you guys know a lot. I really wish i was a computer science student instead of a comunications one. I could spend my evenings studying C instead of csr D:
@HamZa haha really? what I know of php i've learned it by myself too, but i feel like there are basics things people keep talking about I have no idea where they've learnt them
@Ant100 Yeah really, the stuff is outdated (I talk about a couple of years). Security is 0, and sadly enough it happens even on higher levels (near uni level)
@HamZa ah not my government. So I should just keep learning by myself. Maybe if I start learning C I'll get a better understandment? I went straight to php and know nothing else.
@cspray I think it's important to know the principles of C. The way non-memory-managed code works. You should always understand (at a cursory level at least) one abstraction level below where you're currently working
@ircmaxell Fair enough. However, if you're first learning PHP I don't think you should be concerning yourself with the underlying abstraction. I believe that should wait until you're more comfortable with the language.
I'm actually starting to go through the article you co-wrote with @NikiC on learning PHP internals. I feel like I've reached that point in PHP knowledge to want to know more about the abstraction :P
I wouldn't let it come to that, basically ... if I ever catch myself thinking "hey, I could just store php code in a variable" I know that it's time to see a psychiatrist.
I'm getting a segfault consistently in my C program, so I ran it through gdb to find the problem but then it doesn't ever segfault. It's not multi-threaded or using sockets or file descriptors or anything; it is purely computational. Curse you, hidden segfault!