@metal_fan how so? a large portion of the ZF1 docs are the ZF2 docs. It's not like they have rewritten all the stuff from scratch. Not that I had a problem with ZF1 docs. But a lot of people did.
the change that you perceive is not as large as you would think. ZF2-rc3 still had all he global variables intact. The removal of global state was only on the surface level.
@metal_fan We (me and @tereško) had (heated) arguments about how to define MV* before. Matter of fact is, I think it's more of a semantics argument than much else. Then again, he probably disagrees and I think that's ok. As much as I probably made him angry when we talked about hat, I still think it was a constructive argument.
@metal_fan That might be, I haven't done anything that's over 40 lines of code in PHP since 2010. All I said is that just because some framework says they follow X doesn't mean they do. DI and SOLID should be really easy and nice to follow in PHP than in languages like Java anyway since it's a dynamic language, at least that's the situation in JavaScript (well, except for Liskov substitution for obvious reasons, since it is not required to begin with)
> No force on earth can break the will of the service personnel and people of the DPRK all out in the just great war for national reunification and of all other Koreans and overpower their might.
That's true. Because nobody can reason with crazy. The US defeated the Japaneese in WW2 because their leaders at the top were in the end reasonable and saw that the inevitable was bad for them. Not saying the US was good in that, not in the least, but at least the war was ended with diplomacy...
they were put in a position where they could have continued the war, and lost FAR more. Or surrender and save the rest of their people... They made a choice to surrender when it was shown the lengths their enemy was going to go to. (The US was very bad in that respect, not arguing that, but still). They surrendered rather than going to the last person...
I think the US thought Japan was on the verge of completing their own WMD and they wanted to take pre-emptive action. Also, I agree that the second bomb was a crime against humanity. I think no-one doubts that today.
Does anyone know, are there any plans regarding mb functions? I've heard, that sometime ago there were talks about merging them with current none-mb functions.
also .. i kinda suspect, that if SK start waving nukes around, China might just stomp on them. They have vested interest in avoiding nuclear conflict in the region
@PeeHaa I think or rather I hope the whole declaration is just war rhetoric like all the years before. NK seemsa lot like they live 1984 there, so Kim just had to declare war against "the enemy" and then they will have some propaganda and in the end they won and everyone will have chocolate. But the Kim is the new Kim and we have yet to see how crazy he is.
I am a beginner and following is my sql code.
select temp1.service_number,temp1.serial_number, temp1.start_datetime, temp1.plate_number, text , temp1.staff_id
from (select t.service_number,t.serial_number, start_datetime, plate_number, staff_id
from trip t
where t.staff_id = 3685
and start_datet...
I have a login page (local intranet so dont worry about the security issues).
This page consists of the following form code :
<form action="auth.php" method="get" class="blocklogin">
<tr>
<td class="blocklogin" ><div align="left">Username: <input class="...
Aside from SLs effectively being globals, not being explicit about your dependencies can become very frustrating very fast. It produces bad APIs and introduces coupling problems.
@Gordon I think you may be right about this. My google-fu only shows me symfony shite for "service container". Which is quite unfortunate, because I actually think the term is way more approachable than "DIC" or "IoC Container".
@Gordon oh hey I linked to a bunch of songs in my profile, you should check them out and see if you like any. I expect to see them on your playlist =oP
yeah, they got back together and released a new one. There is only really one good song. They changed their style from bubblegum dance to more hip-hop/pop
@crypticツ you should have grown up in the 90s in Europe. Lot's of Euro Dance for you to enjoy :D
@crypticツ anyway. I know have a Pink Kitty Radio playlist and judging from the tracks I tuned in on YT this will be hell to live through. But thanks for the suggestions :)
I'm trying to handle fatal errors using register_shutdown_function. I want to show an error page when this function is invoked, something like this:
`
register_shutdown_function('en795HandleShutdown');
...
function en795HandleShutdown() {
echo '<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 St...
@metal_fan no. i also like pop and country but i dont limit myself to a particular genre any more. when i like it, i like it. bluesy guitars help though.
am using apache 2.2.i have written this code
when am trying to run it my browser is failing to run it ,it's showing
This webpage is not available
The connection to localhost was interrupted.
Error 101 (net::ERR_CONNECTION_RESET): The connection was reset.
following is my php code:
<?php...
though i know time is precious for everyone...but i have to submit my code by tomorrow...and it's 23:44..that's why..i eagerly need a solution...sorry to disturb you guys..bye
@dyelawn because ServiceContainer is not an established technical term and I interpreted it as ServiceThing. You could inteprete from the other end as well though
if we can agree that the term was invented by symfony and that symfony has a "real" DI container (that can be abused as service locator, just like most DICs can), then service container == DIC
thanks @shredding. I'm testing a long polling example on a site I've developed. The server looks for an updated file change time and then echos back the json of the file to my ajax call. problem i'm running into is the sight will not open any other pages while that code is running on server. I have noticed I can make updates from a different browser but within the same browser I'm locked out. Is this on purpose?
it's a bit annoying that people refer to "DI container" and "Service Locator" as if they were different constructs. in most cases they are in fact identical and whether or not it is a locator depends on how it is used. if you inject the container, it becomes a locator. does that mean that the container itself cannot be used as a true DI container? no, it doesn't.
sure, one could argue that a DIC should prevent you from injecting it. I disagree with that because a) in some specific cases for the sake of laziness you actually do want to inject it, and b) that's like saying "you cannot do OOP in a non-OO language". the specific constructs don't matter -- you can do OOP in C with function pointers if you want.
> The important difference between the two patterns is about how that implementation is provided to the application class. With service locator the application class asks for it explicitly by a message to the locator. With injection there is no explicit request, the service appears in the application class - hence the inversion of control.
@dyelawn note Fowler means DI as the other pattern. Not DIC. But it basically boils down to: is the Superfactory injected.
The implication on your architecture is what is important
I've been using Dependency Injection (DI) for a while, injecting either in a constructor, property, or method. I've never felt a need to use an Inversion of Control (IoC) container. However, the more I read, the more pressure I feel from the community to use an IoC container.
I played with .NE...
I am trying to get an understanding of Inversion of Control and the dos and donts of this. Of all the articles I read, there is one by Mark Seemann (which is widely linked to in SO) which strongly asks folks not to use the service locator pattern.
Then somewhere along the way, I came across this...
@TheSilverBullet, The service locator pattern is indeed used for the initial Resolve call. The service locator pattern has to be used at least once. Generally, the call is buried in some infrastructure detail, away from normal business class code. It will depend on how the application is structured to decide how the whole thing starts. But it indeed has to start with a call to Resolve first. In the framework I use, I define a custom factory class that is called at the start of each Http request, it then starts things with a call to Resolve. None of my business code knows about the container. — Kelly EthridgeDec 12 '12 at 21:37
"Hey there, service container. My factory made this thing which does stuff. Would you hold it, please, and give it to the locator when he asks for it?"
"Hi service locator. I'd like to accomplish something. Will you please find the tools for the job, which might be in any number of service containers?"
Sometimes I feel that if me being able to answer some SO PHP questions (like stackoverflow.com/questions/15722405/…) just means I read documentation better than other people. I wonder why some people won't open the manual... :(
I also find it interesting that the PHP room has more discussions about core OOP concepts and theoretical programming concepts than any other room here, that's a really positive thing.
I want to try "ContextualServiceContainer", where multiple service containers might exist within an app, and routes may or may not be tied to any number of these service containers. It will prevent loading an entire service container for something that only requires 2-3 services. Tell me why I'm dumb.
@igorw LOL, I'm not a fan of PHP myself, I think that is has many inconsistencies that a language shouldn't have and should have been fixed AGES ago, which is why I personally stopped using it. 5.3 and 5.4 do seem like big improvements. The fact that are a lot of developers here that vouch for the language and have a good understanding of it and presumably the alternatives means you think it's a good option. That's good
When doing web, I mostly do JavaScript. JS also had a long period (10 years) of hate. Didn't take it personally back then.
@dirt I'd argue that 90% of hate for any programming language is not having a sufficient understanding of that language.
@dirt You know, SO is coded in .NET, Jeff has a recent blog post about why he didn't use .NET for disclosure. Personally I think that C# is an extremely powerful language which has a lot of the right stuff in.
My main beef with ASP.NET is that it's not community driven. This means that the documentation is lacking. Also you have to work with visual studio. Deployment can become hell really fast and there are not nearly as many libraries.
@dirt C# is very consistent within itself. I don't want to make this about a discussion about C#, if you'd like to discuss it you're welcome to do so in the C# room.
@tereško you seem to assume that the world is black and white and everything is either right or wrong. and you also seem to make unjustified assumptions about intent. suit yourself ;-)
dependency injection container does not produce the complete instances, service locator does ... from on you request the dependencies , from the other a complete instance
i have realised that its pointless putting effort and detail into an answer as it is not appreciated and more than likely, isnt even read. From now on, everyone should just post short answers that contain the exact code required to not only solve the problem the question asks, but, implements a learning engine so that the asker doesnt ever have to do anything for themselves again.
@tereško let's go with martin fowler's injection article then. in his example he has a MovieLister that depends on a MovieFinder. does the container (be it PicoContainer or the Spring container) not produce a complete instance of the lister, with the finder injected?
@dyelawn Of course, from my experience (in a particular university) it is only covered in 2-3 lessons (which is ~ 6 hours and a small project that takes 10-20 hours, patterns like DI are covered more in depth in more advanced classes.
the responsibility of a dependency injection container is to recognize and to provide the dependencies , no to create the object which has the dependencies
@igorw in that case i would have directed to GoF book .. no that he will recognize the acronym ..
I don't really care to get dragged into this topic for the umpteenth time, but I will note that the only people doing serious development I've encountered who argue that service locators aren't that bad are Symfony apologists. Is it coincidence that Symfony uses a SL? Probably not :)
@dyelawn tereško can be very rude sometimes but from my understanding he wanted you to read the basic material on the subject before having a discussion about it. Just like you wouldn't discuss the delicacies of preg_replace with someone who has isn't fluent in regular expressions.
user895378
Is SL bad? Not any worse than global. That's all SL is ... a way to access global state from anywhere. If you're okay with it, use a SL. Just know that it opens you up to all the problems that disciplined OOP is meant to avoid.
@rdlowrey While I completely agree about 'being practical' being the most important factor in a development environment, I was under the assumption this discussion was about theoretical OOP. While we all write less-than-perfect (to say the least) code, I think it's still constructive to discuss how code should be properly written.
@tereško I'm not sure I follow. Can't a DIC recognize and provide the dependencies for the object that it creates? I always thought that the difference between a DIC and an SL is that a DIC pushes dependencies into somewhere, whereas with an SL that somewhere will pull the dependencies by itself
@benjamin I have read it. I don't think his comment was even directed at me. My point is, he's not just rude, he's dangerously and boringly presumptuous
user895378
@NikiC I personally subscribe to your definition. If you can't use it to put your application together at the bootstrap phase, what good is it?
@rdlowrey then maybe stop saying things like "Is it coincidence that Symfony uses a SL?" just because certain symfony users abuse the DIC doesn't mean it's not a DIC.
@bizzehdee Hard to judge what the right ones are ^^ I usually try to go only for those questions that require very specific expertise that few others have, but are still of interest for a broader range of people