it is related at least in case of streams... usually you open stream, do reading, and close it... you can do this in both ways, however there is one much better way... guess which one :-)
@zerkms okay, I can't resist anymore - invokeAround is elegant solution for this. you don't need destructor for closing stream, you don't need finally - you'll catch and rethrow, just like @ircmaxell said...
basically i am an android developer..i am newbi to php..to connect mssql from my android application ,i wrote the follwoing script .
<?php
$myServer= "*****";
$myUser="*****";
$myPass="***";
$db="*****";
echo "hi";
$dbhandle = mssql_connect($myServer, $myUser, $myPass);
echo $d...
this is as simple a question as has ever been asked on Stack Overflow and when you can't answer it and worry about your own development computer, I wonder if I can help you at all.
so I'm not sure that I want to help you with this problem that you're having, since you can't read the question and answer it, and you try and worry about 30 different things that aren't related
if you're going to listen to me and respond to the questions that I ask then I will try and help you as far as Iam able
Hey Guys, simple question. I have multiple domains hosted on the same server, these domains access an API, when i do an API request on both servers the requested IP address of rht erequest is the same, regardless of the vhost ip.
The server i'm on has multiple IP address ( apparently ) what i'd like to do is have all requests from DomainX to use one IP address abnd all requests form DomainY to use a different one
is that even possible when using PHP? Or is that to late in the stack?
In your if/else you dont need the else at all. Have a look at the manual for date. The only way date will return false is when you pass in a non-numeric timestamp for the second argument. You are not doing that, so date will return one of the days anyways.
But, instead of using if/else or switch...
I'm new to web programming and in programming in general. I've started reading php/mysql about a year ago, bought some books (Core PHP programming, Proffesional PHP5, Programming PHP Objects Patterns and Practice, PHP in Action Objects, Design, Agility) and i learned a lot.
I've reached to a point where i don't know what to read next, what to code next. Everything "seems" too small or too big. Does anyone else been there before? What are your suggestions to overcome this problem? (It seems as a problem to me.)
I can't say how it will help you, beacuse I don't really know your programming knowledge. Just try write it and you will see what you can, or what you can't do. Just pratice, pratice and pratice.
I would suggest getting away from using strings at all. Date returns localized strings depensing upon locale settings. So you wind up with a magic string that isn't so magic.
Instead, use the numeric day of week:
of_get_option(date('w'));
You will of course need to change the function to ...
Here's what was popular in the PHP community one year ago today:Fawad Hassan's Blog: CRUD using jQuery and Codeigniter - I Fabien Potencier's Blog: Iterator or IteratorAggregate? Arun Gandhi's Blog: 15 methods to speed up PHP based website's performance Chris Hartjes' Blog: Fun with custom Zend_Views Pingdom.com: Exploring the software behind Facebook, the world's largest site Marco Tabini's Bl…
As Derick Rethans notes in his latest post, the Xdebug project is now on github and can be found under his account. I've just opened my Xdebug repository on github. Importing my old SVN repository was a bit of a task. With the help of Ole Marius Smestad I managed to cook up a bash script to import and fix-up the repository. In the meanwhile I've learned more about git than I ever wanted to …
My function is having problems creating and copying the contents to the new directory (also I'm not sure if this is the best way to do this, so alternate suggestions are welcome).
I have 2 network drives mounted via /etc/fstab like this:
//128.251.108.xxx/Data/Agilent_Data /home/lv_admin/uslons...
posted on June 23, 2011 by blog.phpdeveloper.org » PHP
In case you missed it, this post is a continuation of another post looking a some of the things I’ve learned in the time I’ve spent as an open source project organizer for Joind.in. In this second post I’m going to keep looking at communication and the role it plays in the project. The focus will be a little bit different, though – this time it’s more about internal communication. Keeping all …
In an effort to get some real feedback from the community about the state of PHP and what they think it needs, Sean Coates asked on Twitter for people to respond with their suggestions as to what could help make PHP better and what the project itself needs. PHP's intentional stagnation is eating away at me. I'm working on a list of things I think #PHP needs. What's on your list? Tag it #php…
Magento question: Can someone advise which core module controls the catalog price rules? I'm looking to mod it so I can create sales by hour, rather than just days.
As was mentioned by Zend late yesterday, the registration for this year's Zend/PHP Conference have officially opened! The 7th Annual Zend PHP Conference (ZendCon) will take place October 17-20, 2011, In Santa Clara, California. ZendCon is the largest gathering of the PHP Community and brings together PHP developers and IT managers from around the world to discuss PHP best practices and expl…
Hey Guys, is anyone good at Doctrine 2.0 here? Especially creating a new Type. Basically i want to extend DateTimeType and change the PHP display from DateTime to Zend_Date and i'm quite confused as to what to do
The Voices of the ElePHPant podcast has posted its latest episode today - an interview with Keith Casey, a part of the web2project team and the php|architect folks that brought you php|tek. This podcast was recorded at the SQL Server Jump In! Camp. They talk about the web2project project's desire to be a "drop in" solution even when they have SQL Server as their database. They talk about th…
is there a php function that iterates through elements and then takes the returned total and during the next iteration adds the resut to that total and so forth and then returns a new array. Something like: array(1,2,3) to return array(1,3,6,)
I know, #mysql is the other way, but since it's going to be used directly within the PHP app, I figured asking here would be better ;)
I'm going to be building a system that allows for display and comparison of several data points for products. there will likely be many thousands of products, and 50-100 data points per product.
should my table that stores data points be something like product_id, data_point_1, data_point_2, data_point_3 (etc) with one row per product
or, product_id, data_point_id, data_point_value with multiple rows per product
On DevShed today there's a new tutorial showing you how to integrate Facebook commenting with your PHP application via the Facebook Connect API. Facebook comments are a great way to optimize your site for social media and add a level of user-engagement to you site. Quality website comments can increase your website's credibility, as well as its traffic. This tutorial will teach you how to u…
My function is having problems creating and copying the contents to the new directory (also I'm not sure if this is the best way to do this, so alternate suggestions are welcome).
I have 2 network drives mounted via /etc/fstab like this:
//128.251.108.xxx/Data/Agilent_Data /home/lv_admin/uslons...