@NullPointer Yes, it is a funny story. And following the rules of the market and the marketing of the land of the free, that business man should be honored instead of publicly mobbed. Shame on TWN and the rest of the press who is not seeing this.
@PeeHaa wouldn't simply encodeMessage() be better? getEncodedMessage() seems like a slight misnomer, to me it suggests it acquires the data from an external source.
I also need to come up with a nice demo app. Currently it is a chat application like everybody else does. I'm thinking about a game or s simple collaborative document editing thing. @DaveRandom
@PeeHaa All good, but also all kind of unoriginal and thoroughly solved problems, I will have a think about it. Of the three the document thing is probably the most attractive to me, but it sounds like a lot of UI work as well, the communication layer is a relatively small part of something like that.
see Recently i have worked in eclipse IDE with JSP,html,servelet....now i want to learn a new language PHP .so how could i start ..plz be specific if u all can help me
@PeeHaa Also I'm not happy with the masking part of that routine, at the moment it uses double the memory of the message. The other way of doing it would probably be slower though, as it would be a loop with a lot of substr(), I'm going to try and come up with a better alternative but I can't think of one at the moment.
Really websockets kind of suck in this respect, because you need to know the message length ahead of time, which means anything other than having it all in memory is difficult to implement.
Maybe some kind of OTF masking mechanism and the ability to obtain the mask by an argument would be in order.
Having said that, you should never need to mask the messages as you will most likely always be acting as the server from that code, so it's probably a pointless effort.
@hekko if you want to become an expert programmer, google SOLID, buy GOF, buy POEAA, buy Clean Code, lookup GRASP, DDD, CQRS, DCI … but dont ask for PHP books. That's the most reasonable suggestion I can give you when you ask for Expert PHP books really.
I'm not sure certain how PHP works under the bonnet in this respect actually, the current imple may actually end up using 3 times the memory of the message if it initialises the result string before the xor.
@DaveRandom Hey no worries. Your implementation is much nicer than mine either way. Also I agree. It will only act as a server. Anything clienty is a bonus for maybe future use
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<?php
$con = mysql_connect("localhost","Rahul","");
if (!$con)
{
die('Could not connect: ' . mysql_error());
}
mysql_select_db("ebusiness", $con);
$result=mysql_query("select * from members where Email=...
@PeeHaa Don't worry, I'll be nice. I can't criticise PHP devs for not doing bitwise stuff, it's generally way out of the comfort zone that PHP sets out to provide and binary math is a little bit mind-melting. I often screw things up and I deal with it a lot more than most.
@NullPointer I am not sure that spamming the Warning stuff all over SO is good for the site. Google might think it's duplicate content. Besides it's a bit annoying to have 90% of the answer consisting of a screaming WARNING and only 10% actual answer.
Well, I appreciate the good intent but it kinda feels cargo cultish to me. Like back when @Pekka and I used to slap down everyone with "Thou shalt not parse HTML with Regex" and linked to "the rant" instead of giving an educated, reasonable explanation why one would not want to do that.
@Jimbo There is often a lot of bitwise stuff involved in writing network protocol implementations, often they are binary formats. For example in websocket frames there are several boolean/flag fields represented by a single bit, and some integers represented by a partial byte, the only really sensible way to extract that data is with bitwise operations.
I have an question for you guys. I have some similar asked before, but now I think that I can ask it more specify. I have some repeatable fields for my metaboxes inside WordPress. The name attribute has the array symbols [] and a number that increase after add a new row. I can set multiple values then. When I save the post the rows will be overwritten by the default one and the value will be 'array'.
Ok, when I take a look at my database I see that the values are saved, but in the backend the doesn't show. Does anyone know the problem and of course a solution?
This is the array inside the database `dsmeta_image_caption a:2:{i:0;s:5:"Hello";i:1;s:16:"A good day today";}`
@Gordon I think yes I am not a pro in PHP but I think this is what you refer to: $meta = get_post_meta($post->ID, $field['id'], true); This will get the values and inside my input field text I call it with $meta =>> echo '<input type="text" name="' . $field['id'] . '[]' . '" id="' . $field['id'] . '" value="' . $meta . '" size="30" /> ';
@hakre I just found out the server is a VPS running on Parallels. Apparently I can simply do a backup and the convert it to a virtualbox. Still need to find out how, but google says it's possible.