@Sajad if you need to check 20 things then yes ... it is okay. there might be a way to structure your code differently but that would primarily be done to improve code clarity .. not for performance
@Sajad if you need to do something that requires you to check and branch code 150 ways then you are going to need a lot of if statements... there is no getting around that.
I was just considering a case where I am required to set a precisely 4 digit PIN and trying to work out an uninteresting (= less predictable) number, and it turn out 2317 is quite interesting... with the digits arranged in that order, there are only 2 subsets that are non-prime (2, 3, 1, 7, 23, 17, 31, 317 are all prime, only 231 and 2317 are not, and the prime factors of both are composed entirely of 2, 3, 1 and 7)
@JoeWatkins I admit it's likely more interesting to me because it's the last 4 digits of the phone num I had when I was growing up at my parents... I just never bothered to look at the number before
Also I think it is interesting, only in a very, very dull way
All I did was take the same content from this page and put it inside a modal window. It works from destination_edit pages but from the modal it does not
@bwoebi for the record (ha!), DNS-over-TCP is a bad idea unless you are running a relay, and almost no-one supports it, and most servers I've found that do support it don't support interleaving, which just renders the whole exercise pointless IMO. My personal opinion is that DNS should have been fully integrated with IPv6, which would negate the need for any of this crap - IP frames are already fat, bloated and variable length
Allowing named dests instead of numbered dests at the transport layer would have significantly simplified local networking, the thing that the lay man needs to understand, without really hurting the wider world and providing new opportunities for more efficient caching
> Currently Hack has implemented shorthand anonymous functions using the ==> symbol to define them. The position of this RFC is that the ==> symbol is too similar to the => (double arrow) sign, and would cause confusion. Either through people thinking it has something to do with key-value pairs, or through a simple typo could produce valid but incorrect code. e.g.
@bwoebi This is a poor solution, there are several backward-compatible extensions to the protocol that work around this issue without significant overhead, besides which IMHO as soon as you need >512b of data via DNS you are using the wrong protocol
DNS is for low-level discovery, not AL-level extensions
SRV records were a bad idea
(IMHO, YMMV, etc etc)
@bwoebi It's a must for intercommunication (server-server) but not for anything else
It's like the dhcpd failover thing, it works in that very narrow use case, but it's not for clients
You'll end up with idiots trying to do renews over TCP or something
@bwoebi Zone transfers are a whole different ball game, I'm really not sure why anyone thought that could be shoe-horned in to the same protocol that client lookups use
Hindsight 20/20 etc, but it's another one of those things like SMTP that I don't understand why it was allowed to get this far
I went a symposium entitled "The internet is broken, who's going to fix it?" once. The conclusion was essentially "I don't know, but I hope someone does".
It's like chaining map, reduce and filter together. If you don't know what those terms mean it's probably harder than if you had the for loops, but if you know what they mean it's significantly easier and faster.
@bwoebi have you considered making it: ($x, $y ~> { return $x * $y * 2; }) it is nicer to read but i don't know if it's any harder to parse, or something
> PHP Fatal error: Class Mock_Session_a9c9829d contains 1 abstract method and must therefore be declared abstract or implement the remaining methods (CodeCollab\Http\Session\Session::unset) in
When I rename the unset method it works
When I try to isolate the problem in a simple test case the bug is gone
@Orangepill That is correct, my hidden trip id field should have the destination id. Changing it to id instead of tripinfoid on the non modal version, it still works correctly.
I have question. For getting language values I sue array. But if array value has not been isset how I can make it to show error: There is not such array value?
can I use it with foreach to check all array keys in one hand ? not one by one? for example : foreach($array as $key => $value) { if(!array_key_exists($key) { echo 'key doesnt't exist'; }
- defuse/php-encryption v1.2.1 requires ext-mcrypt * -> the requested PHP extension mcrypt is missing from your system.
- defuse/php-encryption v1.2 requires ext-mcrypt * -> the requested PHP extension mcrypt is missing from your system.
^ @PeeHaa … can't install that thing… no such ext on php 7
@LeviMorrison (warning: possibly contentious opinion) actually yes, in many of the cases I've seen it it. I realise it's usually the programmers fault and not the construct, but a often I see these things in O(scary) constructs where a simple loop would have been both more readable and more efficient. Also as a general rule I go for readability over efficiency, but the unnecessary, highly inefficient use of callbacks still bothers me a lot.
Basically unless the code accepts a user-defined callback I generally avoid such constructs. I'm not saying it's better/right/whatever and maybe I'm "stuck in the past" etc but I just don't think these things are inherently more readable than simple loops in the general case.
@DaveRandom I see filter -> map -> reduce all the time. You can often do two of those in the same loop without it being too difficult to read, but when you try to do all three it sucks (but is doable).
So part of it is how much they are used with each other.
If you have one single map with nothing else I don't care too much, you know?
@LeviMorrison I meant unless the public API I'm creating accepts a user-defined callback, and yeh while I try to forget the still-limited amount I know about internals when writing userland PHP it's difficult to change hats like that, I imagine that a lot the mental wall I've put up is reinforced by that inherent cognitive bias
filter/map/reduce is definitely a case where I'd almost always sacrifice some efficiency for readability, usually I'd want to combine filter and map though because in my mind they are part of the same op