Hi, I'm auditing a web site and I'd like to know if object injection is possible in the following scenario. stackoverflow.com/questions/43598180/… thank you
Depending on circumstance, the $invalidState may be permissible to the logic following; in the above case, clearly not. I prefer fail-early, but sometimes failures aren't actually failures.
Moreover, with method-chaining, like builders, you may end up with invalid state, and thus a null-or-invalid-object which subsequent calls try to act on, and it'll throw immediately anyway.
I had little use for them over the years in practise, but I like Fowler's take on them, e.g. not NullObjects as such but special cases, like MissingCustomer. Adds some semantics over a generic Null.
But yes, it feels odd to continue with a NullObject because at some point something will not work as defined in the contract
@CoderDudeTwodee the first sentence in the sf docs sums it up quite nicely: "Symfony's security system is incredibly powerful, but it can also be confusing to set up."
@Wes I am thinking of how I should be making my code blocks shorter as you suggested, am I doing this right or is this just redundant? pastebin.com/vMT2H5Xt
oh yeah i would definitely split that method into smaller chunks... if you can, try to make smaller public methods out of it, but don't do that prematurely... be sure you actually need public stuff. otherwise a bunch of protected/private methods is ok imho
As usually database layer is the same, then isn't Repository pattern better? In this case You could have AbstractRepository which for example has database adapter injected.
as fetchall, prepare, execute is always the same for that $dbh
the problem of long methods is reading them as a single unit, like you have to scroll 100 lines up just to see what a variable is, then scroll back down to what you were reading, you have the problem of accidentally reusing the same variable name for multiple uses, etc
it's about breaking it up into discreet units of work
And sure, sometimes you do end up with a really long method that can't be broken up - sometimes a complex idea takes a complex "explanation" (going back to the text analogy)
But if you look at a line of code, or a group of lines of code, and you can describe it in a way that reads easier than the code itself, that is a unit that can be broken out
It doesn't always make sense, and this is an extremely purist theoretical thing
as another rule of thumb: when you are describing what a method does and you have to use and then it's a sign you might want to split that in two methods instead.
No, need native first-class support. A pre-requisite for that is merging the symbol tables. You want to work on something people will fight tooth and nail (as they will with what you suggest), work on that
You also have a fucking huge performance hit which could be avoided at, from my PoV, very low cost if you just fix the language so that the lib is unnecessary
the slow part of that lib is the instantiation of the reflection objects, but i planned caching them
levi and i actually wanted to write that rfc... it would have started with a notice/strict standard "using the same name for both a method and a property is deprecated"
you will have time up to PHP8 to fix that. fields are 99.99999% private, which means you can rename it without impacting anything else but the class $count is in
@Gordon can you point out the languages have first class method references, that also allow properties/methods to have the same names? (i don't know, but would like to see how they differentiate the two).
public function toArray()
{
$data = [];
foreach ($this as $key => $value) {
$data[$key] = $value;
}
return $data;
}
Is there a 'better' way of doing that? for uncertain values of 'better'.
@Laotse OK this seems like a reasonable and legit requirement, and one that you are not going to be able to solve without a better host and/or getting a sysadmin to do it for you. Sorry :-(
My coworker is driving me crazy in code reviews... he wants a new value object for every value that is written to a log once instead of just using scalars (32 of them...)
I have following function which print comment over pdf page but if there is large text then it breaks and goes into the footer instead of next page.
Here is the function-
function printSectionComments (&$pdf, $section)
{
if(! $pdf->sections[$section["id"]]["commentsPrinted"])
{
...