@Gordon and that's why I'll never make the mistake of having a kid. I don't mind adopting an older one, but I'll pass on all the bodily fluids and excrement.
@MadaraUchiha I strongly advise against that project now that you got elected. Tthere is a direct correlation between diaper changing and flag handling. You cannot do both.
It's not that bad really. Ironically diapers are pretty easy to deal with. The problem is eventually they learn to move, walk and then talk. And one day you look at them, and realize they are a miniature you, which is both awesome and terrifying at the same time
A very simple trick is to use a hash of today's date as the WiFi password, and hook up a RPi to the washing machine or something so that it only gives it away after a chore was completed.
But if they develop the computer skills to move beyond the closed box App Store and prettified UI, and actually manage to alter a script, I'm fine with them not doing their chores for a while until I figure out an alternative.
@MadaraUchiha uhm… I learned it the hard way when I came to uni… but it's not that difficult (okay, I admit, I had a @kelunik to help me when I did things wrong ^^)
@Abe In that same vein, there's a Win10 preview change that will basically plead with you to give Edge another chance before changing the default browser. "It's Edge, not IE12! Why don't you like meeeeee?"
I wanted to create a Windows 8 VM, but I need Windows to download the .iso. Now the .iso is inside my Windows 10 VM and the shared folder doesn't work. :-D
@Andrew Oh OK, well I'm not too familiar with the technicalities, but I believe Symfony makes the Request stack a service as well, so you can inject it into other services like @app.request, so it passes the request from one place to another. Something like that should work. But if you're looking for technical details I'd just peek at the source code of existing frameworks and see how they handle it.
Then just give your service a constructor that takes the request as parameter and pass it from the controller.
@Andrew Make them relative to your Request object. The request respresents something passed to the controller, from there you can dig deeper into the GET/POST stuff.
@MadaraUchiha How would one have a combined GET/POST Request? If you're POSTing to something like dostuff.php?action=doThis, rather than POSTing the action field with doThis as value, you should be facepalming... hard!
I've been digging through some newsgroup posts on PHP Internals and found an interesting discussion about the topic. The initial thread was about something else, but a remark by Stefan Esser, a (if not the) security expert in the PHP world turned the discussion towards the security implications o...
an alternative would be to use a mapper that takes the superglobals and maps them to a specific application request fit for the controller. if you use a generic request object, you'll often need a second one when you intend to use a controller that doesnt speak http, e.g. cliRequest, httpRequest
or you just use two controllers, e.g. httpcontroller and clicontroller.
@Sean ....the controller for logging in should only be called if the request is via a POST method, and it should be checking the CSRF token first.....the ability to set variables via the query param, to override those in the form body doesn't appear to be a vulnerability if those two things are done.
I could see it being a really nice hack for integration testing.....you could write tests that don't need to alter forms, but can force particular fields to be set invalid values.
@MadaraUchiha Domains are validated via files, yes. That's one of the 4 possible challenges, but I think only tls-sni-01 and http-01 are currently allowed for LE.
@tereško I have some nested elements and my HTML structure doesn't has any discipline. Also there is not any classname for selecting element considered. So, the only clue that I have is containing specific element.
@JoeWatkins You should phone them, and tell them you are being forced to leave the property, and ask them if they want to transfer the connection to the new property. That is a massive incentive for them to give you a deal.
@tereško I thought "such an" means "for example" ..! is it not? (but in your sentence it has different concept. I think "that" could be more better (as you mentioned it))
@Danack I usually avoid putting Test into the namespace because Acme\User\Controller and Acme\User\ControllerTest are both part of the Acme\User package. But I guess it boils down to preference.
@RonniSkansing no. I have test and src at the same level and mimic the src structure in test. but when it comes to namespaces I dont care for folders. Namespaces are to logically group components.
I am running into cache trouble.. I have page where I check dynamically whether a user has some interest or not but the page is getting cached and does not load data from mysql.. <?php error_reporting(E_ALL); ini_set('display_errors',1); include_once('include/db.php'); ob_start(); header("Cache-Control:max-age=0"); function check2interest($mysqli, $userid) { $query="select * from registration_steps where UserId=$userid"; $result=$mysqli->query($query); $row=$result->fetch_assoc(); echo $row['Interest'];
yea.. If I pick up a project, I "always"follow the existing rules .. for new projects I come to the conclusion so far that it is context based... and worse it changes as the project spec changes
yes of course.. I change the field in database then i refresh 4 times and it does nothing on fifth time it does refresh.. when disable cache then it get refreshed evertime..
I have set the header to disable the cache but not working