I've been having trouble getting my receiving page to retrieve a "intval($id)" (a value from a hidden input type) from another page containing a looping form. The trouble, of course, is that nothing is being retrieved from the receiving page.
@Ekin That's still a meaningless phrase....does an online user mean they are making one request per second, or does it mean they make one request every twenty seconds?
@bwoebi So Hack's not saying "don't use it", so much as "It's no big deal if you don't, and here's some problems it'd avoid." With "problems" referring to potential future divergence.
I've been having trouble getting my receiving page to retrieve a "intval($id)" (a value from a hidden input type) from another page containing a looping form.
is it possible, on the receiving page, to set "isset()" conditionals from the sending page?
Also @Andrea generally, ~> has the advantage of generally being surrounded with whitespaces, while -> isn't. That's a big distinction, honestly. Unlike => being surrounded with whitespaces too.
> Here, the unusual spacing might give it away (a variable property access would usually be $b->$a), but not everyone is going to put spaces around their squiggle arrows.
I'm not complaining all the time that negation and bitwise not are hard to distinguish…
I never felt that to be an issue to me.
@Danack True for some part… mainly because I know they never have had to read real code with short Closures…
Mhm… I wish I had someone unbiased here to tell me whether I'm really doing it wrong or if it's just both sides having subjective arguments and presenting them like they were objective and it's just as absurd as discussing tabs vs. spaces…
Because I feel like that's what we're really doing … discussing the pros and cons of tab and space indention…
The difference in the symbols is probably less of an IDE than it is in a browser, where the font choice is not a great one for making the difference in symbols clear:
If my eyes are out of focus at all (and they usually are after a few hours in front of a computer) it is incredibly difficult to see the difference in them.
@Danack It's quite a bad example when you're looking for it, and again, you're putting spaces before and after the -> … hence, I'd like to not discuss that now before we turn in circles…