@JasonMonts this is a somewhat broad topic but it boils down to: you have to create a function that returns a pdo object, and then use the same object everywhere you need it. It's important, if you want to created a testable and modular code, to avoid using global variables, if ever your readings get you over there.
The php manual for pdo __construct should be everything you need to succeed
But the flow from db to screen usually is something like data is fetched into domain entities, presentation objects then use these entities to present views of the state of these entities
> It is located on the north-western side of the country, where it comprises most of the wide and inhospitable Thar Desert (also known as the "Rajasthan Desert" and "Great Indian Desert") and shares a border with the Pakistani provinces of Punjab to the northwest and Sindh to the west, along the Sutlej-Indus river valley.
i'm getting angry because of this freaking weather because i was doing great jogging every morning but i had to stop because rain wind and wrath of god
well.. I'm not a fan, but I liked the earlier games. as to why I don't like x-com 2:
mission 2, wasted too much time to get to the end of the mission, but the container is on fire, which was not supposed to be there... it's an occasional bug someone had too
I might've just been unlucky, but I soldiered through it and at some point they updated the game and the lagging was gone and I put the graphics back to max.
I find i prefer gigabyte simply due to the fact that the cards I've researched, gigabyte seems to come out ahead in pretty much everything (albeit by a small margin most of the times).
In the end I don't think it really matters what brand you pick, unless you are a real hard core OC'er that needs to press every bit of juice out of the build.
No, just a'a folder somewhere in filestructure'. But I think that's not really related to this? I want to make sure the 'mv' command I run is correct before I execute.
if you want to move everything to a sub-directory that already exists in the directory you should move everything BUT the target sub-directory mv !(subdir) subdir/
3v4l.org/LlfmE does the commented line knows by itself the first 2 are the type defs and the other 2 are the values? not sure how it works.. can someone enlighten me a little why it does what it does
@kelunik not much. i'm doing encoding stuff and i wanted to visualize stuff in hex so i wrote the echo '\x' . dechex(ord($string[$i])); thingy and wondered if there was a better way. just that :B
@kelunik This is the sort of thing that makes me generally not understand why people seem to be so obsessed with array_map sometimes. I find that about 200% less readable than the equivalent foreach
@NikiC Am I mistaken, or wasn't the behavior before intended behavior? AFAIK refs inside arrays should be preserved… git.php.net/… (so that copies of an array are all referenced equally on that element)
@DaveRandom But the archives aren't even showing anything since June 6th, so surely this isn't just delayed delivery. This is nothing has come through in the last 4 days.
@NikiC uh… but it's a common (well, for certain defs of common) way to write code like function() { return $this->array = ["foo" => &$ref]; } and manipulate $this->array["foo"] by ref…
@Sherif delayed delivery because remote server was not responding to connect attempts, sorry should have been more specific... relays delaying delivery
The news.php.net archives talk directly to ezmlm via news:// so if it's not showing there then it didn't get through to the list
In many disciplines a greenfield project is one that lacks constraints imposed by prior work. The analogy is to that of construction on greenfield land where there is no need to work within the constraints of existing buildings or infrastructure.
== Cellular networks ==
In wireless engineering jargon, a greenfield project could be rolling out the second generation of cell phone networks. The first cellular telephone networks were built primarily on tall existing tower structures or on high ground in an effort to cover as much territory as possible in as little time as possible and with a minimum...