apparently not - the tests like these: develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk/tests aren't in there.....but actually, I've already grown bored of trying to investigate the problem.
It's always nice to find a comment in your code saying "@todo I should really handle errors in a less horrific way..." without having any idea why on earth it works like that in the first place :(
Like... I mean consider a thread which may handle multiple HTTP requests. When a blocking operation is performed could we suspend the code running for one request ourselves (not the OS) and have the thread work on another request?
@William I think you want to use a parameter in the query - e.g. "SELECT * FROM forums WHERE cat_id = ?"; and then pass in the parameter (in this case '2') via bind_param
user6116249
i have tried that it still shows a topic with different cat id
Many things are not done today because they cannot be expressed nicely in the type system.
See patterns such as Optional or Maybe or tons of other generic code that isn't done despite PHP not rejecting it.
It would radically change the way modern PHP code is written.
But no, that's just syntax and not important at all.
No wonder PHP is so horrid.
That mindset is horrific...
> Sure, a bunch of frameworks would adopt them once they become available - but it will not enable them to do things that are radically different from what they're doing today.
False; see Java's ecosystem when generic types landed.
It didn't stop them from doing what they wanted - they just stopped using Object as much.
> Sure, a bunch of frameworks would adopt them once they become available - but it will not enable them to do things that are radically different from what they're doing today.
One thing I coded the other day was also annoying and easily replaceable by a generic. I had to code a CopiedCommitHashes value-object and write logic to validate all keys and all values, while instead it would just have been following with generics:
@Ocramius also, the comfortable PHP dev will not want to write new Map<CommitHash, CommitHash> but just write new Map and have the generic type inferred
I actually got to touch just a bit of java the other day to tweak something I needed for my own project. It is damn slick to use, and self-documenting too.
no, I'm not. I was able to touch someone else's codebase, edit what I needed, compile and run without even testing it first, and it just worked as expected