As per the discussion on internals - if it starts off as Exception, it isn't a problem to make it more specific. If it starts off as a specific exception, changing it is hard....
@Mediasoft The way to learn to is to start somewhere. 3v4l.org/RJ7aC It's not perfect, yet, but it has given you the desired result. Now the trick is to go back, read the documentation again, and gain some deeper insight in order to wield the tool more skillfully. Later comes abstraction and generalization, 3v4l.org/FHn4H, which requires resurfacing that earlier acquired knowledge and applying a little bit of logic and a touch of imagination..
} if ($zip->open($DelFilePath, ZIPARCHIVE::CREATE) != TRUE) { die ("Could not open archive"); }
foreach ($urls as $path) { if (!file_exists($path)) { die($path.' does not exist'); } if (!is_readable($path)) { die($path.' not readable'); } $zip->addFile($path); }
// close and save archive
$zip->close(); echo $zip->getStatusString();
What's wrong with this code? I don't see any errors but I don't see a zip file in my directory either
good morning guys...I'm trying to create a desktop application using nightrain..I copied my files in www folder ...when i execute the exe file php info window is opening up...My question is how to execute my application?
hi i'm revisiting codeginiter for the first time after some 3yrs! i'm searching for very light weight framework as i want my website to be extremely fast! I'm considering YII and laravel as alternatives. any suggestions?
@krishna Don't choose the framework based on speed. Choose one that helps you build something that you can maintain. Speed is of little concern for an MVP. You can always figure out ways to make it faster. First you have to figure out if it's worth your time.
@RonaldUlyssesSwanson Because human time is much more expensive than computer time. In a world where technology moves at such a rapid pace you simply don't have time to learn everything from scratch. You should learn to use your time wisely. Focus on the things you're good at so that you can win where you're already winning.
@krishna Great, just don't consider those alternatives based on speed, because honestly the speed of a PHP framework plays such a small role in the overall speed of your website that really doesn't even matter.
Moving fast is about getting something to work well, for just a few people first and then you can figure out how to make it work better and faster for millions of people. The truth is people may not like what you made and so you will have wasted all that time focusing on things that ended up not even mattering.
Blanket statements are almost always destructive in nature. Don't choose to be destructive. Instead, consider building on top of what's already out there and make it work for you.
That's much easier than trying to be seclusive.
If you think about it, PHP itself is a framework.
At it's core it's nothing more than a parser with a very rudimentary runtime. It's usefulness stems from the collection of extensions that tie into and extend that runtime from a bunch of third party libraries.
The framework is just another higher level abstraction on top of that.
So try not to make it more derogatory than it really is. Instead, if you have some beef with some particular part of a framework, let that grievance specifically be known, and offer them an alternative.
the thing is, i can't trust php frameworks. i could and maybe would use one, if there were good ones, but that's not the case. it's as constant as speed of light. therefore, i can't recommend frameworks to anyone
If you spend all your time building the perfect framework, all you've done is build the perfect framework. Doesn't leave you much time to work on the actual application.
having wisdom teeth removed, and a couple of others, I'm told no solids for at least 48 hours ... after 48 hours it's just a question of whether I can bare the pain ...
they are doing it under sedation, which wears off completely in 24 hours, but I don't think they are giving me anything more substantial than something codine derived to take home ...
@KajalSingh Both are technically correct, as you have already and obviously derived by running the code. I guess what you really meant to ask was "What is a prepared statement and how do I use it?"
Because clearly if you have to ask that question you don't understand the purpose of a prepared statement.
Think of prepared statements like you would HTML templates for your SQL. You prepare the template once, and inject the place holder values (your parameters), each time you wish to execute the statement.
All you did on that first example was create a static HTML page with the values already embeded.
So there was no point in using a prepared statement obviously. You just wasted a round trip to the server.
I want to know first query is preparing or not because pg_prepare() is also use with statement. If both query are executing through prepare statement then which is correct query?
Is prepare statement can be used with SELECT statement without any clause like SELECT * from tbl_name
Sure, that is clearly vulnerable to SQL injection.
At least as far as we can tell.
Who knows wtf you're doing with $cc
Keep showing us more random snippets of code and asking us which ones are vulnerable to SQL injection. It's much more worthwhile than learning what SQL injection is or how a prepared statement works or how to use it.
Holy crap. When Java crashes it really fucking crashes
At least when PHP crashes the worst that happens is you lose that one request in time, but I mean this thing just crashed my entire system. It took down the IDE, the browser, the fucking JVM.
I destroyed the whole castle with one thread. Awesomesauce!
reminds me of chrome. when firefox crashes, and it does that often, you just get it closed or you will have to close it. instead, when chrome crashes you get your whole system unstable
@JoeWatkins is there a way to set the unicode version in intl stuff? i was thinking about inconsistencies between different php exts. for example, what unicode version does pcre use?
unicode version should be the same on such extensions imho
can someone tell me, if you use w or s keys in chrome it scrolls the page, then when you hit the top or the bottom it may switch the page to the next one. how is it called? I know it's not new, it's been in opera for a while, but how do you control this from a web developer point?
oh shi*. it was a js script on that page, not chrome :(
but opera had similar functionality of detecting (most likely by digits in url), like if you're on http://www.com/page/1 and press 'forward', it went to http://www.com/page/2
> You can use the HTML attributes rel="next" and rel="prev" to indicate the relationship between individual URLs. Using these attributes is a strong hint to Google that you want us to treat these pages as a logical sequence.
look at config.m4 for each thing, see what it links, search for appropriate initialization call for whatever lib is being used and you should have your answer ...
The UA string doesn't always contain the explicit brand name of the browser. In many cases it provides generic information pertaining to the UA implementation.
@Joseph Yea, pretty in any user agent you can specify or even hide the UA string sent to the server in the HTTP request. Like I said, it's entirely user-supplied data.
i.e. IE8 having weird rules w.r.t. 301 urls or something... was it relative not working, or absolute? I don't remember. Or iframes not loading their js if they're hidden... weird stuff. IE is very buggy.
Generally you don't care what browser, specifically, someone is using based on their UA. Just sometimes you want to detect certain capabilities indicated by the UA, like if it's a mobile device, or is Mozilla compatible, etc...