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2:00 PM
Good afternoon
 
@BoltClock is that a real question: stackoverflow.com/questions/8820287/…
 
@Donut Afternoon !
you are Donout !
 
Yes I do.
@OmeidHerat Hello, how are you?
 
2:08 PM
I am good thanks.
how are you ?
 
@OmeidHerat Fine.
 
Jon
2:39 PM
hello i have a php question based on a fare calculator, does anyone have any experience with this?
 
I've calculated many fares in my life
 
Jon
my problem is large, my time is limited, is there somewhere we can talk
 
@Jon in that case, you might want to hire someone
 
@Jon here's a great place to talk
@Gordon are you that desperate for work atm?
 
Hey folks. I'm a .NET developer without *any* PHP experience. We've got a web service that one of our clients has to interface with, but their PHP developer is not familiar with interacting with web services *at all* =( Which is not really my problem (it's his problem), but I'd like to try and help him out if I can.
Could one of you point me to an accurate, up-to-date tutorial on using the PHP SoapClient to call web service methods, so I can point him in the right direction?
 
Jon
2:44 PM
i was thinking more a skype chat and yes i can pay
 
(wow, my chat-fu must be off. I don't know why those asterisks didn't make the text italicized)
 
doesn't work on
**multiline**
messages
 
Hi @jadarnel27
 
@Greg Huh. I had no idea, thanks! That makes more sense now =)
 
I assume he doesn't have a wsdl ether?
 
2:47 PM
@edorian Hello!
 
@Greg not at all, just saying that if someone is short on time and faces big challenges s/he should consider hire someone who is more dedicated than someone from this chat who does it just because s/he's nice
 
@Gordon just joking :)
 
Actually, yes. I gave him the wsdl (the web service is on my side). He's just not sure what to do with it.
 
I worded that completly wrong...
Do you offer a wsdl for the service?
 
@jadarnel27: Try devzone.zend.com/25/php-soap-extension - it's based around PHP's native SOAP extension.
 
2:48 PM
Good morning
 
So yeah. SoapClient is what is going to give him the least trouble and works quite well
 
Jon
its not a huge challenge if you know what youre doing ^^
 
The manual gets all the basics down for the SoapClient class.
 
posted on January 11, 2012 by Fabien Potencier

The astute reader has noticed that our framework hardcodes the way specific "code" (the templates) is run. For simple pages like the ones we have created so far, that's not a problem, but if you want to add more logic, you would be forced to put the logic into the template itself, which is probably not a good idea, especially if you still have the separation of concerns principle in mind.

 
@edorian Yep. I gave that to him. The question I got back was "Where is the relationship between the WSDL document and sample XML document you sent?"
 
2:49 PM
@ircmaxell almost four pm and he speaks of morning. americans ;)
 
So he needs more of a general SOAP primer then?
 
@Gordon Yup
 
@Crontab did you really just reference W3Schools?
 
w3schools ^^
 
2:50 PM
Yeah, he has only been doing PHP development for a year or so, and has never run into web services.
@Crontab I think he might take that as an insult ;-)
 
@Crontab That's almost worse than lmgtfy
 
@ircmaxell: Well, if you have a better suggestion for where to learn the absolute basics of SOAP then by all means contribute.
 
Samoa was stupid to change the timezone. Now they are the first to die when the world ends this year instead of the last. Or they just cant wait.
 
@jadarnel27 So he doesn't have much clue about programming.. thats bad for you :)
 
2:51 PM
@Crontab Thanks for the links though, it looks like the manual does cover the basics very well.
 
@jadarnel27 the tutorial seems somewhat ok but usually the php.net documentation works out for most people
SoapClient is / should be pretty easy to use
 
@edorian Yes. I guess I mispoke, it is somewhat my problem =)
 
If your service is somewhat public I'd slap together one or two sample calls
 
@edorian y u not on freenode?
 
All it all It comes down to $x = new SoapClient('/path/to/wsdl); echo $x->functionOnService($parameter);
@Gordon i am, you're not
 
2:54 PM
@edorian i am. you're not
 
@ircmaxell: That's a pretty kneejerk reaction, to consider an entire body of work useless because of your bias against them. It's as if you're saying they have never taught anything correctly ever.
 
@edorian Awesome. that's the basic idea I got from looking here, but when I saw that articel was from 2009 I second guessed it a bit.
 
@Crontab No, it's not saying that. It's saying that the vast majority of their information is fubar. So I wouldn't trust anything on the site. There likely is some good content there, but it's intermixed with such bad content (that they refuse to fix for some reason), that it's worth than worthless IMHO...
 
The result parsing seems a bit strange but depending on what the service returns its ok.
If it is your problem I'd say it should be pretty easy for you to get this running as you don't really need much
 
@ircmaxell: I suppose I'll just keep my mouth shut then.
 
2:56 PM
$packageManager install php5-cli and just try those 2-3 lines with a var_dump($x->methodOnService('parameter'));
 
@salathe what was the convention on class constants in the api signature? prepend classname, e.g. RecursiveIteratorIterator::LEAVES_ONLY? says LEAVES_ONLY currently
 
That should be good enough for him then
 
@edorian The return from the service is pretty minmal. It's just an order confriamtion with an order number.
 
@salathe i remember to have used full constant name in MultipleIterator
 
@Gordon the class name needs to be there
 
2:57 PM
@salathe ok. will fix. thanks
 
hiiii everyone :)
 
@Gordon I can assure you that I am on freenode. So ether netsplit or your quassel is borked
 
@edorian Very cool. I'll pass this stuff along to him. Hopefully this will go pretty smoothly, he seems really bright (just inexperienced).
 
All right :) Good luck with that
If you need anything else feel free to drop in again. There are quite a lot of people here usually :P
 
I sure will. Thanks for your help everyone (@edorian, @Crontab, @Anyone else I missed). "This room is very helpful! Would chat again!" =)
 
3:00 PM
@NikiC hi
 
@Crontab No, it's not about that. It's just that's such a horrid resource, that it makes a lot of people flintch (me included) at the mere site of it)...
 
Hi @NikiC
 
hi everyone
 
3:33 PM
@everyone: Good day to all.. I'd like to ask something about a post someone else made: stackoverflow.com/questions/8821839/…
i'm not sure if it's appropriate to make comments there, so i'll ask here first..
in the case of the above situation.. is there an alternative?
i don't really use the DATA DIRECTORY code, but i'm a bit interested
@everyone: Sorry, please ignore my previous posts.. Sorry for the intrusion
 
Your thoughts on my post and the comment followup: reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/obv2o/… ?
 
@Gordon wanted to ask you one more thing. Today @David19801 asked about Xml problem. How did you know, that user-agent should be signed as php. Is it the usual reason for such behaivour, since I seen it first time therefor it is interesting to me.
 
@Eugene the value, e.g. php, is unimportant. what mattered was that the user-agent is set at all. how do i know that? from experience. i've had to deal with webservers that required this in the past.
 
@Gordon Ou. I see. Thank you.
 
Unrealted
#1: The fact that most people are too stupid to know how dumb they really are is the fabric holding our society together.
 
3:47 PM
Can anyone explain why this XPath is matching two elements instead of one? codepad.viper-7.com/N46AI0 (Line 29 - the second param is meant to specify the first DIV as the context node)
 
@ircmaxell i can only repeat myself
3 hours ago, by Gordon
to quote john j. rambo on this issue: God must love crazy people because he makes so many of them.
 
lol
 
@Greg using // will ignore the context node that you've given
 
Oh really?
 
@Greg Ya really.
 
3:51 PM
@salathe what should the // be replaced with?
 
take out // and it'll find what you want, if you want to look at an arbitrary depth then descendant::p.
 
what does ./ mean? Is that the context?
 
that should give a good overview
 
heh, I'm reading that right now :)
This just got me stumped
 
starting your xpath with .// would work too, if that makes things clearer
 
3:55 PM
@salathe When the xpath isn't in context with another node, would .// have any effect, or would it still search from the root node?
 
if you don't specify one, the context is the document root
 
Nice, that makes things simpler.
 
4:21 PM
@salathe do i have to run the auto indenting in a separate commit?
 
@Gordon docs?
 
@NikiC yes
 
@Gordon If EN docs then yes ;)
 
@NikiC ok. thx
 
@Gordon yep, keep whitespace changes separate
 
4:22 PM
@salathe ok. will do.
 
and make the commit message clear that it's just a WS change
 
@salathe ha you in IRC
 
So I search for a PHP user group around where I live and one of the first hits that comes up is for LARPing... sigh
 
anyone here from the UK?
 
@salathe would it be possible to add a crossreference link to the svn to the manual pages? so that i can look up the implementation by just following a link?
 
4:27 PM
@Charles: PHP-LARP... well... why not :)
 
@Gordon to the php-src?
 
@salathe yes
 
@Gordon Yeah think so.
 
Possible, sure. But not necessarily easy/trivial to do.
 
@salathe Shouldn't be that hard.
 
4:30 PM
@salathe its just a suggestion. might be a fancy thing to have for the new docs
 
@OmeidHerat Yeah, shouldn't but it will be.
 
http://lxr.php.net/search?defs=PUTTHECLASSE/FUNCTION/NAMEHERE
 
@Gordon I don't know, folks who want to find the source would just use opengrok
 
@salathe exactly. I thought he wants something personal, like a Monkey or UserScript.
 
@salathe yes, but do many people know opengrok?
 
4:33 PM
@Gordon most who ask if there's a good tool for navigating the source :)
 
@salathe regardless of that, I wouldn't want this to be implement into documentation, the current links are pretty good and anything more then that will be far to complex for what it's made.
 
@salathe we could have a link that sends the currently displayed function name or something to opengrok for a start, so you get the search results for that then. the basic idea is just getting more and convenient exposure to the actual implementations.
 
@OmeidHerat Yes, my thoughts too.
@Gordon I'm not sure how useful that would be in general
 
@salathe i dont know either
 
I think the best idea will be a User or Monkey script, or mabye a browser extension perhaps, that switches the links between opengrok and documentation trough a keyboard shortcut.
 
4:38 PM
Is there a way to check for a declared non-empty value that isn't null in one function?
 
@Greg !empty($value) ?
 
@ircmaxell oh that checks if the value is set without complaining?
 
@ircmaxell returns true on null.
 
@OmeidHerat Huh? It works...
@OmeidHerat No it doesn't...
 
@OmeidHerat nah, null is considered empty
but I didn't think empty worked for non-declared array keys
 
4:40 PM
@Greg But that is what you don't want right ?
> ...declared non-empty value that isn't null in one function?
 
null is considered empty
 
@ircmaxell I get that, but I think I misunderstood the question.
 
fair enough
 
from the question, I still think he is looking for !EMPTY && !NULL
 
4:44 PM
I am ...
 
@OmeidHerat i think that misses the point because this would have to be installed by the user instead of being available by default to every user who is interested in the implementation.
 
but as ircmaxell says, the empty function checks all that. I just didn't think it worked on non-existent arrays.
empty($thisDoesntExist["NothingHere"])
I thought it would complain at that, but it is fine.
 
@Greg but not necessarily empty() == !EMPTY && !NULL is true.
 
hi @ircmaxell @salathe @Gordon
and others ofc :)
 
hey there
 
4:50 PM
@Gordon fair enough, but I am not sure how useful that would be for average user. and also if I check out something regularly I don't mind installing a tool.
infact, I already have a PHP documentation plugin. it's like a fast search drop down wtih auto complete, it makes search pretty fast.
 
empty is equivalent to return (isset($foo) && $foo)
 
@OmeidHerat the average user will probably not need it, but it might turn an average user into an interested user. one that wants to go below the surface. its really just to make it easy for people to dive as deep into the language as they like. /cc @salathe
 
Hello Everyone! :) I didn't realize Stack Overflow even had a chat until a few minutes ago! I've been using this site for years too-- its just that I never participated until recently.
 
@ircmaxell It's not. empty($var) will return true but (isset($var) && $var)) will retruns false where $var = NULL
 
welcome
 
4:58 PM
@OmeidHerat sorry, return (!isset($var) || !$var)
 
@ircmaxell Oh I see. that makes sense.
 
yeah, simple error in boolean operators
 
All in all: There are very very few uses for empty and if(!empty($x)) would definitly be punch worthy if it wouldn't at least read well :P
 
@edorian The problem is that empty considers a way too long list to be true. so the possibility of the value is really wide for a return value of false or true.
"" (an empty string)
0 (0 as an integer)
0.0 (0 as a float)
"0" (0 as a string)
NULL
FALSE
array() (an empty array)
var $var; (a variable declared, but without a value in a class)
 
Nope. Thats all fine
Thats just how php works, no issue there
 
5:06 PM
There is no problem with the way it works, but the problem is the way its design I think.
 
@OmeidHerat if you need more stringent checks, do them yourself...
!isset($foo) || strlen($foo) == 0
 
I will, I was just explaining what @edorian said:
> There are very very few uses for empty ...
 
Ah ok
I use empty quite often.
 
Really? I don't like it that it covers up undefined variables at all
 
@edorian agree. Better just use if($x) instead
 
5:11 PM
if(!$x) is a lot clearer to me.. which is strange because i usually nameEverythingSoLongThatItHurts
 
@edorian that's why I use it
usually, only for input: if (!empty($_POST['username'])) {
 
For superglobals I can see the point. But as i pretty much always deal with a Request object that doesn't come up :P
 
maybe some mysql experts here? :)
 
Go on, I am sure mysql is a php thing.
 
@afftee > Don't ask whether someone is here or can help. Just tell us your problem. If anybody can and wants to help, they will.
(from the upper right corner)
 
5:13 PM
> Discussion for all things PHP - Don't ask whether someone is here or can help. Just tell us your problem. If anybody can and wants to help, they will.
 
side-note that sounds pretty arrogant, perhaps we should change the language of that to be a little more friendly
 
yeah go ahead
 
ok, sorry :)
 
btw why does it say all things php?
 
And add a "all things php related"
or something..
 
5:14 PM
I think most PHP developers use MySQL-- I certainly do.
 
@NikiC That was the original name...
 
the amount of mysql and js is manageable and I'm fine with it tbh.
 
i have a mysql function : FUNCTION isDocVisible( _document_id INT(11)) RETURNS int(1)
BEGIN
RETURN (SELECT cast(visible as decimal(1)) FROM documents WHERE id = _document_id);
END
very basic func
visible field has int(1) data type in DB
 
go ahead, but why are you using a function ?
 
when i run SELECT cast(visible as decimal(1)) FROM documents WHERE id = _document_id
from console . it returns 1, as it should
 
5:17 PM
wouldn't it be @_document_id?
 
when i run function : it returns 0
 
I hate MySQL variables for that...
Also, any particular reason for using a function instead of a stored procedure?
 
when i hardcode _document_id into function. so select from function looks like : select visible from documents where id = 16, it also returns 0
from query window, when running only this query : returns 1
 
then it's how you're defining the function
 
where to look ?
 
5:21 PM
hrm, second, looking at something
 
i don't understand you :)
 
BEGIN
    SELECT cast(visable as decimal(1)) INTO @return FROM documents WHERE id = _document_id;
    return @return;
END
 
the same result
 
hrm, not sure...
 
@ircmaxell didn you say WHERE id = @_document_id?
 
5:25 PM
i can get no input variables, use the same document_id all the time, and still output will be 0, instead of 1
 
@edorian No, aparently not...
 
I can never remember ether
 
.. so the problem hides somewhere else
maybe type missmatch ?
 
No, MySQL will autoconvert the types for you
in fact, you can get rid of the cast. It's implied
> It indicates the return type of the function, and the function body must contain a RETURN value statement. If the RETURN statement returns a value of a different type, the value is coerced to the proper type. For example, if a function specifies an ENUM or SET value in the RETURNS clause, but the RETURN statement returns an integer, the value returned from the function is the string for the corresponding ENUM member of set of SET members.
 
ircmaxell, ok, i will know that
but why it doesn't return '1' ...
return (select 1 from documents); -- works
returns '1'
return (select visible from documents where id = 16); -- doesn't work.
returns '0'
but, select visible from documents where id = 16 , in query window returns 1
weird :/
 
5:33 PM
hang on, I have an idea
what's the database name the table is in
 
eblankai_dev
eblankai_dev.documents
 
return (select visible from eblankai_dev.documents where id = 16);
try that...
 
nope
didn't help
 
check your error logs
 
no errors for today
 
5:36 PM
hrm, I don't know
ask on the main site
 
ok, thank you for your time
 
huh wut?
0
Q: A Controller Class for an MVC pattern

stack.user.0Here is my controller class for my MVC pattern with all the includes removed. From what I know of the MVC pattern it is good to have a small controller class. Mine is just a collection of public static functions which accept requests and send data to the client. Regarding send(). I'm just wra...

this question is confusing
 
what were the question ?
 
@afftee ?
 
sorry, never mind
misunderstood your post
 
5:41 PM
post?
 
@Neal wtf is that? :-)
 
are you some sort of grammar-nazi ? :) man, relax, i called your message a post, so what
 
@ircmaxell ha?
 
5:44 PM
That's my new version of
 
@ircmaxell right, but what's reason for that kind of emotion? have I said something sad?
 
@KamilTomšík Nope
 
oh, cool... so who did? :-)
 
But it's good to see you again. Haven't talked in a while
 
yep, great for me too, hope you did well
 
5:45 PM
@KamilTomšík did you look at that controller post?
 
@ircmaxell yeah, dunno what it is about
 
:-D
 
I see:
1. action per class (while in oop operations should be represented as methods)
2. switch...
3. static
4. exceptions
5. globals (session_id)
6. echo
7. constants
8. calling other classes from controller

so... seriously, wtf is that? :-)
@ircmaxell lemme guess - you're writing response :-)
 
no
 
@KamilTomšík ?
 
5:49 PM
@ircmaxell ok, how's it going with node.php? :)
 
Good example why using parametrized queries can save you some LOCs: stackoverflow.com/questions/8824105/…
 
parametrized query? do you mean prepared statement?
 
@hakre Hey, at least they aren't using mysql_*
 
well, it's one thing to have an old app that still is using mysql_* and another thing to write code today w/o using what's available today.
@KamilTomšík Sort of, but I think there is a difference between the two strictly technically speaking.
 
@hakre that why I'm asking, never heard (I think) about that term
 
5:57 PM
@KamilTomšík The classic: google.com/…
 
@hakre ? answer to that question start with: "Use prepared statements..."
 
@KamilTomšík Please not only read the first answer, there are multiple answers. For some authority: owasp.org/index.php/…
MSDN has that as well, it must not be a prepared statement to be parameterized, but prepared statements can make use of parameters.
I don't know if it's worth to differ from a programmers viewpoint, but I bet DBAs will differ ;)
 
@hakre okay, I'm not arguing I was just curious if that is really technical term.
thx
 
It looks like that it is a technical term (if you ignore that I had written it slightly wrong at first)
Is it possible that the variable won't be an object? :
 $TOKN0001WSDL   = new SoapClient("address is here");
 
6:20 PM
@hakre :-P
 
LiveStreet CMS, has anyone here used the latest distro, and what is the last stable revision you've used. My 2 versions are not able to make use of the mod_rewrite
if not do u know of any other extendable blog/cms?
 
mod_rewrite is a server module and normally independent to a CMS component.
 
ive done independent testing with my own code and I know it is functional on the server
so its the programming of the cms that I think is the issue
checked around the net and it seems other people are having the same issue
however it being a russian product, most conversations are in Russian, and when translated are not very clear, nor do any of their suggestions work
it for some reason is not able to locate the virtually generated directories
and the latest distro from git wont even manually install, the sql dump is not set correctly, just poor implementation is starting to give me a headache.
 
My Russian is not that well either, so I can't offer you to translate it. But I've got some Russian friends who speak English as well, so let me know if I should recommend them for a translation service to you.
 
the problem isnt the translation but thank you so much, its the actual solution to an issue with mbstring usage i presume, and no one has a formidable answer, even in the russian blogs, they came to the conclusion of just using a previous version, but that doesnt solve my problem of why current version is not working, anywho, just curious if anyone had worked with it
thank u though
 
6:32 PM
Ah okay. As you say mb_string this can be encoding related. You use mod_rewrite for speaking URLs?
And the CMS is not able to locate the content?
 
not whatsoever
404 every time
the UI is there no problem and everything says it installs correctly
checked the configs
checked the server specific rules witht he rewrite engine
checked the almost non existent developer blog
its just the calls to directories like /blog or /login that cause a problem
 
Does the 404 message is from the CMS (a.k.a. CMS is not able to locate content) or is it the message from the server (server is unable to find the file).
 
6:57 PM
@hakre depends
wait? was that a general q?
 
@KamilTomšík lol. Haven't had time to do much with it
 
@ircmaxell node.php?
 
No, not node.php, evented php
 
@ircmaxell oh, same applies for me... sadly
 
yeah
 
7:07 PM
Hello, everyone.
 
Hey there @LeviMorrison
 
@LeviMorrison Howdy
 
however at least I made a little progress in last few days, still I haven't figured implementation sharing mechanism - I already have power of protype inheritance but I dont like that approach much, so I need to discover something new :-)
 
@hakre the server cannot find the document corresponding to the URL
 
It appears that PECL is losing (or is it winning?) the sucks race.
 
7:08 PM
fair enough
 
@LeviMorrison Its winning if you're striving to suck I suppose.
2
 
but as always, I'm wide open for suggestions :-)
 
@LeviMorrison Shalom
 
South side of the building I'm in collapsed two weeks ago. They have us shuffled around in various places.
Adjusting to a new work environment is not as easy as I thought it would be.
 
uhhhh....
 
7:17 PM
@LeviMorrison Wow, just collapsed? Was there some kind of natural disaster?
 
the hell
where's my URL encoding!?
 
posted on January 11, 2012 by Internet Super Hero

We are giving PECL/mysqlnd_qc a second chance. PECL/mysqlnd_qc is a query cache plugin for mysqlnd. It can cache any query issued by any PHP MySQL extension using storage handler for process memory, APC, Memcache and SQLlite. Its default invalidation strategy is Time to Live (TTL). Using a more sophisticated invalidation strategy is possible. Of course, its transparent to use and inherits all

 
@CharlesSprayberry The water-line on the third floor burst. Fortunately nobody was injured. Everyone was evacuated before it collapsed.
 
@LeviMorrison That's fortunate.
 
user image
4
 
7:26 PM
@Gordon VERY interesting.
In New York, Ruby positions pay more on average than PHP and Python. I was slightly disappointed to not see that type of statistic.
 
im not sure what to think about the first parts that are not backed up by hard numbers
 
I disagree on the ease of learning for python and php. I don't know enough Ruby to speak, there.
 
if someone would ask for usability and use of learning here, he'd rightfully be closed as not constructive
 
Also, PHP, Ruby, and Python are all languages.
My guess is that Ruby is REALLY represented there as Ruby On Rails.
 
@Gordon It says though that Google and YouTube are powered by Python. Don't know about the latter, but the main part of Google at least (i.e. the search engine) is not powered by Python.
 
7:29 PM
@NikiC Youtube was originally programmed in PHP. I think they moved to Python.
 
@LeviMorrison I already said that I don't know about YouTube ;)
 
Which language was Reddit in before converting to Python?
 
It's completely unfair to put Google there, still.
 
Either a pop quiz or a legitimate question :)
 
7:30 PM
@NikiC im not sure how much ruby twitter uses nowadays either. i know they used ruby (ror?) in the past but have since changed to java iirc.
 
@LeviMorrison óÒ And they moved to Python?
 
also, listing job offers from craigslist.com is somewhat, yeah, well … unrepresentative
 
@BoltClock Well, it's Lisp after all. People tell fairy tails about Lisp.
 
and i dont get the last two boxes about LOCs and runtime
 
7:34 PM
Yeah, those are entirely meaningless without, uh, some information on what the hell they're exactly measuring and how
 
so i'd say interesting with a healthy dose of scepticism
 
could anybody show piece of readable python code with good structure? just curious how it looks like
 
@KamilTomšík Theoretically, any piece of python code.
 
@LeviMorrison that can't be true
 
I've yet to encounter unreadable python. Then again, my python experience is relatively isolated to just poking at Trac from time to time, and then I only really focus on a function or two...
 
7:39 PM
@LeviMorrison Will the linked list be called LinkedList or DoublyLinkedList?
 
@NikiC I'd prefer LinkedList. Ask @ircmaxell what he thinks too.
 
eih, either way I guess. I guess a SLL is too single purposed to be used much, so...
@Gordon That list is wrong. Twitter was originally built using Ruby, but is no longer (at least for anything significant)
 
posted on January 11, 2012 by Stefan Koopmanschap

Today I needed to get a client application up and running on my local system. This application uses the Geoip PECL package, so I needed to get this up and running. This turned out to be slightly more difficult than just a PECL install, as you're missing some libraries by default, so here is my log of things to do to get it up and running.

posted on January 11, 2012 by Christopher Jones

Following on the heels of the PHP 5.3.9 release, I've bundled OCI8 1.4.7 for PECL. The PECL OCI8 1.4.7 code is the same as included in PHP 5.3.9. The release notes are here. There are several bug fixes; upgrading is recommended.

 
btw: have you knew that oracle was originally built using ada? I've read about that during googling for "too many diana nodes" error :-)
 

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