@JoeWatkins targeting you mainly because of phpdbg, how feasible do you think it would be to make a php assembler? For language development purposes, I want to tinker with what opcodes I want emitted in certain places before I write the C to emit them.
Worth looking into, I would have thought, in principle (without looking or even thinking about it too hard) it seems like all the building blocks are already there with the combination of dbg + opcache
@JoeWatkins cheers, I was wanting to experiment with loop {} else {} constructs which can obviously all be done with existing opcodes, and maybe toy with loop {} then {} else {} for some pythin if-no-break-then {} action
Hi guys... I need one suggestion... in my page I'm getting more then 300 frequent entries from user. is this better to create a ajax call to server for each entry?
Does anyone know a way to take a string and turn it into a hash that Apple uses can this be done in PHP? I have a script for like 43 different hashes but i want an OSX hash.
@PeeHaa It's really fucking depressing that a Microsoft tech product is one of the more sane options in terms of adhering to standards. They have all sorts of weird non-standard stuff, but at least the standardised stuff is implemented properly
@boyee thanks for you suggestion.. one of my friend suggested me to use local storage to store frequent entries and finally pass it to server to store in db.
ping @NikiC what's the status of named params? Last I heard there was call forwarding issues and you didn't want to continue with an incomplete implementation. Is that still the case?
Ignoring potential BC issues, is it a candidate for PHP 7?
If you're willing to take on the responsibility, and can work on the implementation or find someone willing to work on it for you, feel free to take it back to internals and re-ignite the discussion
You can ping ircmaxell here if you want to talk to him about it
Having native functions use named parameters would be interesting though, because then all of a sudden the actual name of the argument becomes important for consistency.
@Tom because your code variable has a value and is loaded into your browser, therefore the button click will always return the same value... until you refresh the page and JS is reloaded with a different random value?
@Ibra038 read the docs. you can either make a premade form or one where you send a hash of the fields if I remember correctly. has been a long time, but I'm sure it's still possible
@ThW Hey man, there's a guy doing some stuff working with HTML5 and said that DOM is somewhat lacking in some areas apparently, does FluentDOM and friends have any additional handling for it?
I can imagine that libxml would bork at <!DOCTYPE html> though, because it's not actually a valid doctype in the strict sense iirc
@ThW I haven't explored the "not work properly" element yet, he's gone for lunch. I pointed him at FluentDOM/PhpCSS and he said he'd have a crack and see how he gets on
domxpath doesn't give a piss about the doctype. either it's a namespace thing or he doesn't know how to look for a substring in a space-delimited string in xpath
@DaveRandom that's old and abandoned. use mastermind's html5 lib if you need one.
Do we think there will be a PHP 5.7, or is all effort now going towards PHP 7 being the next release? (i.e. should I be basing language change patches off master?)