@Andrea and how that's better than casting it yourself if you are still going to pass the exact same thing as the "implicit" conversion? (I'm arguing only for objects with __toSomeType methods only ofc)
ok, you will get a nice error message saying you passed an object but if you implemented __toString it means you don't want the error, you want casting.
@marcio You didn't necessarily specify it though. You specified strict_types, whoever wrote the class of the object you're passing around specified __toString
so you want to use strict types, except you want a pass for objects (only) because their conversion happens to be specified... while anything else whose conversion also happens to be specified doesn't get a pass because they're just not objects
Yes, I'm talking explicitly and only about objects with __toString. You brought an example with a scalar value ^^ but I gave my opinion enough already.
@marcio just because an object has a __toString method doesn't mean whoever wrote that class meant for the object to be implicitly convertible to string. Although it might be true in some places, in others it isn't.
@marcio oh, a class that holds AWS secret + key. Even though they can be representing as a string, and there may be a __toString method on the class that holds them, I never ever ever want to accidentally use them where a string is meant to be used.
@marcio and now you're moving the goalposts. You asked "so whoever implemented __toString doesn't necessarily want implicit string conversion... can you give an example?" You now have two examples.
@NikiC hmm, I wonder if it really gets inlined twice or compiler is smart enough to not duplicate common branch independent parts… let me check out the asm…
@Danack yes, two examples of wrong __toString usages. The concat operator case is not 'goalpost' and frankly I can't believe you think returning your ASW credentials on a __toString for debug purposes is acceptable.
I need some ideas...I have a website that I created for my boss at work so that he can view my work for approval. If you hover over any of the project files you will see a tooltip telling you the status of each file.
I have to manually change the status every time something is approved. There has got to be an easier way for me where I don't have to copy and paste the block of code.
Honestly, it looks like a simple table (maybe SQLite if you don't want something heavy like MySQL) and then loop through results
But nice design. Props for Font Awesome
As simple as it is, you might even be able to skip a DB altogether and put it into a giant array (the data set is small enough to do this). If you ever did have to go DB it wouldn't be hard to convert
Thanks. I originally just started uploading my files for myself so when I went to work I could just browse to the folder and download them. Then I was like well maybe I can just style the default index(folder structure page) and decided that would be more work then worth it so, I took my main website and used that as the base page layout and it just snowballed from there.
The thing is that for each file link I have this basic block of code where I change it according to the file name etc.
<a href="promos/national_oatmeal_day.pdf" data-toggle="tooltip" data-html="true" title="<div class='statprog'>Status:</div><p class='progmargin'> Final Document </p><div class='statprog'>Upload:</div>Yes"> National Oatmeal Day </a>
I have the href="promos/FILENAMEHERE" part and then the parts that change is the title="<div class='statprog'>Status:</div><p class='progmargin'> Final Document </p><div class='statprog'>Upload:</div>Yes" part
I use Pycharm for some personal stuff, but this is non-open source for a company that wouldn't like it if I used PHPStorm without paying for a license. :P
Yes, it is not really that much work because I have to add markup for the new files anyways when I need to add new files it would just be nicer not to have to copy and paste the markup.
I just now made a file with the status markup as templates that i'll use. it will be better than me copy and pasting little chunks at a time
Well I am generally new to TDD and I would like to introduce that logic to my project. Nothing complex, just simple-testing scenarios to my classes+functions (e.g: for different inputs check the given outputs)
So, follow up to that recommendation of Netbeans, I can't seem to get debugging working with that either. :/ It stops at the first line of the file, but nowhere after that.
I was always horrified by the idea that test scripts were always tripple-sized the project's code. Thank you I will study your example. Did you use PHP-Unit?
Yeah I am sure I will find some "out-of-nowhere" errors I would have never thought of; there is a reason why almost everyone uses TDD in big projects..
> Multiple message-header fields with the same field-name MAY be present in a message if and only if the entire field-value for that header field is defined as a comma-separated list [i.e., #(values)]
No, the framework does stupid things. The result is sending the same header twice, which it shouldn't. Someone clearly spent a lot of time copy/pasting code around and didn't realize this code path.
It's an edge case, which is why it took me a while to understand how on earth it was letting me send multiple location headers in the first place.
I only ever set header once. But clearly the framework has it's own custom shutdown functions that somehow forced the headers to be sent a second time which isn't obvious at all.
@bwoebi Well I have been thinking of buying a bunch of logic gates, assembling my own CPU, writing my own instruction set architecture, and seeing where it goes from there.
I just have to find about 10-15 years to dedicate to it.
@bwoebi Well I have been thinking of buying a bunch of logic gates, assembling my own CPU, writing my own instruction set architecture, and seeing where it goes from there.
Dramatization of the burden of taking something that is already relied upon and rebuilding it because some tiny aspect of it doesn't behave the way you want it.
@tereško Oh well then I'm very sorry to have disappointed you. Certainly didn't mean to be the damper on anyone's day. I just felt like expressing my frustration with a current problem by being overly dramatic :)