@MadaraUchiha Right that's why when I was first learning what a session was I was really skeptical on how it worked. I was thinking "Wouldn't every time PHP runs a script be it's own session?"
What makes more sense? For the cart to be saved server-side, and the client updates it every time it makes a change, then "checkout" is a "function without arguments" (taking the state from the server-side session variables)
I frequently develop a system I created using localhost on a local setup and it requires a cookie to access the system. So I can confirm that cookies do absolutely work even on a local environment
Or maintaining the cart client-side, do all the price calculations at the client-side, then "checkout" is a function that accepts all the items in your cart as arguments?
@Andrea I'd rather introduce a proper delegate type, personally. Things are declared exactly as bare functions with no body and a terminating ; either with a delegate keyword or just function (identical to an interface method delc). Name is entered into the class names table. I'm going to experiment with it soon.
@Linus No youcan enable hsts on specific subdomains
> Contract SDK Engineer - PHP (Remote OK)
le me: well that looks interesting
> We're looking for a Contract SDK Engineer to own, design and debug our Ruby and PHP libraries our customers use to interact with Rollbar from their code.
Random question for 11-ers: Do you think the general public would understand what www.beverage-name.coffee means if were used on a bottled beverage label?
@Dereleased if you, as a senator, view the USA media as source of domestic propaganda, then it actually would make sense to refer to foreign source of propaganda source as "anti-propaganda" :D
It seems like certain TLDs tend to have a negative connotation to them, at least among my peers, such as .info, .us, .biz. I'm not exactly sure why, but I personally don't tend to trust .biz domains and I like to avoid them as much as possible.
I really like the new TLDs and I am wondering how ...
@MadaraUchiha Variety. Some didn't like ~>. Some didn't like that it can't support type declarations. Some didn't like that it supported blocks too (not just exprs).
And some people just don't like the idea of the feature at all (these would still vote no, of course)
My application has moved to a server that uses PHP 7.1 instead of PHP 5.6.
I made use of phps feature not to care about the proper amount of arguments passed to a function. Now, I am getting a lot of Uncaught ArgumentCountError. What can I do about that?
Im looking for fix for PHP7 compatibility.
I have code which working well with PHP 5.6.2.
Can you please help me to work with PHP7?
<?php
$select = "SELECT post_title , ID FROM wp_posts ORDER BY ID DESC LIMIT 60";
$sql1= mysql_query($select);
$a = 1;
while($row = mysql_fetch_array($sql1)){ ?>...
PHP -v returns the SAPI name, same as php_sapi_name()
phpinfo() is the same as php --rz, "Show the configuration information for the given extension"
http://php.net/manual/en/features.commandline.options.php
My conclusion is, that you have a brand new PHP installation (built oct 2015), and t...
@Sara Try and find the best syntax for making it through internals.
fn(params) => expr had better reception than |params| expr|params| => expr.
Some people pointed out function(params) => expr doesn't have to reserve a new keyword but honestly I don't like that option as supporting blocks means we'd have to do something like function(params) => {} which just seems weird.
@iroegbu Ah now I realize I misunderstood, I thought that there was a date object, a datetime object, and strings that could all represent dates. I just now realized that instead of being a date object it's actually a string integer(?) containing the amount of seconds since Unix Epoch
I don't know how long it's been that I've been dealing with dates that I didn't understand that
@LeviMorrison I'm not sure what the objection is to a new keyword. The contextual fallback introduced in 7.0 (or was it 5.6) makes that pretty much a non-issue now, doesn't it?
Hrmm, no, we might need to exclude that from fallback since fn($x, $y, $z) could quite easily be a function call
hey peeps, i'm making an advanced search, with php, ajax and mysql. just one small question how do i make the input values effect the other input values in the mysql select statement. for example if you have some search for "hotel" and they select the city "London" from a drop down, what would my sql query look like? thanks for any help :P
That's the problem. Currently that'd be valid syntax for an array where the key is the result of a function call to fn(), and the value is a boolean. With short lambdas using fn(...args) => ...expr that could be an array with a key of 0 and a value of a callable
For some reason my SELECT query is returning TRUE, and if I try to do run $qry->rowCount() or $qry->fetchAll() on it, it tells me Call to a member function rowCount() on boolean