@jbafford The php manual says here that "If your application does not catch the exception thrown from the PDO constructor, the default action taken by the zend engine is to terminate the script and display a back trace."
hmmya. maybe the hosts set it manually to 0 then. I wouldn't know what the default really is. just that often, I have to manually set it to 1, when code runs on shared webhosts or things like ampps
The manual can't attach a "* when error_reporting and display_errors is enabled" disclaimer every time it documents an error that could be displayed. That's wasteful.
@jbafford ok, i have to answer first. A programmer should handle his errors. All errors. Not only one selected kind of errors, but any error. This is what a programmer should do.
say, for the different environments I'll use different handling strategies
no.
my argument is simple: despite a widely shared superstition, there is no need to catch every exception. You may, but it's not obligatory. What you really need is to handle errors for your site.
That is all you need. while catching stuff is irrelevant to reporting errors.
@YourCommonSense I couldn't agree with you more about not displaying errors on production. The problem that I see however is that people screw up and are leaking credentials when they don't expect it. I.e. the db server crashed and "oops" you are going to have a bad day.
hey guys, I have to make commenting system with users registrations in PHP+Mysql for some project. I plan to use Laravel. They asking me to use 'binary tree' in this project, so can someone point me to the direction of what excatly is binary tree model in this sense ? Is it about designing database schema in Mysql ? Is there any nice tutorials about this? thanks...
In computer science, a binary tree is a tree data structure in which each node has at most two children, which are referred to as the left child and the right child. A recursive definition using just set theory notions is that a (non-empty) binary tree is a triple (L, S, R), where L and R are binary trees or the empty set and S is a singleton set. Some authors allow the binary tree to be the empty set as well.
From a graph theory perspective, binary (and K-ary) trees as defined here are actually arborescences. A binary tree may thus be also called a bifurcating arborescence—a term which actually...
I usually implement dependency injection/design patterns/etc.. So i never used $GLOBALS or global variables or passing by reference .. But want to learn If there is a scenorio which makes sense to use $GLOBALS or global variables .. Thanks .. Or is it really a personal preference to use them or not ..
> Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions,
They ask for 'implementation of binary tree rather then recursion" . That is the only info they gave me. And the project is about making commenting system in MVC framework of choice and MYSQL db.
The short version is that with some structures you can write all the queries you will want to write in a way that takes only one query, rather than having to repeatedly touch the DB.
They probably are using the wrong word of 'recursion' rather than repeating, as they probably made that mistake themselves once, and used recursion for the implementation.....but the problem is just the repeating.
thanks, i am just going through slide and reading some stuff from google so i will come up with tree like database schema for comments soon. just need some time. if anybody can share some similar examples from the web i would be thankful
what i dont understand is the fact that binary tree has two childs. But what if there is a more child comments below the root comment? I will do it logically..
@Nikanor ....maybe just ignore the binary part of their request......look at the examples on the slides and there is a better implementation that a binary tree.......though it's also possible that they have another reason why they want you to use a binary tree.
Putting the data into the table isn't the difficult bit. It's getting the comments out in one query that is difficult. I suggest reading the slides or book.
If the group noun given to languages like PHP, Javascript, Ruby and Python would be scripting languages, which group noun would be given to languages like Java and C variants?
well, Java wouldn't necessarily be in the same bucket as C. Remember that it started out interpreted to begin with, and (never?) compiles directly to machine code (only to Java bytecode)
If I were naming things, you'd have: interpreted (e.g. bash: read the file line-by-line and execute as you parse); scripting (anything that compiles to a bytecode); compiled (anything that is intended to target assembly), and then you have sharing of concepts between all three.
well, what does "desktop" and "native" mean when you have things like PHP-GTK?
PHP-GTK is a set of language bindings for PHP which allow GTK+ GUI applications to be written in PHP. PHP-GTK provides an object-oriented interface to GTK+ classes and functions. While PHP-GTK partially supports GTK2, GTK3 isn't supported at all.
== History ==
PHP-GTK was originally conceived by Andrei Zmievski, who is also actively involved in the development of PHP and the Zend Engine. The idea was received well by the PHP community, and more people started to get involved with the project. James Moore and Steph Fox were among the first to join in, contributing a great deal to PHP-GTK through...
@QuolonelQuestions That was why i put python and php as the same category under multi-paradigm languages..There is differences..Like OO or OO capable.interpreted or compiled..But they are really similar..There is not a really right way to solve a problem for both languages and yes everyone hates python developers..
If you'd said everyone hates PHP developers then I would have known where you were coming from. They all hate us cuz they aint us innit xDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
LLVM is a generic compiler infrastructure tool. Its namesake is a ("low level") virtual machine bytecode that serves as an IR between a compiler frontend and asm generating backend.
IR == intermediate representation
basically, a compiler front-end turns your language (C/Java/Swift/whatever) into an IR, the middle of the stack optimizes that IR, and then the back-end turns the IR into machine code.
you only have to actually write a front-end to support a new language, and then you automatically can target any architecture for which llvm has a back-end.
without proper abstraction, you'd have to, because your FE, IR (if you had one) and BE could easily be too intermingled to handle translating some language construct into improved machine code.
well, all you do now is add support in the relevant back-end, and then maybe add support in the IR if there's some new concept you need to express the cpu capabilities, and then maybe update the front-ends to emit improved (in expressiveness) IR
but that's a much easier task than if it were all one thing