@ErikLandvall something will be setting the status code....it doesn't get set magically. Just check everywhere that is calling header() in your code...
@tereško then explain why there's no errors! I'm telling you, it makes no sense.. it's jst layers of abstractions in the code that works with one method, but not the other.
@tereško Pls, don't be descending. I tried all sorts of stuff before I asked here. I'm not a scrub... 10years plus experience. the code works, even with DELETE if it doesn't go through the layers of abstractions... I'm trying to show you the flow, just hang on
"then explain why there's no errors!" - your code isn't doing what you think it's doing. The reason why putting an echo in, is that it makes PHP sends the headers including the status code. You ought to make sure that you have error reporting properly enabled, because it sounds like you don't.
I Think I got it all in there, just trying to show the code that I'm using, hard to do with all thees abstractions, but with out the abstractions, the code works..
@ErikLandvall 501 is method not allowed. You're getting errors when issuing a DELETE verb. Go look at the docs for your web server software and determine why it's rejecting the verb. Maybe you have an extension installed that acts on the DELETE verb, or maybe you've otherwise expressly told it to forbid that verb.
@ErikLandvall "then explain why there's no errors!" - right there is where you're putting the blame on someone else for your code not working. And the code you linked isn't runnable...and I think the error is not in the code you're looking at.
Not for the moment, @Danack my day ended 3 hours ago, was suppose to have a repo set up today actually.. will try and make time for setting up a repo tomorrow or something. Will try and make a smaller code base to re-produce the issue as well. Thanks for your time all.. / Broken and failed coder going home for the day
> If I understand this correctly, different files are stored in different ways; for example an image data is stored as binary inside a jpg file. But not all file use binary.
* Buffers all records until a certain level is reached
*
* The advantage of this approach is that you don't get any clutter in your log files.
* Only requests which actually trigger an error (or whatever your actionLevel is) will be
* in the logs, but they will contain all records, not only those above the level threshold.
@kelunik well, I don't want end up having an OOM due to all the buffered logs… looks fine for short-running scripts, but not possibly infinitely running scripts?
For the record - I have officially given up and am using static methods in place of functions. Although it makes be feel a bit dirty, it stops me having to worry about loading functions, having a single file with ALLTHEFUNCTIONS.PHP
The dump-autoload is still a shitty solution...the problem is that the code is being loaded on each request. A modern-ish CPU has say 12 GB/s of memory bandwidth to play with.
(btw I might be wrong on the following, but don't think I am)
If you're loading all possible functions needed on each request, the code gets copied from OPCache to the process running the individual request.
Even if you only want to aim for 500 requests per second, that is about 24 MB of memory bandwidth per request......
So loading all of the functions eats a shed-load of that memory bandwidth up....but even worse, the dumped autoload file for even moderate sized projects can easily get to 5 megabytes.....
Yay - even without any processing of code, your system gets completely constrained by just copying data around uselessly.
Or, you could just give up and only load functions when needed....which is what happens automatically when you use static methods....
@bwoebi I don't put them all in one class. Just group them into sensible collections. And also, it means that if I pull in a dependency that is only used in particular scenarios (e.g. deploying the application) and it has a collection of functions, those functions don't get loaded for each request.
@tereško the status code before the front dispatcher is just an ordinary 200. Let's not get into it right now, I will set up a test case that can re-produce the issue if I won't solve it..
The biggest problem I have is working out WHAT to test. In this case I am expecting a result from the DB, I know I should test the actual DB, but I assume it is correct to simulate how to handle the result of the DB
Let's say I have a super simple object that has an ID and a Category (foreign key pointing to category table). How would that object be modeling in php?
@EquinoxMatt only reason for testing exception that was thrown by a mock is if the expected behavior is tho let the exception to bubble through the tested class
Let's say I have a super simple object that has an ID and a Category (foreign key pointing to category table). How would that object be modeling in php?
@tereško I guess what I am getting at is, if $category is equal to a foreign key, then is it bad that I make a call to the DB in the getter method when I want to get the actual name of the category?
actually if you really need to test public or protected methods, you just extend the tested class ... but at that point you begin using unit tests purely as a development tool not a testing/QA tool.
(I sometimes write unit test for private/protected methods, when I am developing some really confusing algorithm and need to make sure that some recursive nightmare actually works as I think it should be working) << this is not a good way of doing things
I only do this for methods like "balance" for an AVL tree. Balance is not something you can outwardly see but it is an often reason for the structure to fail.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes, I think so. When the user changes their ID, I want their other records to also be updated. I wasn't sure if I should call the respect repositories via the service layer, or call one repository and let it do the work
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeah that is something I had a look around about a few days ago. The general consesnsous seemed to be mixed, leaning towards a repo having access to several tables
@BenjaminGruenbaum I am using a datamapper orm as my persistance
Honestly, I changed my feeling about ORMs from "sometimes" to "should not contain any logic except for querying and adding - certainly no joins or dynamic proxies - should just map to objects".
@Shafizadeh if I drink as single beer: absolutely nothing. But it's really complementing the food. Two beers get me relaxed. 4 beers and I am actually kinda drunk.
@EquinoxMatt now, I just want to know Teresko's opinion about "love". Honestly I believe Teresko had experienced a bad love failure ... I want to know my thought is correct or not!
@samayo ha ha ha! (that was funny). actually nothing, I just like to know more about him, I don't know why
Anonymous
9:57 PM
@Shafizadeh because you are new
Anonymous
I miss being a first-timer. In your first year, you'll feel free to act and speak as you are used to in your more open society. In Europe and the West however, the etiquette is a bit different. Little by little you have to learn to be a little less of yourself, and do more of political correctness, social justice to fit in.
Anonymous
So, to sum it up, after a year ... you'll change your personality.
@Shafizadeh "I just like to know more about him" - we've had this discussion before. Hassling people online to try to get personal information about it is highly inappropriate. Please stop doing it.
ya look, I am usually a polite person, and I don't interference at people lives. But in this case (Tesresko) I liked to know more about him because he is different than others a bit and he is kinda pattern for me. I try to behavior like him, so for doing that, I need to more data
anyway ok, I learned my lessen, I never ask about him anymore