yeah, it doesn't handle that sort of thing. I'm interested to know how that works out. it may be that the Leanpub stuff does that all for you. maybe you break apart the book into chapter per file? not sure
@ircmaxell the generic one doesnt tell the proper mime type though and the OP also asked whether s/he has to save the data on the server first. that's what made me doubt.
@Funkatron I'm really looking forward to this book. Writing testable code and test suite organizations in big projects are under explained topics (which I have sort of strong opinions about)
@Funkatron: I think the podcast explanation of the microphp part gets the point across a lot better. Based on this, I wouldn't have written my blog post at all...
Originally I was using asciidoc and then a tool chain to convert to docbook and then from docbook to other formats. If you need all that other stuff I recommend investing the time in learning docbook
@ircmaxell you almost made Ed cry while we were recording
@Funkatron: I think one of your arguments can be turned around though. You commented that the more code you have, the more you maintain and worry about. That's true. One could argue it's easier to manage one large package than 4 small ones
@ircmaxell Chances are slim. If one of my new colleagues will fly over there I'll ask to join. If not I guess I won't be able to make it. So chances are: Nope
I wanted to really rag on Ed about that but he kept talking and I couldn't get a word in edgewise. STANDARDS, MISTER FINKLER, ARE WHAT SEPARATES US FROM ANIMALS
@edorian: My issue was with situations where you're making several exception classes that have almost/no content, and you break each one out into its own file. Personally, that makes things harder for me to track
@Funkatron I don't see why having all exceptions in one file per module would help me. And "one class per file" kinda works out quite well and I don't mind having 4 line files I guess
What I don't really see is that a project having "too multiple files" is an issue. For me its what it exposes. I don't really care about my /vendor/ dir having 100k files
@everyone: Good day to you all.. I just want to ask what is the most effective way to validate email.. I came across filter_var($emailAddressString, FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL); but I'd like to ask you guys if you have better/more effective ways to validate emails, like using regular expressions or whatnot.. Thank you for your time..
@Nonym for what I know, that is the best thing you can get, matching all valid email address according RFC-3696 and only those valid ones are something not quit simple.
> The Internet email message format is defined in RFC 5322, with multi-media content attachments being defined in RFC 2045 through RFC 2049, collectively called Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions or MIME. Prior to the introduction of RFC 2822 in 2001, the format described by RFC 822 was the standard for Internet email for nearly 20 years. RFC 822 was published in 1982 and based on the earlier RFC 733 for the ARPANET
If you think "People are to stupid to use frameworks" suggesting that they write their own stuff doesn't really work out.. been there seen that. It's just a lot more crap copied from all over the web :)
I've got a "dispatcher" part of the application that passes data structures only when they are needed, and that's done by passing them in as parameters
so for instance, to access the dom at a point where the framework allows you to, you use $dom["h1#name"]->innerText = "Greg"; but I want to achieve the same functionality without passing in the $dom variable.
I'm trying to roll my own extremely basic SMTP function with PHP, mostly just for fun. But I'm getting an error message that I don't understand; googling hasn't really revealed much.
About halfway through the connection, I get the following:
<b>Warning</b>: fwrite() [<a href='function.fwrite'>function.fwrite</a>]: SSL operation failed with code 1. OpenSSL Error messages: error:140D00CF:SSL routines:SSL_write:protocol is shutdown in <b>~~~</b> on line <b>23</b><br />
It appears to work fine until I send the From email...
How to diagnose OpenSSL errors:
Look at the error message:
error:1408F10B:SSL routines:func(143):reason(267)
Take the reason code (267) and determine the error:
grep 267 /usr/include/openssl/ssl.h
/usr/include/openssl/ssl.h:#define SSL_R_WRONG_VERSION_NUMBER 267
Now goog...
That explains how you can troubleshoot openssl error messages.
@JMRboosties replicate your server environment in a virtual box and then you can try the install there first. if it breaks, you just broke your virtual box and not the real thing
Is there any way to create a virtual machine that you can use in VirtualBox from a physical installation that you have? For instance, if I have Windows XP installed on a physical computer and want to have a virtual version of that machine on a different computer. This would save a ton of time by ...
alternative is you replicate your server environment by hand. then you just need some iso of your server distro to start with and mount that to the virtual box
my server isnt too complicated, i just want a way to check to make sure im doing it right. could i just insert the parameters for my server (OS, size, etc) and just see if the commands work?
@JMRboosties you still need an iso image of some sort then. virtual box is really just a virtual computer. you define the memory and cpu and hd space and then you can install something on it
Hey, I am trying to pass a variable from one page to another with jQuery loader. The previous person working on this seemed to try and pass it by creating a url with a $_GET variable and loading that. But since the page doesn't reload...php doesn't run. is it even possible to do?
Interesting...basically, throwing a request to a PHP websocket server every 50msec with the request taking up 100msec on the server, will make PHP lose packets.