Hey look, an issue that would have been made more obvious with my "Warn about invalid strings in arithmetic" RFC: stackoverflow.com/questions/35043445/…
> PHP Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 2147483648 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 262144 bytes) in /srv/Amplify/vendor/amphp/amp/lib/functions.php on line 860 PHP Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 2147483648 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 262144 bytes) in Unknown on line 0
+1 thanks, now I know how floats are stored. PS: No, Windows doesn't. At least in PHP5.3.1/Win7 I did have floating point issues ;) — NikiCSep 29 '10 at 16:56
@Danack No I am not, I want to try to solve this with understanding which is way i showed what I have tried. The reason for the chat is for quicker response as I have several things I dont understand
@Danack I have a test tomorrow and have been studying, and some things like above I cant seem to understand, the thing I tried above for example returns that it is incorrect with a practice test. So basically I think the problem is how would I express 10 in the binary language using 3 bits?
@DaViDa The wording doesn't make any sense. It might not be a homework question, but it's still a weirdly phrased non-real world programming problem. If that is the actual text from the question, you ought to ask a tutor what the fuck it means, as it makes no sense to me.
@AboutLeros Why? Well, why don't you go ahead and review the mysql_query documentation, and you will quickly discover the "why" to both of my suggestions. :)
@captainrad Simple, no, but finding the index of the first instance, doing a substring extraction and replacement, then putting the substring back in could work. I expect given that you're thinking about indexes already that you don't wanna do that, and I don't blame you.
@AboutLeros No. Well, maybe. It's important that you make sure the return value from the query is actually a statement handle, and that if it is a statement handle, that there's data to retrieve.
@AboutLeros Assignments return the assigned value, so as long as the assignment is truthy, that should work in a while. That said, addressing a boolean as an array isn't a good idea, so you should skip the while if the statement handle is false.
@ChrisOkyen I haven't looked at a raw XML file in Firefox in forever, but it used to have a collapse/expand mechanism... I know Chrome does not have one. IIRC IE used to have one as well, but again I havent' checked.
if I have a string `$content = "this is SUPER a string that contains the word SUPER three SUPER times' and I want to wrap the first instance of "SUPER" like so... "<a href='blah'>SUPER</a>" and leave all other instances alone.. what would be the best option
Before the interview, ask them explicitly how they cater for people who have gotten used to using particular IDEs, and how they might not be as productive in 1.5 hours as people who are using an ide they are used to using?
If they have a sensible answer to that - such as, "lol we don't care about the code written in the test, we're just testing how your work to solve problems", then it's not a problem.....If their answer is "WHY DON'T YOU USE PHPSTORM LIKE EVERYONE ELSE", maybe, problem.
<DirectionsResponse> <route> <leg> <step> .... more and more <step> <distance> <value>660459</value>
<text>VAR</text> </distance> ..... all end tags
continues <route> <leg> <step> .... <distance> Value> however many times theirs routes
How can I say ... Get REGEX you @#@!, do get all values within <value> that arte in <distance> which are below <step> but not in side of it which is in all <routes> and a sandwich
<route>"/n""/t"/<leg></n" "/t" "/t" <step>"/n" "/t" "/t "/t" * wildcard "/n" "/t" "/t "/t" "/t" <distance> something like that
github.com/amphp/aerys/commit/… … sigh. And I don't really want to segment fread()'s into chunks of 500 bytes as that would be just slow for most use cases. \cc @PeeHaa