@DaveRandom it would be Keinerda though if it was a pun on nobody. We usually say Kanada Kanahier, e.g. Kann (can) er (he) da (there), Kann er hier (here)
Love this way, it's better than accepted solution, as simple as possible, but you should optimize it minimally by removing $count-1 from loop and putting it above: $count = strlen($charset) - 1; — s3m3nJul 30 '12 at 19:35
^^ Observe how well pple read code :) check out the accepted answer.
@LeviMorrison Sorry I haven't been able to test your code yet .. I was kinda hoping it was simple, but it's a lot of code to go through and understand =S
is it available somewhere? I'd try not to bloat ardent too much and make separate libs if possible. the streams stuff from @rdlowrey also belongs in a separate lib imo.
@LeviMorrison yes, and that's exactly the problem, since I'm not hardcoding the values. so I need to use either reflection or a loop just to create the vector.
@DaveRandom Firefox :) I'm using Zend_Form, and validation actually expects empty (0 byte) attachment (I removed that nonsense naturally), I was like... WTF. Couldn't POST a form for acceptance test. But browser on the other hand, does it...
I don't think it's a standards violation (although it should be) but it definitely makes no sense. I mean you could easily do it manually by building the request body and setting the content type yourself but I can't see a use case tbh
@LeviMorrison yes, it means that I can target 0.6.*@dev and if dev-master ever changes to be the dev version for 0.7, my constraints still get the tagged 0.6.x versions
@igorw Also, I wish PHP had multiple constructors like Dart. This would completely solve the varargs vs array issue: new Vector.fromArray($array); new Vector(1,4,5,9,0);
@igorw Factory method maybe, but it won't be static, that's for sure. If you ever subclass Vector you might want fromArray to, you know, actually return your subclass.
btw, IMO a static factory method is perfectly fine. the new operator might as well be considered a static method like it is in ruby. you get zero additional coupling by using a static factory method over new.
@webarto Yeh it's definitely not a violation of RFC2046 (that I can see), so technically cURL is wrong in throwing up about it. However I think they are probably right in enforcing that restriction, it's such a weird thing to do that it's only right you should be forced to do it manually. Interesting side note that I just discovered: MAX_FILE_SIZE is a thing completely made up by PHP. Browsers don't understand it, and obviously it's useless anyway because it's client side.
@webarto Also related and something I never realised, multipart MIME boundaries are allowed to have trailing LWS after the boundary and before the CRLF /cc @rdlowrey
@DaveRandom Agreed, regarding MAX_FILE_SIZE, you can't "turn it off" in Zend_Form, it is such a crap, and it's validated by PHP (ZF specifically), browser don't care what it is.
@igorw I think @LeviMorrison is smart about having a categoric no-static policy ;) It removes the need to think about "well maybe in this particular case static could be maybe potentionally not really bad" :)
@igorw I do like appendTraversable or appendAll or whatever you want to name it that just takes Traversable and appends items in the order the traversable supplies them. In case of an array, that does require a new ArrayIterator($array).
@NikiC Not useless at all. Many is the time when I've swapped arg order round while developing and not been 100% paying attention somewhere and I get a syntax error because there is a trailing and/or missing comma (usually when I have the arguments laid out on a line each). Allowing a trailing comma "fixes" that by bringing it into line with how arrays work and doesn't hurt anything. IMO.
@LeviMorrison No, you don't have to. Do you currently test the catchable fatals that are thrown on invalid type for every single function? No, you don't. So you don't need to test the function doing the equivalent either
Do not repost the question you were about to ask until you have
READ EVERYTHING WE ARE ABOUT TO TELL YOU.
While trying to ask a question, one could get:
Oops! Your question couldn't be submitted because:
Sorry, we are no longer accepting questions from this account. See http://go...