@ircmaxell I actually feel like we totally need a SSA->CFG transformation and major compiler rewrite for that first before we can get anything like that done. And I'm not having too much time to do that now. [I have real respect for Nikita how he managed the AST alone for PHP 7] … But maybe in like a month after the exams… [if not too busy with Amp/Aerys things then.]
@Trowski I'm not being difficult, some of these problems are insoluble in five, or the only solutions are horrible ... one of the main problems is needing to read from the object store of other contexts, this is dangerous, not supposed to be done at all, and when you do it the results are undefined, sometimes they go our way and others they don't, in 7 the problem has gone because a zend_object* is directly in the zval, so we can safely do things we just couldn't do before ...
@HassanAlthaf So do I, but I just seem to remember reading a question where he/she used a command to do a print_r that was automatically wrapped in the <pre> tags, although I might be wrong.
tbh, I hope there won't be an episode for each of the main characters that are trapped now >< that would be another series of insane amount of fillers :P
@LiamHardy if it's easy for you to decrypt it's probably not a good password encryption and is not safe. Also you should not be encrypting passwords, but rather hashing them so the passwords can't be recovered, but needs to be reset.
@Gordon Yep, my bad. It seems 'new' doesn't like a method invocation as an arg. The following works though: $class = $this->namespace(); return new $class($arg);
Hello, I am trying to remove some info of a url. I would like to match '://' with regex only if http or https are not present. I am using this regex '/(?(?=http)[^-\.\:\/\w]|[^-\w.])/'. Can you help with this?
@tpunt Can you explain your regex? I never used this function before and would be quite trouble some for me to change my code to work with this function.
@GiwrgosGkogkas given that you said you also want to remove some data from the url, I'd just use parse_url and throw the exception when the result is false
@GiwrgosGkogkas It's too easy to screw up a regular expression. Use one of PHP's built-in functions, like filter_var (php.net/filter_var) or parse_url. It'll be a more robust solution