@Wes yes, although it sometimes turns into a crappy decision again when said default impl has a public ctor, or when there are multiple provided implementations and a base class (BaseFoo also makes my face twitch)
internal visibility is one of my most desired features, but I have never yet come up with/seen a proposal of how that would actually work that I don't hate
I have reached the conclusion the lack of a native package-like construct/clear package boundary that the engine can understand makes it basically impossible to have something that is both useful and well defined :-/
class Foo
{
public function abc(private MyCollaborator $collaborator){
// means requires private access to the MyCollaborator object
$collaborator->privateMethod();
}
}
class MyCollaborator
{
function test(Foo $foo){
$foo->abc(private $this); // means it gives private access to $this object
}
private function privateMethod(){}
}
I'd rather something like class Thing friendof OtherThing but that feels crappy as well
the only thing I have seen that I don't entirely hate is a package declaration (with identical semantics to namespace), but I don't like having yet more leading crap at the top of the file.
I suppose you could do something like namespace [Package\Root]\Sub\Ns or namespace Package\Root:Sub\Ns
but I definitely feel that it should behave as public within a defined scope, and private outside it, with no pissing about with declaring relationships between individual scopes
eh, whatever, this is firmly in my "unresolvable" box :-P
@Wes I irrationally hate that, for the almost entirely invalid reason that the fcall overhead in PHP is large, even though I know it's a completely irrelevant definition of "large"
@Darius was (mostly) joking about that, if you post some code and/or description I'd be happy to give you some opinions
@Wes that's a totally different thing though, not really related to proxy classes in any way other than that one might use the word "delegate" when describing both of them
class FooWrapper implements Foo{
public Foo $wrappee implements Foo;
function __construct(){ $this->wrappee = new FooThatHasDangerousPublicMethods(); }
}
public Foo $wrappee implements Foo; this means that all methods in interface Foo and only the methods in the interface Foo must be delegated to $wrappee
Trying out inheritance table stuff. I have a an abstract class "Media" and entity classes "Photo" and "PDF" + others for arguments sake. They each extend Media class. Right now, I have the saving and retrieving working great. Where I'm stuck now is I need store multiple versions of each file and not sure how I should store them and keep track of uploads. Photo needs 4 versions lets say (thumb, medium, large, original), PDF needs 2 versions (altered, original).
I'm stuck with a chicken or the egg situation, where uploads are done prior to having a "photo" or "pdf" entity inserted. So I'm thinking I should have a "uploads" table, and a "uploads_versions" table.
I'm going to guess you are outputing it in a document that is being rendered as HTML and the browser is contracting the leading whitespace to a single space
So if you can , help me through the thought process, am I right in thinking "Upload File" -> I know which type this will be, so put into "uploads", generates an ID and puts in the filetype and account_id, and return ID to browser, when browser presses submit to add the Photo (extended media) entity, it will reference the upload ID, ownership and the filetype. It will create the versions of the upload , and insert into upload_versions, then it will create a ManyToMany relationship with
I'm assuming I'm doing it correctly by setting all methods to private in SF4. They all share, title, description, slug, category, user_id and some other things.
Yep, that's why I'm open to "consulting" :D I don't know the issues that will come down the line due to inexperience with this. I had them all as separate tables before.
@Wes feels like a separate issue though, i.e. something that should be worried about only if/when enforced-type properties are a thing
...i.e. not something that you should include in a proposal :-P
I feel like that's the main reason I often disagree with your proposals, you try to do too much at once and create weird inconsistencies in doing so :-P
here's a start, without all the upload stuff, since I haven't figured it out yet.
Kk. I'll take a look, at quick glance it seems they spread out stuff and make a lot of empty columns to reference like photo_id, art_id, pdf_id into one table.
I was hoping/thinking there'd be a way to do upload_id, item_id, entity_type and be better than having upload_id, photo_id, art_id, pdf_id.
tbh I wouldn't worry too much about getting a fantasically awesome and beautifully perfect OOP relationship when dealing with database entities, especially in combination with an ORM, there will always be holes in it
@DaveRandom sure i wouldn't introduce in the proposal... problem is, as we are introducing a new syntax... must work with current syntax and probable future ones :P
@Darius semantically in the database, what's the difference between the different file types?
a table for image uploads and a table for pdf uploads (or whatever) doesn't feel like the right approach, unless they have different metadata stored with them
bearing in mind that I don't do orms: all files have a common shared set of properties, so it'd reasonable to store all that data in a common files table. If a specific type of file has additional fields, I might deal with that by having a videos table with that extra data with an FK to files
when translating that to classes, File has the properties from the files table and Video extends File with the additional properties
because orm/data mappers/whatever that abstraction might leak a bit
@DaveRandom Thinking I understood what you said, what I came up with is for lets say photos I will have Photos extends Media, and Photos has extra columns for small_filepath, medium_filepath, large_filepath , and not reference to yet another table. And Videos will have extra columns for converted, sd_path, hd_path, 4k_path.
That way they all share Media , but have their own independent fields, without worrying of different types being in yet another table?
Still playing with class inheritance and table inheritance, trying to learn the correct way to use them. Is "Likes" a good candidate? Photo, Video have "likes" and I'll want to load up "all likes" at some point by a user, and also individually "video likes" and "photo likes".
Am I weird for wanting to define my form validators as classes? It seems like there doesn't exist a good library to do this. At the very least none that were designed this way. I do know I don't want six billion rules wedged into my controller, and there is no way I can instantiate a validator outside of my controller without making a mess of my beautiful dependency injection.
Its possibly I completely don't understand what I'm doing. Not sure what the best-practice technique is here.
Also, before I get my ears burned off, I am knowingly breaking the MVC conventions. Infact, I shouldn't really call it a controller. I'll just call it the thingy that talks to the ORM and Template.
controllers are only there to map the request from a medium (http, cli, ...) to your application. they should only contain code that is relevant to their medium.
@GiantCowFilms I have tried to go that way, but it was always way overengineered. Since the controllers are only glue code, they only have very little code in them anyway. Splitting that up into two separate classes doesn't make much sense in my opinion
Presentation Layer (Controllers, Templates, etc) Application Layer (Commands and Queries or Application Services, the use cases of your application) Domain Layer (Entities and other domain objects that encode business rules) Infrastructure Layer (Implementations of interfaces that deal with external systems like talking to a database. DbalFooRepository for example)
@GiantCowFilms yes, it's pretty much this but I use the layer names from domain driven design instead
Okay, I think I am starting to get my head around the layered acrchitecture. Seems vaguely over-engineered to me, but that is more of a prefernce thing.
Still, I am disturbed by the lack if injection friendly validator libraries.
@GiantCowFilms proper MVC is what you do in large applications (think: 20k lines as the very least), because you need to impose restrictions on the codebase in order for it not to devolve in a garbage fire
@NikiC regarding gc_data and gc_count, if I have a buffer of structs where the zval is the first member of the struct, can I simply use (zval *) buffer for gc_data? And is gc_count the number of slots in the buffer from 0 to consider?
I've been using symfony's router on this latest project (a replacement for a file system routed site that has been left in production far, far to long).
Hi, for those who want to take a look here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50542302/merge-records-containing-the-same-keys-in-relation-to-another-table
And why not just explain the rules instead of indicating that you give me negative votes for no reason? If you had told me I would have deleted the message from this chat, instead you gave me a negative vote, which should represent the integrity of the application, not the user's behavior.
@tereško But how does it make no sense? I entered the procedure, the query and the results of the extraction. I have also published the results of the query. I do not understand why it would not make sense ...
So catching my PDOException but if I want to run var_dump for debugging and prevent my db credentials from being read out is this a viable approach: `public function __debugInfo() { $properties = get_object_vars($this); unset($properties['host']); unset($properties['user']); unset($properties['pass']);
I am just wondering if I bring in someone to work on some code and I have a development environment setup and I want to provide a class for running var_dump but still want to prevent the db creds of the dev db from being read out how I can accomplish.
the best case scenario is to have a separate "dispatcher", that does the invoking
in some libraries the responsibility of disaptcher is merged into the router (example: FastRoute)
neither controller nor the view should have any clue about the existence of a router
closest you could get to that awareness of a routing code would be in some utility functions in the templating code (or extension, if you use Twig), that share the configuration with the router to let you generate URL based on named routes
a named route is only necessary in the templating .. and only if you rally need it for generating URLs (and it would not really be related to the name of "current route")
I'm trying to find the one I saw yesterday. It was the one where there is a kid in a hospital bed hooked to a machine with his parent. The kid says something like "Now that I am getting healthy, I want to be a PHP Programmer. The next strip shows the parent with tears in their eyes unplugging the machine keeping them alive.
Though now i have fixed it. but let me explain the problem.. i am retrieving comments and want to store the last comment id for on scroll retrieval. I had the logic later in the page where I store the id as attribute on the div element. Now I have had to move the div to the top of the page and the foreach statement where I retrieve the comments is now later in the page and the lastid is populated there. Though now I have retrieved the last comment id based on the size of the array and retrieving the last id.
This is an addendum to our announcement about a recent ToS update concerning Stack Overflow For Teams and GDPR; I'm starting a separate discussion because concerns about the third bullet, an introduction of an arbitration clause, has caused consternation to rise to a level that we quite frankly d...
But not just because it's 2018, although that's a fine reason to do a great number of things.
We're changing our Terms Of Service (ToS) shortly to address three things:
Stack Overflow For Teams is launching soon, and we need to include stuff that talks about us expecting people to pay for it, ...
also, you are probably getting a lot of "we bought an email database and we are checking which of these emails are actually used" spam (depending on implementation of gmail proxyies, they might be actually tracking the "opening of emails" based on unique embeded image lins)
@Wes the whole thing is a shitstorm that very few are even aware of
@azamkhan there is no simple answer to that. Frameworks are a form of technical debt. You use them for a specific goal, IF you have a good understanding of the underlying assumptions.
usually that means a good grasp on OOP in general and various of its practices and principles (SOLID, LoD, SoC, etc.)
@NikiC so in the case of the ds htable bucket, which has 2 zvals each, what do I do with gc_data? Do I need to do an allocation of that pointer in that handler? And then in the case of the priority queue which has {zval, int}, I can't set *gc_data to anything directly because there aren't consecutive zvals.
I've seen that, but doesn't that mean that you have an entire allocated buffer on the object that doesn't serve a purpose other than to tell the engine what to gc?
Haha yeah exactly what I was trying to say :p
If I allocate the gc_data buffer itself, will that get freed later on?
Yeah I had in mind having a priority queue as it stands now. but also a heap with a comparator.
One of the textbook examples where a pq is used is Dijkstra's algorithm, but that requires you to change the priority for a specific value, and doesn't support duplicate values. I think you can just use the ds map for that though, except you wouldn't know the lowest value until you sort the map.
Would be O(n) to change the priority of a value in the ds pq as it's done right now.