@bwoebi I'm not sure I care enough right now, tbh, the real solution to the issue is to reconnect. We do need an orderly shutdown but not as much as we need it not to shutdown in the first place.
@John if() is a statement; it cannot be done in a place expecting an expression. The parenthesis of the if() require an expression, thus you can't put an if() inside of an if's condition.
@MattPrelude I cannot understand it executes or not .. it just selects something, but because that condition is containing FALSE and AND, then the statements of that condition never run.
@Wes a better demonstration is 3v4l.org/kB1gJ - note that the memory usage stays the same until you actually modify one of the copies. Until that point everything points to the same ht structure underneath
am i right? even if there aren't active instances of A that array will stay in memory regardless. instead, if the field is being filled within __construct() the array gets destroyed when there are no active instances of A. correct?
@DaveRandom yeah i know how COW works, but i don't know how good it is to guess that the data is the same
An article "6 Simple Tips to Get Stackoverflow Reputation Fast" at codexon.com made these suggestions:
Be the First to Answer. Even at the cost of quality.
Use Downvotes and Comments Strategically
Use obnoxious in-your-face formatting and lists.
Be Aware of the 200 rep/day Limit
Ed...
Is there anything wrong with this code $stmt = $con->prepare("INSERT INTO replies (to, poster, body, date) VALUES (:post, :username, :comment, :date)");
It says Array ( [0] => 42000 [1] => 1064 [2] => You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MariaDB server version for the right syntax to use near 'to, poster, body, date) VALUES ('1', 'Bob', 'Hello', '2016-05-27 16:38:39' at line 1 )
@Joe I don't like too much that you say "There's no JIT yet" … well… we're since PHP 7 at least on the train of incrementally making changes so that a JIT once might be possible…
it just feels like an add on ... I don't object to the kind of change that is only required for JIT, but we should make those kinds of changes at once, I think ...
it's better for 7.1 to have consistent behaviour, and 7.2 to have consistent behaviour, the behaviour can obviously change between versions, though I doubt we'll get anything ready for 7.2 (would love to be wrong) ...
@Saitama well ... it depends what you are comparing it too ...
it's more expensive than doing nothing at all :)
(serialization does a thing, you have to compare it to the alternatives)
I have it written this way, but it leads to some interesting conditions where the first subscriber can get a bunch of values, but the second misses those values because they were only given to the first.
Software spam back off and human spam back off. Multiple messages are harder to ignore when there's a large number of them (Thinking of the "Deprecate these features from php7 RFC that had like... 12 votes on it)
No I mean the chat spam protection thing, if you try to post too many messages too quickly it basically says "go away for a bit" - which we do handle, but it might leave a few seconds between messages being posted
Command endpoints for plugin 'RFC.PHP' (enabled):
[X] Search - List RFCs currently in voting, or get the current vote status of a given RFC (Default command: rfcs, Mapped commands: rfcs)
[ ] Votes - Get the current vote status of a given RFC (Default command: rfc, No mapped commands)
I've no plans to work for a little bit Joe, but I will be picking up a laptop before I leave for when I feel like I can or to earn and justify my lack of work.
maybe do a twitter account and tweet photos of your travels, could be an interesting kind of diary to look back on ... and interesting for others also ...
@DaveRandom The other benefit of a Result class is I see that as the place where you should go if you care about things like non-fatal connection-level warnings and notices. Not the connection instance. The scope of those warnings exists only in the context of the single query/result
@rdlowrey while I agree with this in principle, in practice it doesn't work for two reason: 1) libpq doesn't work this way 2) you can recieve notices when there is no active query
I don't think we should build our APIs around the functionality that's available in libpq or in a specific extension. I think we should build our APIs around the most useful and simplest way to expose the important functionality.
user895378
In general this is something we, as an industry, are terrible at doing.
user895378
Also: there is a ton of value in exposing the bare minimum possible API.
user895378
Don't make me think. Tell me what I need, don't give me everything and make me figure it out.