: None; we 're advocating lying here. I 'm sure you also lie in your everyday life to avoid hurting the feelings of people you care about. Show some love to the internet as well. And that's the last I 'm willing to say on the subject :)
I don't like to hurt people's feelings but I'm gonna call it like I see it, particularly if they willingly solicit feedback.
That code is utter shit. @tereško saying, "Well, that's a good attempt but you really need to change: everything about it." That's just bullshit and everybody can see that its bullshit.