Spoilers for episode 5 of season 6 "The Door".
At the end of the episode we got to see how Wylis became Hodor and why all he can say is "Hodor".
If you've watched the episode you know that
but how was this shown in versions of the episode dubbed in other languages? If the name of character...
@DustinSnider I think I know how to do that...but I doubt it's the best way.
I did something similar when I was white-listing a service to include CSS files from S3 based on a header. That header was created by an .htaccess file.
Using a GET variable is not as good because you may want to re-route requests that are more complex.
in fact, I remember reading once an articale about scope, reference counts, memory handling and garbage collection that was like the dawn for me. And I can't find it again.
s/once/an awful lot of/
but that precise one was really enlighting.
... which is pretty orthogonal from object handles, but y'know. I get carried away
it's hard to explain because the difference is subtle. and the details are hidden to userland. like. in order to understand the difference you need to understand how variables work internally
@Wes a handle is a pointer to the real object. If a handle is used as an argument to a function it will still be passed by value...the function will receive a copy of the pointer. I can therefore delete the original variable I passed to the function, and the object will have not been removed from memory...just the first handle.
If however I pass it by reference to the function and do the same thing...the variable passed to the function will be null.
when i write query for updation error occurs like this: Parse error: syntax error, unexpected ''.$roww.'' (T_CONSTANT_ENCAPSED_STRING) in C:\xampp\htdocs\phpbb\includes\functions_posting.php on line 2176
If user input is inserted without modification into an SQL query, then the application becomes vulnerable to SQL injection, like in the following example:
$unsafe_variable = $_POST['user_input'];
mysql_query("INSERT INTO `table` (`column`) VALUES ('$unsafe_variable')");
That's because the us...
if you dont know what prepared statements are, google it. it's fundamental to know. you cannot continue writing code like the above. you are making the internet insecure and you are putting your client at risk of losing all of their data.
@Danack If you read the article, the only reason why they didn't use UUIDs was because they wanted to stay with 64bit for legacy reasons and UUIDs need 128.
And for some reason they want to sort by id instead of tweet date. I guess that's also for legacy reasons because 3rd party applications do that and I guess they had autoinc before
But didn't want to rekindle the discussion. Let's leave it at that :D
If I use the scope resolution operator and store the result in a variable, why does the value of the variable change when I change the scope class? For instance I have $var = CL::Foo(); // changes property value to "foo" then if I do CL::Bar(); // changes property value to "bar" What I want to happen here is that CL::getProp() would return "bar" because it has been changed in the class. But I want $var to stay as "foo" but it would show "bar"
> Facebook has decided to change the React license from BSD+Patents to MIT to make it possible for companies to include React in Apache projects, and to avoid uncertain relationship with the open source community.
@Wes that's the thing. if you make the url configurable, people will put in different urls than those anticipated by the code, so it cannot be used freely, because changing the url requires changes to the code.
@Patrick I am not a frontend guy. I had very little hands-on time myself. on my previous job we used angular and it got the job done and the devs liked it. at the current job, we heavily use react and it also gets the job done. so I am basing this solely on that :) might want to get a more qualified opinion elsewhere.
Is declaring lots of variables bad? Does it affect performance, loading times etc?
I have a validator class but created multiple variables for each type of validation because the class stores restrictions. Would it be better to do that or have a clear() method and reuse the same one?
@DaveRandom I am trying to teach myself PHP so I don't fully understand which is why I ask a lot of questions. Thank you for that advice. That is one thing that always makes me wonder
Hello Guys, I need some help in wordpress + woocommerce https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46189133/how-to-supply-console-logs-data-into-the-woocommerce-cart
@Gordon sure, me too, generally my initial commit should be a poc. What I mean is I forgot to git add --all, so my initial commit consists of a project skeleton :-P
@RonniSkansing i know, my handwriting is very bad, but you can also read the question text, there is no need to look at the pic, plz answer ig you know
hey everyone...looking for some advise here, i have installed laravel framework, but at this point i´m kinda stuck on how to proceed relating the database...i´m used to work with mamp on my mac, but laravel has homestead which seems to be really great, but...should i configure laravel to work with mamp, or should i use homestead?
i see people configuring mamp with laravel, but homestead seems to be more smooth to work, what do you think? has anyone here working with laravel? what should be better to work with?
@Patrick a friend of mine said that laravel was a good framework and that i should try it, so i went to the laracasts videos and started seeing the videos, and i also though it was great, but do you think it is not?
@Danack thanks for answering
for a person like me(rookie) that is used to create all the .php files by hand, do all the work without no organization, a framework helps a lot
@Patrick really?!?! oh man!..i though the docs was one of the things that was good, even the videos, the tutor explains so well that makes you feel that you can do anything :)
@Japa laracasts has some good stuff, but then there are videos like laracasts.com/series/php-bits/episodes/1 that go against everything that we learned as a community in the past decade(s)
It's always good to learn from multiple resources and then compare them
@PeeHaa another thing that came out of it is I am surprised how tolerant browsers are of ascii-incompatible charsets at the document level, as long as you declare it in the Content-Type header Chrome FF and Edge were all happy to swallow UTF-32 and big5, including when I started including some literal big5 multi-byte sequences in the doc
(prefix: I know what I'm doing and why I'm doing it and I know it sucks and I don't want a lecture) Has anyone had issues with $injector->share($injector) in auryn? /cc @Danack @PeeHaa
When I just do that, it "doesn't work" in the sense that I don't get the same instance, but when I do ->delegate(Injector::class, function() use($injector) { return $injector; }) it works