I'm going to convert an array that it's data populated from the server.
the array schema is like below:
$info=array(
'user'=>array(),
'allProduct'=>array(array()),
'AllOrder'=>array(array())
);
my php code:
<?php
include("PDOConnection.php");
function selectAllUser($cnn)
{
...
I am building an extension in two docker containers. It works fine in container 1 but not in container 2. I understand the error message, but not why I am getting it, nor do I know how to fix it:
/opt/ext/src/my-ext.c:22: error: redefinition of typedef ‘php_timeout_ull’ /opt/ext/src/thing/thing.h:21: error: previous declaration of ‘php_timeout_ull’ was here
the thing I am not getting is why it works in container 1 but not in 2. makes me wonder if it has to do with the php versions I am building this against. could this be?
@AnmolRaghuvanshiVersion2.0 - add headings to separate sections - clean up examples - talk about benefits and not replacements - explain what tight coupling is - there is more than just constructor injection
@Gordon as Dave said - why is the typedef in the C file when it's also in the header file? I suspect it might only be working in one container due to co-incidence, rather than being correct code. e.g. different CFLAGS disabling that error on one box.
@AnmolRaghuvanshiVersion2.0 and there are 3 ways to cause tight coupling (that I can think up on the spot): using inheritance, when it is not needed; using static classes; using new inside a class
The new documentation feature should have an initial area to explain the topic. Take Dependency Injection as an example. There's Constructor Injection, Setter Injection, Injection Containers, but where should dependency injection itself be explained? I'm really missing an initial section above th...
Please can we settle for curating doc content instead of generating it? I feel like all these topics have enough docs, if you want to write PHP docs, write them in the PHP docs...
@JohnyNassar if you specify a default value for the column, you can omit a value completely for that column when you do an insert. If you don't have a default value, you have to specify it explicitly
@JohnyNassar if you set any default value. The default doesn't have to be null, but if the column is nullable (the checkbox is ticked) then the default value can be null.
@Jimbo It does the usual thing of REST === JSON data format, which I don't like (don't like as a rule to apply, don't mind it in general where JSON makes sense). But it seems to be a standard set out for use by MS internally, which they have made public so... whatever, they can do what they like. I will do what I like.
Does anyone have a recommendation for the following: using Symfony 3.1, should I use Assetic, or Asset Component? I'm kinda confused by the two. Asset Component has near no documentation (I just learnt you can configure it in config.yml, but it isn't documented). And I am having a hard time getting Assetic to work cross domain, with a CDN type static webserver.
I want columns to take null value if the user doesn't want to fill the field, this is my question. In this case I have to check the NULL checkbox ONLY, RIGHT??
@JohnyNassar Maybe. However, chances are you're code will actually end up inserting the empty string rather than null in that case, unless your code specifically generates a query with NULL
@JohnyNassar you're right, setting the dropdown to NULL will create a new record with NULL as it's intial value, you do not have to specify this in your INSERT statement. The checkbox will ALLOW a NULL value to be used. If you don't use the checkbox, the insert statement will fail with 'NULL' not allowed.
@JohnyNassar i might be missing something in your question... But the checkbox does not set the default value to NULL, it only tells the database to allow a null value to be used. So you could use a INSERT into user (address) VALUES (NULL).... If the checkbox is off, than that statement will fail.