Seriously, how that fuck did we end up with this insanity with integer sizes and what different languages call things? Esp int/integer and long, I have no idea what size those things will be in any random env
@DaveRandom the integer issues are so bad in fact that I gave up on one project (a binary client for OrientDB) after spending two weeks plus trying to work around 32/64 bit inconsistencies. It's supposed to get better in PHP 7 with 64-bit support everywhere, except (obviously) on 32-bit systems. IMO they should stop building/supporting the 32-bit build. (who still has 32-bit hardware laying around? if they do, they're surely not going to run the latest generation of PHP on it.)
@Arundivakar What do you mean by size? Size of data? Image dimensions? Volume of the sphere described by adding together the heights of the people in the picture, cubing it and multiplying it by 4/3 Pi?
@chozilla You are free to make your own list of constants. They aren't defined in PHP as that would limit the definitions to what were available when that version of PHP was compiled, and not what is possible on the system it is being used on.
@Danack to my knowledge the mb* functions don't use system libraries to do their thing, so the range of character sets possible is indeed fixed at php compile time
@Arundivakar your issue is here imagejpeg($img, $newcopy, 100); change the 100 to an 80 ... you shouldn't see any visible degradation but the file size will be considerably smaller
On our website, we have edit pages. When the user clicks save, the form is posted to the same page, then redirected to the next page. For some reason, the redirects are taking a long time (like 20 seconds).
I am cropping images using `include_once("includes/imagecropping/resize-class.php");` `$resizeObj = new resize($pic);` //For Website Events Images Crooping And Saving. `$resizeObj->resizeImage($imgwidth, $imgheight, 'crop');` `$resizeObj->saveImage($evt_tmp, 70);`
@John the actual redirect is probably taking no time at all it's all in the image processing, database work, also I imagine there is cache invalidation happening and some other maintenance stuff
Back to my question ;) I have a WP site where I created a shortcode to grab a custom post type by ID, however as it is using Visual Composer it is spitting out the garbage code from that - how can I get it to render properly?
if it turns out it's the image creation, I would suggest you work up a deferred image creation system... it's not as difficult as it sounds - make sure your image URLs follow some kind of pattern, e.g. "images/profile-123.jpg" source image at 500 px might be "images/cache/profile-123.500px.jpg", as long as it's a pattern you can parse.
Set up a rewrite for missing files in "images/cache" folder to a PHP script that generates (and sends) the file. Now you don't need to generate images in advance anymore, you just generate URLs - the script generates the image versions the first time you hit a missing URL.
Deferred image creation is a good idea under any circumstances - you won't be generating images that never get used.
@john isolate the image resize to it's own file and test the timing on that by itself. If the image is not going to be used in all seven sizes you might be able to just get away with saving the original and resizing when the image is requested (with result caching of course)
@PeeHaa I created a shortcode to grab my custom post type, which is passed an ID from a Visual Composer Element, however on the front end it is showing the raw VC code
The Matcher applies a predicate to the Context, and returns bool accordingly. However, it also assigns a Mutator if the Matcher's predicate results in changes to the Context. So, then Mutator::mutate(Context $c) : Context is called.
Q: Can my function return to a different function higher up the call stack? A: YES! THROW THE RETURN VALUE! THROW IT HIGH, THROW IT WIDE! HAIL MARY! HE'S GOING FOR A TOUCHDOWN!
@DaveRandom I should've used send and thrown from the generator.
seriously though @DanLugg, I meant something more like pastebin.com/5yrBnmCa - whether it gains you anything is debatable, but at least it avoids the ref and enforce type safety on what was the out param
@mindplay.dk you are returning a new function that defines a static within it. They are not the same function they just happen to contain the same code
@mindplay.dk Static variables are only static to the local function scope. When you do return function() {} you are instantiating a new closure. Technically $a and $b are two different functions. So they each have their own static variable.
@mindplay.dk I guess the real question is, "how are they not static?". Perhaps you had a different expectation of how static variables would behave there?
@DanLugg I have no issues with return [$bool, $mutator]; as an acceptable analog for structs. I used to get all het-up about type safety but if you are really bothered then use a classed VO instead of an array as the retval
The real distinction here isn't that the instance lifetime has effected anything, but that you have two different instances (or local scopes).
In practice a function definition in PHP exists for the lifetime of the program. Albeit that sort of changes in cases where you have anonymous functions or conditionally defined functions.
I get it now, it surprised me though - the introduction of closures sort of changed the meaning of static depending on context. A static variable inside a closure is really just a property of the closure instance.
@mindplay.dk Well, there are two different uses of the keyword static in PHP. static could mean a static method or property in a class. Or it could mean a static variable in a local function scope, which is how you're using it here.
@mindplay.dk Sure it does. A class does not redefine a function upon object instantiation. The definition only happens once. The same is not true for closures. Each new closure is a new function definition.
@John I believe the summary answer is "Imagick Is Awesome And Does All The Things" but I've not used it for ages and I don't know that much about it. @Danack is you best bet, not sure if he's about atm
Much higher on my wishlist for PHP is complete gradual typing. With return type-hints, we're almost there - except we're not, because there's still no type-hint for properties. To that effect, I wrote this: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/property_type_hints
@ScottArciszewski About half the questions are about people having problems installing it (due to just grabbing random libraries from download sites) and of the remaining questions, all of the interesting ones are so specific to a user, that they barely gather any upvotes: stackoverflow.com/…
Also accessors. With that, and property type-hints, PHP would start to compare with modern gradually-typed languages that were designed that way from the ground up. For some reason, we have to inch towards a complete, consistent type-system with one new feature added every 5-6 years ;-)
@Orangepill don't blindly just copy files into a publicly accessible folder (under your document root) and let people execute freshly uploaded .php files, for starters ;)
@NikiC I guess for type-hinting to be truly complete, you would need to add type-hints for variables as well? I don't feel it's as necessary though, as getting to complete type-hinting support for the public interfaces of objects, e.g. function paramters (check!), return types (check!) and properties (miss!)
@kelunik unset() on typed local variables can't "remove" the variable (which is a spooky feature anyhow) and probably should just be equivalent to setting it = NULL. (?)
@NikiC doesn't inference raise the same questions though? infererence is just static typing without explicit type-hinting. So if $a is inferred as int locally, it's the same as int $a, so raises the same issue with unset(), I think?
@mindplay.dk I was referring to your earlier message there. In a typed environment unset() on variables should be simply forbidden. It makes zero sense, just like isset on simple variable
@kelunik agreed, which means we'd need generics - unless you decide that all variables are nullable; which is a shitty solution, something I'm really unhappy with in Typescript. It's probably better than the status quo in PHP though? already every variable is "nullable", so it's maybe less of a departure to just maintain that feature.
Exceptions are objects which contain information. The message of the error type should be attached to that object, so you should just be able to:
try {
} catch(PDOException $e) {
echo $e->getMessage();
}
The exception message should be defined when the exception is thrown.
@chozilla should work the same as any other function result... biggest issue I think is how type info is transferred back through the driver. and if a requested property does not have a scalar representation
@kelunik yeah, that's weird and has tripped me up sometimes - like function set_user(User &$user) doesn't work and can't ever be called, if you're expecting to set $user from within the function. Instead you have to write set_user(User &$user = null) which works, but has the unintended side-effect of also making the argument optional. Sorta messed up.
@NikiC yeah, everything is nullable now though, so it's already a shit show, but I agree - it's a bad solution. I think they did it that way in Typescript to stay closer to how it works in JS, but it's been widely criticized. Facebooks type-checker thing has a better solution, with a generic Nullable<> type.
@kelunik of course, but it's our only means of returning more than one value, unless you return arrays, which, like, no thanks.
@kelunik of course, I consider that, but in the case of short-lived values, it doesn't make sense to construct objects. That is, when you're really truly returning two values that aren't related (enough) to exist in a class with any meaningful name.
so I guess json_extract will return a string given this definition CREATE FUNCTION json_extract RETURNS string SONAME 'libmy_json_udf.so'; so I'm assuming that means complex properties will be returned a json strings.
What would you do if: you hve setup a system where users can register, login, after they are logged in they can approve their data with a form to confirm a purchase. With a file upload etc.. nothing that magic.
In the backend the admin should be able to do actions like approve and deny people In the backend the moderators can only look at the data by a url with password protection.
I have to setup that thing it's pretty small but what should I use for it? Is a framework overkill?