@PaulCrovella well yes but the mentality does seem to be quite child-like, and children really do get bored of the annoying thing if you ignore them for long enough
I know I feel quite a childish sense of satisfaction at being blocked
There are some people with whom it is possible to engage who are on the "other side", but none of them are trolling people on Twitter because they are adults. Adults with a a different and IMO pretty warped viewpoint, but adults nonetheless.
I was trying to say, that if government went against the result of the referendum, it would be end of said government and it would make a significant portion of "remainers" to change their mind
@tereško right, I got that, I meant that for them to push the other way it will be suicidal for them as well, because they are not going to be able to deliver on a lot of the things they keep promising the people who are currently behind them
I've heard good arguments that could convince me that leaving is the wrong path, but the kind of rhetoric you can fit in a tweet doesn't do that ... I heard someone on twitter say that Article 50 was designed so that dictators can leave, even if that is true, it does nothing for your argument ...
@JoeWatkins Indeed, I'm not trying to change anyone's mind, this is a purely masochistic exercise for me right now (and I even basically said that at the start)
and similar voices of dissent were around, it's just that millennials (by and large, the people arguing now) weren't alive to hear it, and there was no internet ...
@DaveRandom I've been doing it for years, couple of times I'd have been better off negotiating in another currency ... but right now, I got a ~20% pay rise because of brexit ...
forgive me if I don't completely change my mind :D
@tereško Brits actually leave the country a lot, it's kinda shit here a lot of the time and jumping on a train to a bit of France that is way nicer is not prohibitively expensive
@tereško also: even if you find yourself able to afford this, don't.
@JoeWatkins No indeed, I have never expected that would be an issue in reality. What pisses me off about that is the amount of fud that has been spread by both sides using that as a basis for... anything.
@PaulCrovella A lot of people seem to think they are taking the nintendo with them...
OK, can you show example input (i.e. the data in the array) and output (the HTML that should be produced from that input) please? And really actually please do it in a gist or something
Fine, but you really need to do what I said or I can't help you. I don't know what you are actually trying to do unless you show me. For example show me the output of var_dump($s2); and the HTML you want to produce from that data.
Please always use var_dump() instead of print_r(), print_r() output is almost never useful
@DaveRandom can we get rid of the default_charset ini setting entirely and convert everything that uses it to simply use utf-8 unless explicitly overridden?
Also it would be the kind of breaking change that requires a major probably, and that will reignite the Unicode Support™ debate and nothing will happen probably @PaulCrovella
@DaveRandom I'd roll it up in a php 8 rfc culling as much of php.ini as humanly possible. changing just the defaults for htmlspecialchars would already need a major anyway
I mean in reality I could probably just use it with the defaults every time anyway but I have had it drilled into to me that I must always declare the charset explicitly, so I've got into the habit of using the HTML5 flag since I have to pass some flags anyway
Generally my projects have a function named html() which takes a single string arg and is just a less wordy convenience wrapper around htmlspecialchars()
using it in full in templates makes them a lot less readable