surprising that the whole traits' methods aliasing part passed. not only it's a mess to use, it's also pointless in my experience... if one needs to rename methods they probably designed traits wrong... right? cc @LeviMorrison
That moment you see an interesting question and work for an hour to solve the problem, only to see the question deleted after you finally got it... /cry
So I had to figure out a way to send the previous key value back to the script on a page refresh (POST was out of question cuz of the refresh). Then walk through the array untill the pointer was set to the old value. Go to the next and display it
@icecub here's something worth learning: you shouldn't use functions like end(), current(), key() etc. the trend indicates that in future they could be removed
@LeviMorrison what do you think of the aliasing/renaming part? if i've ever used it, i did it just to realize i could do it in a better way, a way that didn't involve renaming..
also i wish i could call methods directly rather than importing. i should write something :B eg
trait Foo{ function qux(){} }
class Baz{
protected function qux(){ return Foo::qux->bindTo($this)(); }
}
trait Foo implements SomeInterface{} // ^ implements SomeInterface completely or partially, must be used in a class or abstract class that implements SomeInterface
trait Foo extends SomeClass{} // ^ must be used in a class that extends SomeClass (such that parent::calls() from within the trait can be resolved)
this is what i'd like to have :P and the combination of the two
@kelunik That's true unless that PR is merged, then React's promises wouldn't need an adaptor… they'd implement the spec as well.
Clue is focusing on the fact that Amp's promises only implement the spec.
Using done() is another can of worms since React has it's own semantics for that function, including effectively calling our rethrow() function if no rejection handler is passed.
I'd consider using a function like done() as the interoperability function… but I feel like that's a compromise rather than the correct solution.
At this point I'm not sure I care… we should just go with the standards the group agrees on and just build adaptors for React (or possibly build support for React code directly into Amp).
internal array pointer functions are globalish @Stephen iterators are better. recently each() was deprecated and sooner or later the others will be deprecated too
i get that iterators/foreach are a better option for truly iterating the whole array, but what's the new golden child to e.g. replace end(), if you just want the last value of an array?
So, firstly: if `-1` doesn't work, it should. Secondly, this is not exactly filling me with confidence about "we can deprecate end/etc" when http://php.net/manual/en/arrayiterator.seek.php says it's been available since php 5.0.0, but then says: "Warning This function is currently not documented; only its argument list is available."
i mean 13 1/2 years isn't long enough to document a method?
based on the explanation in the rfc (i have to trust the analysis that its 10x slower than foreach) i can see why each() makes sense, but does that really automatically mean end/current/key/reset will go too?
sorry maybe i should rephrase that. i really mean, does that mean it's inevitable they will go. I realise they won't go without an RFC
on a completely unrelated topic.. anyone know of developer version of DevOpsReactions tumblr? I've seen the most ridiculous use of eval() just recently and I need some closure.
it's irrelevant to speculate on either way - nothing will happen without an rfc and a patch. and even if it's accepted I wouldn't count on it 100% until it's released.
@Trowski That's indeed another possible way we talked about yesterday, just baking in support for Amp in React and React in Amp and we're fine in 99% of all use cases.
Hi there, anyone know how to fix this? jsfiddle.net/erikasaves/8p1weyud/2 it's work normal but if you write example : admin/admin sometimes autocomplete appear with yellow background and when your mouse focus to field, it's make icon (user) gone. sry for bad english
he's very broken ... but he communicates with an electorate that is at least as broken, and at least as ignorant ... it is not apparent to that electorate that he keeps making huge mistakes ... they still think he's "getting shit done" ...
You just have to keep in mind he only got like 45% of the vote and half those people only voted for him because they didn't like Hillary. His approval ratings are down in the toilet. He has the lowest approval ratings of any US president in history in his first 30 days.
america seems uniquely capable of trying to "solve" a problem, fucking it up marvellously, and then just claiming the concept is a) too hard or b) not worth solving, because their single attempt is not a roaring success
excuse me, but your universal health care will now incur a $5 fee for each visit. oh and that project to deliver broadband to every person in the country, won't be all fibre now, some of it will be using copper still.
notice a different
or a difference
your response is pretty typical of americans when confronted with this idea that its not a worldwide thing for government/political parties to be totally and completely self serving and utterly incompetent at the job they're supposed to be doing
yeah, politicians are often somewhat self serving, but the system in general works for the benefit of the country.
in america any benefits for regular citizens seems to be in spite of the people in office.
You seem to be drawing some pretty baseless conclusions here. Remember, it was America that helped Europe rebuild after WWII, while other European governments stole other country's gold supplies, the Red army raped over 5 million women, and some refused to participate in alliances. So please don't pretend that any one government is less self-serving than another.
@Stephen Sure, when you contrast the worst of American government to the best of Australian government you've made an excellent fallacious straw man argument. What's your point?
Let's compare American government to Nazi Germany while we're at it. I'm sure that will be a winnable argument.
That's just such a trolly statement. You think my life is going to be deeply effected in the next 4 years because there's one more stupid leader in power?
What does it mean that in PHP Objects are CallByValue by default which is opposite from most programming languages and catches most programmers off-guars?? Taken from pixelcrayons.com/blog/web/php-vs-python-vs-ruby-comparison but don't know the meaning of CalByValue
@PeeHaa I kind of agree, but I wouldn't really know another way. When I think of other working examples of that.. pattern(?) I think of things like PSR interfaces, and they tend to work
I remember DaveRandom mentioning it might be a good idea to put (I think non-built in) plugins into their own repos / also having their own process spaces