I am just trying to validate a number (integer or float). This is what I have written: $number = '[0-9]*(.[0-9]*)?'; $ret = preg_match('/^'.$number.'$/', '-1.1'); echo $ret;
@SonuKMishra No worries. It'll help you a lot to step through your regexs bit by bit and think about exactly what each piece will match (and won't), and how that might not necessarily jive with what you're trying to do with it.
I'm not sure it can be optimsed as well as it could be if it is included in core. Opcache could optimise things like closure('foo') completely away....
Not all stuff is return-type-able unfortunately. But being able to tell the difference between someone meaning to return a string, and meaning to return an invokeable thing is useful.
btw @Andrea at at least one person in that reddit thread has their own implementation of callable -> closure, and they seem quite supportive of the RFC, as it makes their API library, which only accepts closures as callbacks more acceptable to the community.
"this is nicely readable as well" - No it's not. And the RFC lists reasons why a function is better. If you want to persuade me that an OO method is better, please say an actual reason why it's better.
@Danack Why is it better? Simple. Why is there a magical global function that produces closures?
In OOP you group data and the functions to deal with it into a class
If I made a new global function call which takes a Closure and an object to bind to, people would rightly ask why it wasn't called Closure::call instead
If I made a global function listFromArray which takes an array and produces an SplDoublyLinkedList, people would ask why it wasn't a method of that class
> e.g. in cases where the same function is turned into a closure twice: with the implementation being a function it is perfectly acceptable for $fn1 and $fn2 to be the same object. If instead the implementation was as a constructor for the closure class:
> Additionally having it be just a function, would make it easier in the future to implement it as a language construct, which might be desired for performance reasons.
You aren't going to persuade me of making it be something other than a function unless you can tell me something it either allows or some other concrete benefit. Just saying that we need to stick to 'OOP principles' is really not convincing.
@Danack unless you're actually proposing it as a language construct and have something showing an actual performance gain, that looks more like wishful micro-optimization
@PaulCrovella It could be a compiler optimisation - which is beyond my ability to implement, but I will be prodding people to do it. It will need to be able to inspect the parameter as to whether it has any static vars, and then generate appropriate code to generate the closure.
and, quite honestly, even dismissing the OO argument as just "obsession" is kinda irritating - no different than someone dismissing you as just obsessed with being contrarian about it
he's not wrong, though I don't give two shits about phpsadness
considering all the bizarre nonsense that's come up on that thread, I'd say that email in particular puts forward his position in a reasonable, understandable way
this false preoccupation with cognitive overload is out of the league, it's just FUD like always. I won't get involved in any argumentation related to this anymore.
okay, I think you want a thing and because of that you're willing to completely disregard the possibility that there might be any downside to having it at all rather than honestly weigh the pros and cons.
I think levi's proposal probably comes out as a net positive. I also think bob's proposal would've stood a better chance if concerns brought up about it weren't simply dismissed for as long as they were.
@Danack I have to say I quite like the idea of new Closure(callable $callable). Each call will have to return a new object, but this probably isn't such a bad thing.
But it doesn't really offer any advantage over closure(callable $callable), so meh.
@PaulCrovella really? I've been questioning for days why they think auto import is an issue and really tried to understand all that was presented but none of the reasons presented were important enough. If you think raising FUD like (unproven) cognitive overload, "plenty of SO questions" and "another PHP sadness" will be created or "it's been like this for 20 years" is being reasonable, then let's disagree. Just don't pretend you know my opinions better than me, that's inappropriate.
@marcio the only one I've seen mention cognitive "overload" is you - the dude just said there's a higher cognitive load, so maybe leave the straw man out of it
or kick and scream about FUD, I don't even care anymore
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Hrm, out of curiosity, if a user asks us how to hack something, and then after being informed that is not what we do, he simply rephrases the "how to hack" part into a more innocent phrase, is it still viable to flag / close / w.e due we know it's gonna be used for "bad means" ?
I am looking to recode a php script I'm using to hide email form input on a script.
Like many php scripts, it asks for an email address to proceed however I'm trying to make it simple and remove it – I set a default password and hid it or put the password on opacity: 0 - thus the person enters ...
setting up a repo with vagrant and a weak web app for testing/practice/learning web app security .. any idea for a good name... so far the best I have come up with is "VulnWeb"
I've seen 2 kinds of company: those who have a home-like network where they don't care because everything is online, and those who have hugely complicated networks with a sysadmin team and all the stuckness that goes with it
@FlorianMargaine yes, it does autodiscovery so its aware of network topologies. it requires an outbound connection to our cloud servers to collect the data from any server you run an agent on.
for debugging I would just do "die(var_dump($db_name)); # returns "Array()".. Why?" instead of printing it and then die. but that to be out of the way.
can I have one of those floating robots for my office please @Gordon ... kthnx ...
@NikiC if we, humans I mean, entertained every stupid idea, we would never get any real work done ... it's okay to ignore stupid, if it's stupid for stupid's sake ..
it wouldn't be so bad if it were one train, but you can bet it's four or five ... this is like a nightmare for me, the probability of me managing to get on all those trains is literally nil, I can see that six hours turning into 12 easily, I doubt I would even get to the destination ... easier to stay home ...