> Don't start an RFC (or mail list discussion) about standardizing PHP function names and function argument orders. [...] This has been discussed ad infinitum. Review previous discussions and feel free to fork PHP on github.
@AlmaDoMundo So you're looking to retrieve the actual memory limit at call time, as an int, regardless of to what it has previously been set, valid or not.
Hi all. I've a query here. I'm trying to use phantomjs through exec(). But I get an exit code of 139, which on further investigation turned out to be segmentation fault. Could segmentation fault be a result of my webserver blocking execution of the phantomjs binary?
@Orangepill that was my point, yes. so from @ircmaxell point follows there will be no limit, while @Jack says there will be ZEND_MM_SEG_SIZE (256 * 1024) limit ..
the default could still be to throw exceptions, but for those that are somehow not understanding the feature I'd rather they could break it that ruin it for everyone else ...
I think ppl think it's a replacement for if() !! these people seem to want it to throw fatal errors ...
but I've done all I can to explain it, if it's not understood then it won't be understood I don't think ... and I sorta feel like everyone is saying they want errors and I'm just repeating myself about exceptions ...
Hi all. I've a query here. I'm trying to use phantomjs through exec(). But I get an exit code of 139, which on further investigation turned out to be segmentation fault. Could segmentation fault be a result of my webserver blocking execution of the phantomjs binary?
I think we should email all PHP errors direct to the NSA. That'd soon stop them reading peoples emails, what with the blood dripping from their eyeballs and all.
@DaveRandom I had cause to write in a communication to internals "So with the fact established that errors should be managable; and it is a fact" ... I shouldn't have to say that there
because it isn't really satisfactory at all, an exception is not harder to understand than the concept of programming a computer, I should say if you are seeking to learn PHP, or any language, understanding the concept of an exception is the least of your worries ...
the only thing that can reasonably be warnings as they are now are E_STRICT notices, only E_STRICT aren't only warnings, they modify the behaviour of the application ... so there would be one legitimate use for warnings, if it were implemented sanely ...
it would have to be a major version anyway ... there has to be some time in the release process where BC takes a back seat, it has to be major versions ...
I didn't start yet, I only played, tis quite doable ... get some simpler stuff done first ...
I think I can provide pretty good reasoning that exceptions are always better than errors, that actually it creates better, more precise and efficient code, on that side of the fence you can reason the case brilliantly, on the other you have to clutch at very very thin, breaking straws ...
I've never heard anyone from Zend say anything about errors vs exceptions ... but spend a bit of time reading /Zend, it appears to me that Zend intended to use exceptions, it is prepared to use only exceptions ...
Exceptions > Errors, in all cases. We don't need warnings; just the do()/tryDo() convention by which do() will always throw, and tryDo() will always return bool with the returned value as a reference parameter.
@crypticツ yes.. it is just like that. Ugly and not user-friendly. He has vision issue so high contrast is good for him. Unfortunately the program was not made for it to works in high contrast so when you mouse-over the item it is just black.
he just want to be in touch with the family and he experience difficulty to remember things a bit.. it need to be as simple as possible
@happy most browser have the ability to prevent websites from setting their own styles (colors, font, etc..) change it so websites can't override your custom settings.