@LeviMorrison In the previous discussion the preference was to not enforce LSP on parameter names. Because it's too much BC and most methods will not be invoked using NPs. So you'd get a runtime error, which is okay with me.
@ircmaxell I think it makes sense to make ... capture and expand named params as well, PHP arrays would perfectly fit function arguments if named parameters were added
@LeviMorrison What's the blocker? The E_NOTICE stuff?
@LeviMorrison Sure, we just need some means to trigger one
We could make it into a fun easter egg. But that's probably a bad idea.
Though __zend_summon_kraken does sound fun.
If it's an easter egg it won't be taken seriously and might be mistakenly removed
So __zend_debug_throw_compile_time_non_fatal_error would work. It's long-winded, extremely unlikely to be used by chance, and adds minimal cruft, if any.
"PHP Warning: phpinfo(): It is not safe to rely on the system's timezone settings. You are required to use the date.timezone setting or the date_default_timezone_set() function. In case you used any of those methods and you are still getting this warning, you most likely misspelled the timezone identifier. We selected the timezone 'UTC' for now, but please set date.timezone to select your timezone. in C:\web\phpinfo.php on line 5"
@AndreaFaulds That bug - bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=67125 it's because the relative path for the 2nd image is failing to be found. I would tell the user to chdir() to the directory that contains the first image....but that only affects PHP code, not the underlying library code.
@LeviMorrison I've made my own pull request which fixes most of the tests and the E_NOTICE issue (special token), and updated the RFC to link to it, as well as removed the mention E_NOTICE issue from it since it has been solved.
I have 3 tables:
Table X:
Choice A Choice B name group
Apple Water Title1 'X'
Orange Milk Title2 'X'
Table Y:
id name
1 Title1
2 Title2
Table Z:
id Y_fk group
1 1 'X'
1 2 ...
If he'd stopped halfway through it would have been good - and used the array_map/_reduce functions. But the final code is something that is far more difficult to understand and debug than it is halfway through.
wait, I can't do that because it pulls information needed from the DB, if it returns false..it will throw an error.
And I can just use it like this right? `$rData = $GLOBALS['FalconSQL']->checkAdmin();` Or should I do `$rData = array($GLOBALS['FalconSQL']->checkAdmin());`
@ircmaxell I need to write a blog post on this......no it's not. Although it's certainly possibly to understand the code, particularly when you've been programming in that style for a while, it takes up a lot more brain power at once to comprehend what the end code is doing.
Think of your brain as a stack or cache; the code at the start and the middle of the video is very simple and each chunk can be thought about seprately. Thinking about each chunk pushes just one item into your brain stack/cache, which isn't very demanding.
The code at the end is doing far more things at once. To think about it, you need to push all of the things it's doing into your brain stack/cache at once. Even if you are able to do that (and I contend that it's not guaranteed that everyone is able to do that) because you've got to push lots pieces of information into your brains cache at once, it's far more likely that some other information is going to get pushed out.
The other thing being that it's far harder to tell what is going to happen if you press "step into" in a debugger for that end code.
even that's not bad, if you ignore that the second closure is really the identity function and should be excluded
I get your point
and in general I think you're completely right
however, functional transforms allow you to isolate state and therefore focus on the specific transform involved. As long as the transforms are stateless, they are easier to understand than stateful procedural code
Well yeah....but when you can do it without a lib dependency, and without having to worry about whether the methods on the collection does something funky....
Since PHP 7, there is a null coalesce operator:
<?php
$x = $a ?? $b;
It is equivalent to isset():
<?php
$x = isset($a) ? $a : $b;
Until PHP 7 comes out, though, your best bet is the ?: operator which is a shortcut for the ternary operator.
gimme all the upvotes you might want to consider boosting it
The Null Coalesce Operator, (??) has been accepted and implemented in PHP 7. It differs from the short ternary operator (?:) in that ?? will suppress the E_NOTICE that would otherwise occur when attempting to access an array where it doesn't have a key. The first example in the RFC gives:
$usern...
What to write in .htaccess file to allow to read *css and *js. Browser gives unstyled page and This:Failed to load resource: the server responded with a status of 403 (Forbidden)
PS: every time you call a conditional operator "ternary" (when you are in fact addressing a particular operator not its type from the arity perspective) a kitten dies
so before $scope.processForm, add $scope.comments = '';
and within the success closure for your $http call add $scope.comments = response.comments (assuming response is a json object with a comments property)
and within your view/markup use <div class="view_comment">{{comments}}</div>
so now you are using the comments model and two way binding
and every update to $scope.comments will be applied to the view automagically
So yesterday I requested a hosting account from my university. Apparently it's a shared one but I could SSH into it. It was quite secured since I couldn't use sudo or even apt-get to install or upgrade software. I uploaded my php API that uses NikiC's FastRoute library. I got into problems since it requires PHP 5.4 while the server has 5.3. I noticed that it has Suhosin patch. While I could just use another host that does support 5.4+ I wrote an email to a teacher (maintainer) stating that upgrading to 5.4+ would not only have performance gains but also security patches. He replied that the…
The second question would be: is there an alternative?
@HamZa use 5.6 with the extension. Sticking with 5.3 in the name of security is backward. Not only is 5.3 eol, but the suhosin patch for it isn't being updated either.
@Eenvincible basically just ask a specific question where you're stuck. Maybe someone will take an interest into it, maybe someone has an answer. Asking a general question: "Can someone help me?" will likely not get answered
So I have build a laravel web application but what I would like to do is deploy it using GIT so that future changes will be easily added using git commands like git push;