I am working on a website in which I write code for htaccess but the thing which I wanted to do is not happening. I have url which is:
http://www.example.com/demo.php?id=234&title=ask%20me%20a%20question
I converted to below url using htaccess:
http://www.example.com/234/ask%20me%a%question
...
Consider the difference between cat foo.php and cat /foo.php in the shell. Same principle.
If I request /foo/bar and you rewrite it to example.php?path=$0, it would get rewritten to /foo/example.php?path=/foo/bar. If you rewrite it to /example.php?path=$0 it would result in /example.php?path=/foo/bar
@Worf I also prefer global namespaces to just use the slash. Lots of use statements bug me... although phpstorm does fold those so I guess it doesn't matter.
Hey, quick question while I'm here - I once, in a rush, wrote a fairly small JSON API using CodeIgniter, because I happened to be using it for something else at the time. Any particular frameworks that might be better or more geared towards that kind of use, without being overkill?
@Trowski I really miss working from home, did that for several years. I'm a cubefarm dweller now. :(
Afternoon all - can someone explain why this returns "1953" as result, but i expected it to be "2315" echo (date("Hi",strtotime("+15 minutes","2300")))
I think Minnesota is a lot more of what you probably classically think of as "up north" , it is a lot more rugged up there. Roughly same snow levels, but Michigan is relatively flat so it isn't "snow pack" per se. More like "shitty roads" and snow-covered corn fields.
@ChrisBaker ok... I have to feed this result into a variable, the initial value "2300" comes from a long SQL table where the column headers are 24hr format time in 15 minute incriments. THe column headers in the table do not have the : character
so how best to convert a 4 digit number thats equivalent to 24hr time without the ; seperator into a time + 15 minutes
So 2300 as an argument is 12:38:33am. +15 minutes would be 12:53:33am. "Hi" is 2-digit military time + 2 digit minutes, so for your local time that's 1953.
@DMSJax Something like date('Hi', strtotime(date('m/d/Y').' '.$timeFromDatabase.' + 15 minutes'));
You might have to put a : in there for strtotime to make sense of it
Or, and probably better, you could use the Date object
That has a createFromFormat method, so you can feed it any goofy thing you want, you just have to tell it how to make sense of it.
strototime takes a string and tries to make sense of it. A string of "2300" doesn't look anything like anything by itself. If you put the current day on there (date('m/d/Y')), then add 2300.... now we're looking like a timestamp.
@Danack Hmm... I wonder if 2/3 or 50%+1 would be required for my RFC. It's not actually changing any language syntax, but it does change what is throwable to an interface rather than a concrete class.
@Trowski I think, possibly, putting 2/3 is safest. It would be up to the release managers to figure out what to do if no competing proposal gets passed, as we do need to tidy the stuff up.
@Trowski 50%+1 is fully enough. We're neither doing a BC break (the system is anyway PHP 7 only), nor language change. If too many people behave ignorantly from internals, it might not pass. I think it's safest to do 50%+1…
And if it doesn't pass at 50%+1 and another RFC comes along promoted by someone inside Zend, it would be incredibly likely to pass, even if the community as a whole voted against it......
They don't vote in lockstep, but there's been very little splitting of votes from people who work for zend. That does give any rfc coming from them a decent advantage over other RFCs.
@salathe Throwing it out there. But I don't think that it would be unreasonable for them to do that....people are going to be able to explain why their RFC is a good thing to people to they talk to all day, much more people can on the internals email list. People who work together are also far more likely to have experienced the same set of problems, and so have similar ideas of what is important or not.
After this change, the message would instead be `Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to add() must be of the type integer, string given`
this part implies a possible mismatch between the expected behavior and what really happens, so you I guess this needs more explanation. What's the intention? Catch all exceptions?
@PeeHaa "The interface isn't pointless. It allows us the capability of having types of exceptions outside of the current hierarchy....and yes, it's difficult to imagine the actual scenario that would be useful in, but at least it leaves it open..." i.e. the same reason interfaces are usually good...
@marcio How about this wording: The reason an object named TypeException would not be caught by catch (Exception $e) is not obvious. The Exception suffix implies that TypeException extends Exception. If the name of the thrown class was TypeError instead, it is much clearer that the class does not extend Exception, but rather is part of a different class hierarchy that must be caught separately.
And yes, if anyone has an actual application that would benefit from being able to detect when the memory usage balloons out, please try out MemTrigger and let if know if where it breaks.
It's currently set to replace zend_execute and just chain the call to the original version of that function. I got the complete replacement working, but it's currently ifdef'd out.
I thought I could count the opcodes being called from there, but this line was never reached.
@marcio Hopefully we're past that and we can at least agree that if there is going to be a separation, lets make it clear rather than obfuscate it behind similar classnames.
@RonniSkansing not exactly the web-server itself... but the dns/server/db setup.... since two unrelated softwares have speed issue only on admin area... and for both softwares, the usual fix for this is modifying something in /etc/hosts file...
@Trowski Mainly the architecture of the app how everything is spread into nice minimal classes traits and interfaces… but that's only personal preference
@bwoebi Ah, I see. There's a few schools of thought on that, and I guess I prefer to spread things out to make it easier to change small pieces of functionality without having to re-write an entire class.
@Trowski I rather find other issues with it… for example… what's this DuplexInterface::isReadable() ?! … it's linking to isOpen() ultimately… which does an is_resource() … well weird. Why would you call that in a while loop condition… not sure what that helps
And @Trowski you're using a shitload of exceptions for things… eofexception… huh… why? Why is that an exception for example?
@bwoebi The echo server example is almost a little overly simple, but since that's dealing with a stream socket, as long as the client is connected isReadable() is going to be true, and you can try reading from the socket.
@bwoebi Actually that's an interesting situation, and agreeably a poor choice. The way that's handled, EofException actually isn't thrown anyway, it's just used as the reason the socket closed.
But it's interesting that you actually have abstractions for $stream->read() and $stream->write()… I mainly already wish having $stream->write() for a long time in Amp … (@rdlowrey ;-))
@bwoebi I might have to talk to you about your testing methods. I've done some testing with Icicle and was fairly happy with it's ability to handle loads.
--with-cpu-opt=CPU build for the specified CPU, valid values: pentium, pentiumpro, pentium3, pentium4, ... I know I have a Pentium my cpuinfo gives this: vendor_id = GenuineIntel, and model name = Westmere E56xx/L56xx/X56xx (Nehalem-C). So which Pentium option should I choose? I'm assuming Pentium4?
@Trowski cpuid gives family = Intel Pentium Pro/II/III/Celeron/Core/Core 2/Atom, AMD Athlon/Duron, Cyrix M2, VIA C3 (6) Which contains both pentiumpro and pentium3. Should I just go with pentium pro?
Notice: Undefined variable: request in /srv/www/Feedr/routes.php on line 151
Fatal error: Call to a member function getBaseUrl() on null in /srv/www/Feedr/routes.php on line 151
Oh wait. That was just me fucking things up I think
@LeviMorrison in this case the it states the following: valid values: pentium, pentiumpro, pentium3, pentium4, athlon, opteron, sparc32, sparc64, ppc64
Hey guys, regular ol' html. Is there a way to make <label for="drop_down_option_1">Option 1</label> Cause it to select an option value in a <select></select> ? Trying to cater to a responsive layout and would prefer options be in text in full site and in dropdown when screen is smaller without javascript. and avoid having two different forms/duplicate content.
The most recent Windows desktop language I know is VB 6. Probably not appropriate for this, might as well go for Assembly. I had C# in mind, but why not.