You know what makes me happy? I've been doing major refactoring all day with nothing but red in my tests results ... but everything just turned green. Mother F'ing woot.
Seriously, i honestly have problems locating the bracketing if there's no space between it and the function name. Shitty eyesight and nystagmus. Also, you leave a space before a bracket in English so why not in code?
I only ever don't leave space between a function name and the opening bracket if I'm using a language that's retarded enough to fail to parse it, such as MYSQL
@GordonM A non-exhaustive list: You use tabs, instead of spaces. Your variable definitions are $crazily = 'overaligned'. You leave a space after the function name (same for array access). You don't leave a space before the ? and : of the ternary operator. You use the curly-bracket style if in templates. You put the { on the next line for if, but not always.
@NikiC 1) so? 2) I like them aligned (Also, readability issues for people like me with shitty eyesight and eyes that won't stay still), 3) Already explained my reasoning on that one 4) You don't leave space between words and question marks or colons in English so why should you in code? 5) so? 6) Probably an oversight on my part, I never leave the { on the same line as the if
The "eliminate all whitespace" advocates don't realise that for some people it's the whitespace that's the difference between readable code and a total mess. Then again most people don't have nystagmus :(
Therefore my code has lots of whitespace in it and I'm not going to apologize for that or change because someone like function() instead of function ()
@PeeHaa And I think I just proved that statement wrong :)
Besides, I'm sure your editor has a "reformat code" option if you really hate it that much. It's not like my coding style would be unreadable to you (though I'm not sure the reverse would be true).
@NikiC > @Dave - all the major browsers support it, but with so many out there it's very possible that this might trigger a bug in some browsers, and not submit or submit to the wrong page.
Actually, the Form Submission subsection of the current HTML5 draft does not allow action="". It is against the spec.
The action and formaction content attributes, if specified, must have a value that is a valid non-empty URL potentially surrounded by spaces. (emphasis added)
The quoted sec...
Damn you HTML5!
I hate specs :P
@Kerrick Yes, I believe HTML5 allows omitting the action attribute entirely, and defaults it to empty string. HTML4 did not, it specifies action as required. — derobertJun 1 at 15:54
@PeeHaa HTML4 always requires action but allows action="" (but it's flaky in some browsers) and HTML5 says you can omit action but if you do specify action it must have a value (and it's probably flaky in some browsers too). :(
> The action and formaction content attributes, if specified, must have a value that is a valid URL potentially surrounded by spaces.
> The action of an element is the value of the element's formaction attribute, if the element is a submit button and has such an attribute, or the value of its form owner's action attribute, if it has one, or else the empty string.
But why ditch OSX? Not that I've got anything against Linux (I like it a lot in fact, it's mostly a lack of commercial support that puts me off it as a main OS), but you could have dual booted.
@webarto PHP is designed to service a single request and terminate. node.js is designed to run daemons. Right tool for the job. ;)
So anyway, what do you reckon? I obviously need to write the actual tutorial to get from empty project to that code, but do you reckon it's a decent project for a php.net tutorial?
You should write it as an example project and integrate somewhere in here in a way that most topics seen are coming back in that I think. Don't know what others have to say bout it
@PeeHaa Will do, I'll try and draft up some actual tutorial text to go with, first.
Will also have to read up on collaberating with github. Not done any of that yet.
@webarto It would be nice if they looked into making PHP a bit more general purpose as something that can run daemons or other stuff that lasts longer than a single HTTP request. Maybe @ircmaxell is the guy to ask on that front though.
@ircmaxell Mostly thinking about PHP versus node (which is the right tool for particular jobs) and thinking it would be nice if PHP could do more daemony stuff rather than just request/response/exit stuff. (I know you technically can, but PHP isn't suited to it)
@NikiC I'd have to think about that when I'm less sleep deprived.
@LeviMorrison I'd be more inclined to push the sidebar and downloads to the right a bit, it does look a little like everything's crammed into the middle a bit. That's just me though.
@GordonM I actually salvaged 30 more pixels on the right side. For some reason there was always a padding on the right side but not the left. I was like . . . lopsided is no bueno.
@LeviMorrison I wonder if it would look a bit less cramped if the bar separating the "thanks to" section from the rest was as wide as the main content box only and didn't also span across the sidebar too
Also, while it definitely looks better without the technicolor sidebar, I would suggest that you make the "documentation" like stand out from the other links because I'm sure most requests to php.net are for looking at the manual.
two reasons for right side : for 90% of userbase it is easier to reach navigation in right side , and the structure was already tuned towards right-panel layout
If I just LOOK at the page, the right-sidebar is better. However, when I'm reading the articles or when I'm using the page as a whole, I like the left better.
The sidebar on the right negatively affects the reading experience on the article, but it looks much cleaner, I'll agree.
@ircmaxell By the way, is one week for voting the standard? It seems so short.