I'm a little concerned that I knew that without Googling it.
user1125394
position: ( 13.33, 33.7)
Anonymous
I don't know where I read this, but said something about $_SERVER varibles are not reliable or something... PHP is a retard language.. Everything is either bad, or not the best way, or not recommeded, deprecated....when does the madness end?
@TheCOMPLETEPHPNewbie Indeed they are not, but HTTP_HOST can be relied on to be sane (if it's not, the server has bigger problems than breaking your application)
@hakre Presumably refering to the fact that function definition's position within the script is irrelevant unless they are in a conditional or inner scope
@hakre I guess you could have different definitions of the same function in different call-time blocks though, so just the fact that two functions have the same name is not an instant cause for rejection. But yeh, that above case does look a bit odd. I can sort of see why it happens though.
It bit me once because it doesn't close active TCP connections, and the server started rejecting my connects when the script auto restarted because it only allows 1 connection per IP
Plus you can end up with files that are left flock()ed with no lock owner
If you use XDebug, there is a maximum function nesting depth which is controlled by an ini setting:
$foo = function() use (&$foo) {
$foo();
};
$foo();
Produces the following error:
Fatal error: Maximum function nesting level of '100' reached, aborting!
This IMHO is a far better ...