@Ekin Redis probably only listens on 127.0.0.1, but it's trying to use the external interface to connect, as you don't have gitamp.audio in your /etc/hosts.
the situation is in that array i want to search address key because simetime that may come like Home_address / work_address .So for the same purpose i am thinking to take all the keys and the apply regex search over it
An elephant in Cairo is a term used in computer programming to describe a piece of data inserted at the end of a search space, which matches the search criteria, in order to make sure the search algorithm terminates; it is a humorous example of a sentinel value. The term derives from a humorous essay circulated on the Internet and published in Byte magazine in September 1989 that described how various professions would go about hunting elephants.
== Algorithm ==
When hunting elephants, the article describes programmers as following this algorithm:
Go to Africa.
Start at the Cape of Good Hope ...
@Caner I would say it depends on whether your other entities may need a relationship with the countries, how frequently you want to update it and how much data you want for each country
@pmmaga I need it for users and some other db items like locations, but always only for addresses, the names of countries I have to translate in more languages
@kelunik Oh sure, but I'm quite familiar with the reg command already (confident in not breaking my machine while playing with it) and having the ability to modify the registry via a nice API is no more dangerous than the existence of unlink()/exec()
@DaveRandom I also thought about returning the entire list of values at a key. Would allow amphp/dns to make only one request instead of most often two.
Because spawning two processes instead of one is obviously twice as bad for performance.
@kelunik there should be a fallback to the default nameservers, however it should generate an E_NOTICE (thus I agree with the E_DEPRECATED but not the complete removal) /cc @bwoebi
@DaveRandom Depends on when they run. If it runs after the user was created, then UserCreated is better, if it the event is during the creation and maybe can even influence it, then I think UserCreate or CreateUser is better.
There's not really any other reason for "shouldn't be doing what you're doing" in computer programming, either things work and don't cause errors (no error), or they might cause errors (E_WARNINGORNOTICE), or they just don't work (E_ERROR)
@kelunik but $x->after('UserCreated', ...) would be more correct anyways? Still, it's not what I am using it for, it's for an event log and all DDD resources claim that you should name them in the past tense. I'll just stick with the convention here, was more interested in short name vs sentence :)
@kelunik A better question is why not fall back? It's a last-ditch attempt to try and do something useful in the face of adversity. It is not harmful or particularly untidy and it is already written... if we were starting from scratch and the debate was over whether to bother adding it, I might say no, but it's already there. We still issue a warning saying "something ain't right here" but I don't see the point in bailing when we can continue.
@DaveRandom It's not the general consensus. @PeeHaa and me are for dropping, you and @bwoebi are for keeping.
Anonymous
@JayIsTooCommon I totally appreciate your concern. It's the nature of the incident that took us this long, because cleaning it up to the very best of our ability required coordination and cooperation from so many different third party services (e.g. Google, Yahoo, Yandex, Etc, etc, etc, etc). I'm posting something today or tomorrow as we're finally at the point where we feel it's okay to shine a bigger light on it. It's not us being tight-lipped, I promise. It's us just being a bit fanatical about cleaning it up prior. — Tim Post ♦6 mins ago
Anonymous
@PeeHaa It just so happens that today they're at that point :P
OK so the way the API works is how I think this API will need to work, for sanity's sake. You may not like it. Basically you query a key ($baseDN in this API) and specify the names of the values you want to retrieve ($attributes arg). The alternative is two read() functions - one for reading all values under a key, and one for reading a specific value.
Regarding the value object that contains the type info, that can be done with flags
PS don't look at my 2 year old repos. They are all 100% automated testing. Honest.
@kelunik there are some inherently unhandlable edge cases here. E.g. in a REG_MULTI_SZ where one of the strings contains a literal "\0" (the char sequence, not a null byte)
@kelunik in fact I'm wondering if just shipping an alternate exe would be in order. This is obviously for windows use only, and a different exe could provide a much saner API, potentially use JSON as a format and possibly handle more than one call in a single process (no spawning new processes every time)
pretty sure I could write a replacement binary in a couple of hours
You could do it as a PHP extension as well but making something pollable for async would be hard impossible
Still I cannot understand what fetch does, or at lease when exactly should I use it?! As far as I know, pull get the project from the github's server, so why should I use fetch?
@kelunik Why should stream elements be missed with the normal Stream?
@kelunik Emitter is an object similarly to Deferred, just with Stream functionality. Producer expects a (coroutine) callback to which it passes an emit callback
@Shafizadeh here is the fun part: you actually need to get a quite good understanding of git, because, if I'm not mistaken, you will be the one at your workplace playing the role of "git specialist"