@JoeWatkins internals question - when you instantiate a class, it doesn't create a copy of all defined methods right? i.e. when you call an object method, it calls the singular method definition with a pointer to the calling instance?
feels like a silly question to ask, I'm assuming it works in a certain way, just want to double check..
Of course it does, if I'd have thought about it I'd have known that. The class definition has a methods hash table, and calling a method on an object looks up the method in the hash table, and populates $this accordingly
Yea, I just had a dumb moment during refactoring, thinking I'd save memory overhead extracting some methods from a class there is many of, and placing them in a class there is only 1 of.
sorry @Fabien was on school run, I wonder if you can find the abuse email in zone file, zone files are a standard format, look at dig command or find the rfc for DNS ...
consider the following fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/7fgDf/3/
$(".cl").rotate({
bind: {
dblclick: function () {
$(this).data('angle', $(this).data('angle') + 90);
var w = $(this).css('width');
$(this).rotate({
animateTo: $(this).data(...
@MadaraUchiha I watched this go game(44:46) last night. It's a commentated youtube video. Commentary is a little hard to understand but he does a great job. Might be interesting to you.
I have complete page html i.e from doctype to </html> which is coming as response through ajax request <Mr_Green> I am doing the above using prototype <Mr_Green> I want to get a specific element though that html text <Mr_Green> How to get a element in prototype?
I still do. I still sit with them, and that's the only reason I haven't left yet. Well, I sat with them. On monday I move to the other side of the building
part of me wants to write a blog post talking about compiled vs interpreted
but the other part of me wants to do something useful
Argument 1 passed to Core\Managers\Configurator::error() must be an instance of Core\Managers\string, string given, called in D:\wamp\www\nautica\bootstrap.php
@ircmaxell I love the idea that data must be immutable, but take for example a DAO, where in you generate some part of the data from the user. How does data immutability come into play here?
@AshwinMukhija Consider the number 5, it's a value object. If you take 5+2 that doesn't make 5 suddenly become 7, instead it returns a new value that's 7
In PHP I use static variables to initialize large chunks of persistent data in functions that do not change from call to call. This happens approximately never, but does on occasion (a classmap autoloader). I have yet to see a good reason to use a static method in PHP.
Static is effectively global; since you can just get the object anywhere you want a lot of the time people do. This leads to designs where dependencies are never explicitly declared and leads to maintainability problems.
which is generally not possible in procedural languages. but that is probably a limitation of those languages. being able to re-set that state or "instantiate" a module of procedures would allow limited control over state without needing objects. :)
(that said, you could consider a 'process' to be an instance of a procedural module)