Most of the major registrars have a 3 character minimum for second-level domains. However, I know that it's possible to register them. (a.cc, o.co)
You can ever register single unicode domain names (௫.net, ✈.com, ಠ.com)
How is that possible? I know that IANA has most of the .coms restricted, bu...
How could this $dreams .= "the following should say locations ".$k." ".($k == "locations")."<br><BR>"; possibly print this the following should say locations 0 1
i have a script in /example/dir/script.php and would like to use the is_dir() function to see if there is a directory in /example123/dir123/123/. What do i wright in the is_dir() to look up /example123/dir123/123/?
@Radi is_dir needs a path relative to where you are, or the full path. So you would use ../../example123/dir123/123 for a relative path, or /full/path/to/web-root/example123/dir123/123 for a full path.
Also, when you read this "I really enjoyed our conversation today and am looking forward to having you in the office for some in-depth exploration on both sides. " Does that strike you as an obvious double-entendre?
@Anfurny i used to think it is the framework out there but after having worked with it for about a year and a half and getting below it's surface i came to the conclusion that it sucks. I would not use it again. Or if I had to, then I'd make sure I would not have to use MVC components. They are broken beyond repair. The other components are mostly okay unless you need them customized. The codebase isnt too good.
Heh, no I'm not saying she really means it, consciously, just whether that blatantly strikes everybody who reads it as "that's what he said" kind of moment or I just have a dirty mind.
So you @cbuckley @Gordon found that zend in particular's implementation of MVC sucked. I would really appreciate an example thing you wanted to do but were held back by.
The bootstrapping is very restrictive and very difficult to extend. We've concentrated on functional testing for the MVC portion and left unit testing to the logic so we haven't hit on such problems
Really? The only way to find unlabled email in gmail is to do a search negating every single label you have? -{label:label1} -{label:label2} -{label:label3} -{label:label4}??? I have over 200 labels. Good god...
@anfurny another thing that annoyed me was when mocking/stubbing components. ZF uses so many magic methods that you never know if a method is magic and you have to stub __call or if its a real method.
@Anfurny there is also an overly large amount of statics and singletons, which i consider unnecessary in ZF but they lead to coupling in our app.
also, i fell into the use-as-much-as-you-can trap in the beginning. i gave preference to ZF components when I could have done it with native PHP. This leads to abyssmal performance when handling dates
@Anfurny well, like i said, i wouldnt use the MVC components anymore nowadays. but i wouldnt rule out using other components of it again. id just be more selective and open to alternatives.
@cbuckley I've found web applications can benefit more from resources than web sites. You can leverage the HTTP methods quite a bit more. Give me a moment and I can give you some examples.
@cbuckley likely by making the controller respond to http methods instead of verbs encoded in the url
here is one link for that peej.co.uk/articles/rmr-architecture.html showing one way to do that. i dont like the article that much though because it doesnt say that much about rest as a whole
@gordon I understand that for a RESTful Web service, but if the service is to be used to deliver a Web application to a browser for instance, a custom client needs to exist to consume that service
In most of our cases that is a lightweight MVC app
I guess the main focus of that is device independence
@cbuckley you really only need the custom client when you want to use verbs beyond post and get because you need ajax for that. iirc not all browser supports all methods as form methods yet.
@ircmaxell I got it working!!! Avoid stream_recv if at all possible, it's got some very strange side-effects. Instead use file functions (fread et al).
@cbuckley To begin with, my server set-up is different than normal. I have the web site the user sees, and a different website that serves up a REST API. The really nice thing about this setup is that you can expose the API to users if you wish.
The web server essentially becomes the client for the API. This way you can build the requests you need without ever using JavaScript. I love JS, don't get me wrong, but to depend on it for these tasks seems really, really wrong.
Maybe its just the way I think, but when I design for resources I end up with very, very clean URLs.
Another nice thing is you can do anything your site does via ajax if the need arises. Again, I don't recommend relying on JavaScript, but if you have some nice enhancement you can do, that's fine.
Another benefit of keeping them separated is that your data can easily be transformed into whatever content type you need to serve.
A lot of the things I've mentioned can be done without focusing on resources. I have simply found that it all becomes easier and more natural when you do.
@LeviMorrison it depends. its a different mental model. for a user it might be easier to think in the usecases the application allows. rest is http centric and most users dont think that way
When you say you have a "website ... and a different website" do you mean different web server? Or do you mean your application sends http requests to itself?
but do your requests actually go out through http, or do you use some sort of include to just simulate the requests (i.e. API->user_controller->add('joe'))
@Anfurny Can you decide in a meeting one day, "So, our users are asking for an API. Let's expose ours." Can that project be done within the week? Probably not if you are using the setups I've seen. With the setup I use, I just have to make sure authentication is working properly for the new users. There's one benefit.
Well, MVC traditionally makes it easy to expose your API by separating the view so thoroughly. In Zend for example, I could do something like echo json_encode($view); with a little tweaking
Yes, you're separating out the view from the logic... but that's almost the definition of MVC.
@Anfurny But that distinction right there makes you stop and actually think about what you are doing. You cannot pass object through memory over HTTP. You have to serialize it.
@Anfurny you are not sending the objects as such. its not soap or rpc. you dont need to reassemble on the other side. you actually just send the representation for a resource as requested by the client.
@BoltClock superping. i have collected the additiona information made by the OP in the comments to stackoverflow.com/questions/8826908/… into the question. can you cleanup the obsolete comments, please? I flagged them but i doubt people will understand why.
@Anfurny I guess I prefer managing my resources as resources. Using HTTP makes it really easy. Browsers don't fully implement the HTTP protocol, notably they don't normally won't send a DELETE or PUT request. Because of this, it is useful to have a resource-centric server and a user-centric server.
@Anfurny I never said it couldn't. I've just never really seen it done. I've seen people claim they have, but I've always found pretty significant flaws.
Whatevs, I'm not too worried about pissing people off online. If I didn't say something everytime it got somebody online mad I wouldn't be talking too much.
@Anfurny I may have to give Zend Framework another chance. If I restrict myself to the Zend_Rest_* areas, I may be able to avoid a lot of other problems.
it seems to be the most popular MVC framework for php.
San Francisco.
And some of the companies that have been interviewing me, I realized, mistook my zend php 5.3 certification for a Zend framework (which seems to be what they want).