what does the `backtick string expression` do in php? can't find anything about it :|
Anonymous
hm, it's probably easier to install it and get dirty first. I hope there are no nasty, error-prone time wasting setup problems. These days I can't get anything done without pulling my hair for 30 minutes :/ @bwoebi
After reading a couple of answers and comments on some SQL questions here, and also hearing that a friend of mine works at a place which has a policy which bans them, I'm wondering if there's anything wrong with using backticks around field names in MySQL.
That is:
SELECT `id`, `name`, `another...
funny that phpunit has a bunch of imho verbose assertion methods such as $this->assertGreaterThanOrEqual and it doesn't have $this->assertOk() $this->assertFail()
the closest i can get is $this->assertTrue(true); and $this->assertTrue(false);
@Worf Doing $this->fail("Some message here") - allows you to specify why a test failed. For a test that succeeds, what message would you want to do, other than "yes, there was no error."?
Meh - For the record I am still annoyed at this PR being closed:
> You will have to live with different settings of opcache.save_comments in your test / production environment. Or simply set opcache.save_comments=1 for production. I do not believe that opcache.save_comments=0 provides a significant performance gain anyway.
It's a data source - it returns some data based on the testname that was passed to it. Doing a switch statement is the same as loading the data from a file.....which presumably you don't think is a bad thing.
To be completely fair this wasn't entirely WordPress's fault... My VPS suffered a harddrive crash and I spent many years heavily customizing/bastardizing the fuck out of that WP install. It wasn't trivial to get it back up and running from memory.
Sure, the database was backed up, but not the code.
There was a nightly rsync job that was supposed to back it up to S3, but unfortunately for me I turned that off about a year ago after I changed my S3 API key and forgot to update the cronjob.
@Andrea If you have no idea now, start a bit working on it and then think again about it… Will be a major refactor maybe, but you only see what you need by trying
$ ~/Projects/2014/PHP/php-src/sapi/cli/php src/main.php ~/Projects/2014/PHP/php-src/sapi/phpdbg/phpdbg test.php
No opcodes could be compiled | No file specified or compilation failed?
Ooh, yay, I got it to capture phpdbg's output as a string
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
namespace ajf\ElePHPants_Love_Coffee;
class CompiledVariableOperand extends Operand
{
private $number;
public function __construct(int $number) {
$this->number = $number;
}
public function getNumber(): int {
return $this->number;
}
}
No, but I mean how often does it make sense to take PHP code and try to run it in Javascript? Why not just write JS and run it in JS, and if you really wanted to do something with it in PHP you could use the V8JS extension.
@Andrea I mean, if I understand this correctly the use case for something like V8JS is to potentially build something like a Selenium framework. In which case I don't see why the extension is so bad?
@Andrea True, I've never actually used it for anything serious so I guess I never bothered to figure out exactly how it works. Now that I'm reading the documentation it does seem to be a bit of a pita in that regard.
hmm, I honestly thought it had a better API than this.
Now that I think of it I suppose it would be a lot easier to translate PHP code into JS code than the other way around, sans the extension-specific code.
There's a lot of JS code that just wouldn't make sense in PHP.
Don't just blindly copy API signatures. Change them to fit the language.
C has to have horrible out-parameter APIs everywhere. PHP doesn't.
Also, ugh. I start writing PHP code again and I remember why I don't write PHP code... Function names and parameter orders I can't remember nor guess. Arcane syntax. Needless verbosity.
@Andrea also sometimes i see redundant stuff, like the $offset parameter in preg_match. there's already substr for that. php itself should intern string substrings. basically $a = "foo"; $b = substr($a, 0, 2); should not allocate a second string, but reference $a with different boundaries
@Worf Because that's its job, to cut out a piece. If you want to reference a part of the string, I guess that would be the job of some sort of slice mechanism (which we don't have)
$a = [1,2,3,4]; $b = array_slice($a, 1, 1); $b doesn't allocate anything more. when you access $b[0] you get it internally pointing to $a[1], basically
it would actually allocate if you do in a later moment... $a = [1,2,3,4]; $b = array_slice($a, 1, 1); // just references $a but with different boundaries $b[1] = 3; // here happens the actual copy
array and strings are already interned, but not their subsequences
You do this for a few 100,000-character strings. You think you've used several hundred characters' worth of memory. No, you've used hundreds of thousands of characters' worth of memory, the original strings weren't GC'd
With copy-on-write you abstract the semantics away from the user, but still achieve the desired effect. With immutable strings you force the user to have to explicitly copy to get that effect.
class StringSlice {
private $string;
private $offset;
private $length;
public function __construct(string $string, int $offset, int $length) {
...
}
...
}
By assigning it to an instance property you are technically modifying it. Between the local variable and instance variable you lose the local container.
Again... I could be wrong. It's been a while since I've revisited PHP internals.
Because trying to equate a PHP script for a web page is antiquated thinking. a URI is merely a gateway to interface with your PHP. There is not a 1:1 correlation between them.