One of the things I love about Twitter is it enables me to stay in contact with the PHP community, and in particular the group of speaker I have come to know through PHP conferences. My friend Chris Shiflett tweeted about the “Ideas of March” calling for a revival of the blog as a form [...]
"Function names follow the same rules as other labels in PHP. A valid function name starts with a letter or underscore, followed by any number of letters, numbers, or underscores. As a regular expression, it would be expressed thus: [a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x7f-\xff]*."
@TannerOttinger Is the class supposed to do anything else other than output text? I don't see the need for unnecessary bits of code. In my opinion anyway.
Although, with my class, you could just make a new instance. The class will be with included code, from an outside source, when I use this. So, I need a singleton to make sure that included code cannot use the class.
it's not about "how to connect". connecting would be all the same.
it's about how to setup remote server to allow connections from your IP.
do you have root privileges on the db server on 192.168.0.235? if so, you have to run appropriate GRANT PRIVILEGES query on it.
If not - ask a db admin to do...
If you give us more detail as to what you're trying to do then maybe we can help, but that error is vague and can be many things.
Your MySQL permissions might only let you connect from a certain IP range and or other things that we might keep guessing all day if you aren't more specific @experimentX
@TannerOttinger If you ever want to get into MySQL php.net/manual/en/book.pdo.php Don't use the regular mysql_* PHP functions they're old and have a lot of security holes
$playernameresultsquery is an array with the result of your search
$db -> query() is for MySQL queries that require no $_GET or $_POST input.
$db -> prepare() is for MySQL queries that require user input.
prepare() makes a prepared MySQL and escapes quotes
automatically
so you don't need to escape or filter the user input, like I've said before
@TannerOttinger The last example is for when your application accepts user input. $db -> query() is only one line and you should practice making simple queries to retrieve information without user input.
In my Beyond Frameworks talk, I explained how a component-based architecture can help answer some of the important (i.e. expensive!) questions you might face when creating long-lived apps that rely on a PHP framework. In this series of blog posts, I’m going to look at how to go about creating and working with components. phix is a small command-line tool for PHP applications. I created it to…
A small MVC application for a family member that's starting his own computer repair business. To keep track of repairs, clients, miscellaneous records and such.
He asked me to help him out since he can't be at two places at the same time some days I agreed but he's taking in the clients information on printed pages and boxes... I was like uhhh I'm not doing this on paper. Which is why I'm doing this project... mostly for myself to be honest
Maybe. But I'm building this from scratch since I'm getting acquainted with the MVC structure. So it's mostly for practice.
I'm enjoying it a lot, OOP really shines with MVC. I'm pretty new to OOP and I also wanted to get my feet wet with making an MVC application. :)
Regarding MVC I'm wondering. When requesting user input, should the get/post information be extracted in the Controller section then passed as an argument to the Model? Or should I just extract the user input once the Model function is called?
Today on HN there was a thread on how to get the Facebook share counts for a URL. Turns out that with Facebook, just like with most social web services this is quite easy. And actually I've been doing this since 2007 to calculate news item relevance on Maemo News. Of course the social web landscape has changed quite a bit since the 2007 launch of our "social news" service, and many of the ori…
The Controller handles the incoming Request and delegates to the appropriate Model, which usually means you are only forwarding those parts of the Request the Model needs to fulfill the Request. In other words, if there is POST data in the Request and that needs to be processed by the Model, then pass the POST data to the model.
A Request contains status headers, information about the http verb used, blablabla.. if your model just want to process the data in the POST body, it doesnt need that other stuff, hence dont pass in the request, but just what the model needs
I am not a PHP developer but I'm assessing the security of a PHP5 application.
The author relied on extract($_POST) and extract($_GET) in some places, outside of functions.
My suggestion is to call extract($_POST, EXTR_PREFIX_ALL, 'form') and change the code accordingly, but his stance is that ...
Man, that sure is fancy. (For lack of a better word)
Too bad I'm somewhat new to OOP so it looks just a tad over my head. Maybe just the exception parts... I have difficulty knowing when they should be used or not used
Regarding the other HTTP verbs, there is also HEAD, PUT and DELETE and some others and while not all of them are used to send Form data, those are all valid request methods. You will find those in REST architectures.
@PushparajJoshi Not that we're not here, but if no one answers it probably means no one uses it... Did you try asking your question in www.stackoverflow.com yet?
I guess "simple" is what you can easily handle. If I had to put that in general measurable terms, I'd say if it takes more than ten sentences to describe what your app does in plain english, then it's too complicated
This blog post will give you a detailed introduction into the development of custom PHPMD rules. PHPMD is static code analysis tool that helps to improve the quality of PHP software projects. Therefore it processes the project's source code and searches for known error patterns, design flaws, overcomplicated expressions and unused/dead code. You would like to use like PHPMD to improve the quali…
@Gordon Would you care to explain or recommend some OOP terms that I'm not 100% familiar with? I've heard decoupling a few times, not too sure what explicit dependencies exactly means...
cant pinpoint. i think i have a good understanding of what they mean, but when it comes down to all the nittygritty details … blah, you get the idea :)
@Gordon I should probably get some rest. I think I'm at my limit when I can't seem to store processed information from my brain. (I can read it but it's just passing right through me :] )
Good talking to ya, thanks for all the help and pointers. (Bookmarked for later) See you around =)
Method setValue() In class SomeClass accepts arguments and no way to get this arguments back for make assertion.
Can I create a stub for method setValue() that allows save an arguments passed to this method?
class SomeClass {
public function setValue($name, $value)
{
// do some stuff
...