I am trying to write a query that gets a list of trains from my database, the user will enter the real name and the first query will get the code for the station or 'tiploc' and then use it in the second query. For some reason i am not getting anything back, I am certain that it is to do with dat...
@ShaquinTrifonoff, well, SO is overly complicated and I far away from making anything like that. Just a question answer website, SO format, Yahoo Answer's style :D
@DaveRandom Alright Dave mate, i.imgur.com/DWfAR.png I'm trying to follow redirect by "injecting" a new Client into $_clients, and that goes smooth, but I don't think that Client is executed, etc. I'm fucked up somewhere. But... it is your birthday :D
I know you are going to tell me I'm insane and should not fiddle with this crap etc.
OK without properly examining what that does, that switch (true) is a needlessly verbose way of writing switch ($httpCode) { case 301: case 302: ... break; default: ... break; } and you are assigning the result of print_r() to a var without passing TRUE to the second argument
@DaveRandom dropbox.com/sh/j4i6dh16ii6ob19/ZGgIRL_WE8 Application.php line 58, basically, "injecting" a new client doesn't work, I'm thinking that loop exited because I removed clients one by one bla bla... I suck at this.
@webarto Well, good that you got it working, but that architecture is a bit wtf if I'm honest. It really needs splitting up into at least a couple more classes to abstract the HTTP layer from the sockets layer, and you could do with implementing (the way I see it) 3 queues, namely "connect pending", "request pending" and "response pending" (possibly "request pending" can be trashed)
@DaveRandom what architecture? :) Yes, I need at least 3 classes, and lots of cleanup, proper implementation would take some more time. Pending (Done OK|Following) Pending etc... Thanks :)
I built notification system for ticket support/helpdesk, and trying this Pusher thingy, because I don't want to depend on my websocket server, it will probably fail at some point and that is not nice... Pusher for my needs is $20 per month...
@webarto Content-Length:should always be 0 if you send a HEAD request. No, you cannot force the server to send a content length - but if you send Connection: close, the server will drop the connection when it has sent the response, problem solved.
HEAD $client->path HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: {$client->host}\r\nLength: 0\r\nConnection: close\r\n\r\n
Content-Length, right. I'll replace this ugliness.
Q: Is it possible that magic_quotes are somehow forced to be On? I'm having strange issue on server and it hasn't been there before i.imgur.com/8diZE.png
@tereško i.imgur.com/NKbR6.png Do you know by chance, why does script wait for previous batch to finish, when they are not related. I mean, each batch is separate XHR and is calling the same script (PHP).
Order inside batch is "random" because it is ASYNC.
So lets say I have a class that is composed of other classes.
class HttpRequest
{
public $session = new Session();
// .. the rest of the HttpRequest code
}
Now, I want to have access to Session class through HttpRequest class so Im using composition.
But does this breaks laws of OOP Encapsulat...
Guys, quick advice: How do I diagnose excessive caching on a client's website? Seems caching on the PHP side itself was disabled, and I've explicitly set headers to disable caching on the client side.
I've also checked the headers I receive on the browser side - no caching specified whatsoever.
hey ah! quick question: if i provide my web app with tokens and want those to be time limited, lets say an hour, would it be cool to refresh the site automatically after 1h?
Anyone else noticed chat using a ridiculous amount of memory when you leave the tab open for a long time recently? I thought I'd screwed up with cv-pls but I removed it on Friday night and restarted Chrome and left it open over the weekend and I've come to my desk this morning and it was using ~750MB
@Christian The PHP6 trunk stalled a long time ago and was merged back into 5 and became 5.3 (IIRC), but by that point a lot of people were anticipating it and a lot of books had been published about it, and there were servers running builds off the dev branch. It looks like the company you linked haven't caught up with the PHP world yet.
@DaveRandom I was under the impression most hosting providers tend to use a PHP version at least 5 years old. I'm surprised these people even built the bleeding edge one from scratch.
It will happen one day, but not before 5.5 has lived its life at the very least. IMHO they should skip 6 and go straight to 7, releasing something under the umbrella of 6 would be very confusing to people who bought any of those books...
@DamienOvereem Never gonna happen, by the looks of it. The PHP world is decidedly split on this point, but the nay sayers just say "If you want a statically typed language, go work in some other language" - and they do have a point.
@NullPointer That guy is clearly an idiot. I mean you'd have though he would have bothered to read the page. It even gives you an option to choose PHP6 when you get a quote.
@DaveRandom To be honest i dont understand what the fuss is about .. function test($a, $b) .. no type hiting .. function test (int $a, string $b) .. type hinting..
The only reason they are not doing that.. is because they dont want to break backwards compatibility for people that implemented "Int" and "String" classes..
im just so tired of all the "if ( !is_numeric($a) ) throw .... " crap in most methods
I would personally even be happy with a php6-strict branch ..
@DamienOvereem I sort of agree, but the question is how do you handle invalid input? Currently if you break a type hint your get a catchable fatal error (which is a massive wtf in and of itself, but that's another story) but with scalar types what do you do? Do yo trigger an error or cast? What if it cannot be cast? (You try and convert an object to a float for ex.)
@DamienOvereem Just cast input to whatever you want it to be, and if users break your API spec let them deal with the consequences. There's only so much anti-stupidity error handling you can do.
@DamienOvereem That's just the thing, you don't get and exception, you get a "catchable fatal error", which is one of the most ridiculous things in PHP IMHO.
@DamienOvereem Yes I have politely asked about the idea of __toInt(), __toFloat(), __toBool() et. al. before, and it sound like that'll never happen either.
@DaveRandom Its a shame though. Because of all the backwards compatibility for idiots, php will never be really mature. They still try to keep people that mix html,sql,php together on one *.php into consideration.
@AlphaMale It allows you to define a function that you can use to include a file when you try to use a not yet defined class. (See the manual entry ). If you wan't more you'll have to say what you don't understand.
Guys I want to discuss a situation: I open a website and browse different pages, it works. And suddenly it stop working or take too long to open. I also captured a situation where I start a downlaod and browse again but it stops working, even the download is in progress.
@Christian If they make if so that $obj->prop() works it will be a start... that pisses me right off. In particular there have been a few occasions where I wanted to give a class a method called list(), and it could be done with closures if that worked.
@srinu I don't know Joomla at all I'm afraid, sorry
@Paul nothing unusual in logs, continuously getting data in access log. Erro log is very smart and only contains download errors (cancel download I guess) "2012/10/19 09:20:30 [error] 1083#0: *99016 recv() failed (104: Connection reset by peer) while sending to client..."
@cmnajs Next step then would be to take a look at the network traffic (TCP level) and see what's going on when you have problems. Is it a latency issue? Are you successfully sending a request and waiting a long time for a response? Are you suffering a lot of lost packets? If it's a latency issue or lossy connection, check yous connection and have the hosting provider check theirs. If it's slow response, it's probably a server load problem.
@AlphaMale It's like having (potentially) more than one __autoload() function.
Singletons have very little - if not to say no - use in PHP.
In languages where objects live in shared memory, Singletons can be used to keep memory usage low. Instead of creating two objects, you reference an existing instance from the globally shared application memory. In PHP there is no such...
:6191722 I've been circumventing that with a mandatory $self first argument. To handle it transparently, you could do:
class Test {
protected $on_a = null;
public function __call($name, $args){
$name = 'on_'.$name;
$args = array_unshift($args, $this);
return call_user_func_array($this->$name, $args);
}
public function on($name, $callback){
$name = 'on_'.$name;
$this->$name = $callback;
}
}
function doHickyFunc(Test $self, $a, $b){
}
@Gordon What if PHP introduced an interprocess, non-volatile object mechanism? I'm not saying "use singletons", I'm saying that "if they're useful in situations like the one you mentioned, than why not go that route?"
Give you a nice reason to use them: wordpress with soap backend. I have a singleton that obtains a list of products from my backend, but I do not have full control of all other plugins. Once the products are obtained, it doesnt have to happen again. Since i have no control of the order, atleast with a singleton i can make sure the soap request is only done once per request.
@DamienOvereem If you are using wordpress, design patterns are the least of your worries... :-P and SOAP?? Jesus, it's like you want me to hate your face.
@DamienOvereem Sure, let's take XML, something that is already mind-blowingly complex, and make it even more complicated. I would rather use an API that required me to talk to it in Latin.
meh.. Zend_Soap_Server_AutoDiscover FTW :) its an internal communication, so my wsdl doesnt have to be all that strict
but with autodiscovery its easy and fast to add elements to my communication. Not to say that REST woulnt do the same, but in my case SOAP is much more manageable.
@DamienOvereem In PHP just create one object, rather than a singleton. Code that uses singletons gets coupled to a specific class implementation. It is better to just inject a single object, then you aren't necessarily bound to a particular object (you could typehint for an interface or baseclass).
@Christian most people simply misapply Singletons. Having a shared memory environment does not automatically mean things should be Singletons. You use a Singleton if - and only if - kittens die when you instantiate a second instance of something and you need global access to it.
@Christian No I hadn't, but yes, I guess that works. I hate to use __call() but at the same time using closures to define methods isn't really any better.
@Christian it's an authority argument, but if Erich Gamma himself already suggests that their use is almost always a design smell, it should make people think. I mean, he invented the pattern.
@DaveRandom I would like to add that I am also getting server connectivity errors (timeout) in Google Webmaster Tools shows that it might not be issue of my ISP also I am using AWS(ec2 and elb)
Well, I think that regardless of the code smell factor, they are useful in situations where you can't do any better because the systems already pretty much sucks.
I mean, tasked with writing updating a system, I'd always put my recommendations on the table ("system sucks, we shouldn't make it worse with singletons"), but if at the end of the day the contractor doesn't care....well, it's better a bad pattern than spaghetti code, I think.
@Christian I wouldnt call them useful in that situation. Just because code sucks, doesnt mean one should make it suck more. It's more like: ok, this sucks, but it's the best solution we can get short of refactoring/rewriting. If you have to use a Singleton to make Legacy work, you should be aware that it is Technical Debt.
@Gordon I'm not having a pop, I only very recently came to truly understand why singletons are bad (I always knew that they were bad) - I am only really now beginning to properly understand OOP in a practical way, because I am self taught and I started with shell scripts, so I still have a very procedural mindset. I'd be interested to see a legitimate use case for one, purely from an educational point of view.
@Gordon Slightly off topic. Would you help someone that asked you a singleton-related question in such a situation? I don't think you wouldn't.... but I think that most people around here wouldn't be as receptive...
@Gordon OK, we're on the same line here. Now, I'd like to point something out. What's the chance people asking about singletons here are actually writing a framework/app from scratch? I'm not insinuating anything...just trying to get a point across. @tereško ping.
> Discussion for all things PHP - Don't ask whether someone is here or can help. Just tell us your problem. If anybody can and wants to help, they will. Please note: You Are Doing It Wrong (tm)
@magnetik That could actually work against you....doing it from scratch means you don't know the performance "tricks", you end up reinventing wheels, etc..
The two primary questions that I'm interested in seeing answered are: 1) Does provision provide and/or call any hooks at all, in currently stable versions or -dev versions? 2) Has there previously been a discussion about this functionality, in the provision issue queue, aegir forum, or elsewhere?