Hi! Could someone please check on this question? Probably even with moderator privileges? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/29719177/php-convert-large-decimal-number-to-hexadecimal
I answered it, the OP accepted my answer. Just after that a user showed up and decided that the OP surely wanted to ask something different, therefore he edited the question's title and tags. He gave another answer which is cool in general, but is really bad for the concrete question. Now he is stating that SO should not be about concrete questions, rather about general solutions. Did I misunderstood how SO wor…
@CMate I don't think you're wrong, but maybe you could just go have a beer and not worry too much about someone on the internet being a little bit rude.
Well, I'm not used to it on SO from higher rep. people to reflect with insults about arguing on programming topics :) Anyway, thank you guys @PeeHaa, @Danack for your attention. Probably you are right and I should just let it go :)
@HassanAlthaf '/Users/{username}/{id}' looks like a route notation, which should be CONVERTED into a regular expression. Then you take this regexp, apply it to your incoming URI and extract the values.
He did not even use loaders when I was processing 10 million items in db on the backend assuming user should be sitting in front of the monitor wondering 4-5 seconds. :D
yeah, there was a time, when I was really focused on trying to convince/change some people about their pov and that almost made me to leave the project
since then I only try to focus on the issues at hand and that seems to be working better for me
// It's basically the alternative to
$val = val();
do {
if ($val == foo()) {/* ...*/ break; }
if ($val == bar()) {/* ...*/ break; }
/* default ...*/
} while (0);
@LeviMorrison which may make perfect sense. [I haven't a concrete example ready] But I've already seen such code.
@bwoebi Other languages use advanced pattern matching in switch statements.
So you can do things like:
switch productBarcode {
case .UPCA(let numberSystem, let manufacturer, let product, let check):
println("UPC-A: \(numberSystem), \(manufacturer), \(product), \(check).")
case .QRCode(let productCode):
println("QR code: \(productCode).")
}
But we can't easily do something like this in PHP because we currently allow method/function calls. We have to introduce new syntax of some kind to disambiguate.
But in my opinion I'd rather just disallow expressions, hence the rant ^^
The most deterministic way to check if a callback is an actual closure is:
function is_closure($t) {
return is_object($t) && ($t instanceof Closure);
}
All anonymous functions are represented as objects of the type Closure in PHP. (Which, coming back to above comment, happen to implement t...
Maybe it's better to just add a note that the part is slow and the user is responsible for not recalling it, if not required, no hacky solutions required.
@Danack I need to finish this to have a clean conscience (don't want to work on sundays"
@Rangad Well it sounds like you're trying to solve the wrong problem. If you need to have some information only created in a once, you need to have a single place in the code responsible for managing it, rather than trying to detect duplication elsewhere.
Probably. If only I would ever use this I had no problem. But I'm thinking to much of others. I'll wrap the common usage patterns (and handle storage there) and if someone needs to use something that is not possible using the higher level api, it's really not my problem if he misuses the bare interface and doubles the response time in the process.
Hello. I'm curious whether hastebin.com/peragahesi.bash can be exploited to print "Yay!". The part I'm concerned about is that the first if check them separately but the second checks them after concatenating them together. The user has control over $a and $b (through a post request, but I doubt that's important).
@Blob Yeah, I can't see anyway either though. But maybe there's a better way of making it secure. Presumably you're using $a.$b to be some sort of command?