@Shashi Lots of it is pretty bad, but I came to the conclusion that discussing it here in chat is useless most of the times and that people eventually find out for themselves :)
But mostly it boils down to: having looked at the source and found out it was crap, having to actually put up with a framework and found out the hard way it was crap, not knowing enough about it and neither don't want to making it a waste of time to build something with it @Shashi
I've noticed that a lot of CVs contain a segment that looks something like:
I have fast learning skills, out-of-the-box thinking, high motivation, loyalty and dedication. I am a hard worker and a team player and intend to put in a lot of hard work.
I've noticed some people put those 'perso...
> I have fast learning skills, out-of-the-box thinking, high motivation, loyalty and dedication. I am a hard worker and a team player and intend to put in a lot of hard work.
@NikiC "Don't distinguish between ast/list in parser" aw man, obviously causes merge conflicts for me :D It's really not that bad, I just hate doing manual merge resolution.
I have a PHP class that does the database connection.
I have 2 main credentials (different servers) to access databases/servers. When connecting to the default server (SERVER A) I can simply call the main constructor without supplying any additional information. But, every time I want to create ...
Holla! I don't know how to formulate this question but I will try to explain it. I've got a public var called Cart and if I will update it in method for exp.: $this->Cart['items']['product'] = 'bla and blaa'; then my Session should update too
@Fabien tomorrow I'm smuggling certain quantity of Bhut Jolokia, Trinidad Moruga Scorpion, Carolina Reaper, the f* hottest peppers in the world. Some people smuggle coke, I smuggle peppers :D
I usually have a Session object which your Cart object (among other things in the session) lives in. The Session object is responsible for actually storing it in PHP sessions.
But here's some food for thought for you.
Why should the cart be held in a session?
Or more specifically, why does the server care about the intermediate state of the user's cart?
In this case I'm not sure what the expected number of failures is, but it's definitely higher. But thanks for the reminder about that very useful, very under-used command.