Yes, and it's called Stack Overflow. (But seriously: the number of "I need a regex to do this" questions here has been rather overwhelming lately.) — Dan RasmussenJul 21 '11 at 2:37
can someone explain why my form is submission of <input type="file" name="file_upload" id="file_upload" /> is saying 'file_upload' => string 'balance.png' (length=11) in $_POST and null in $_FILE
@Jack array_reduce($input, function(a, b) { /* calculate product of a with b*/}) is a mouthful. it would be nice if we had a more terse way of writing that. with less boilerplate code
@rdlowrey surely, we can disguise the static as a getStack()->db->do() — this is exactly the same effect. All these factories could be some static method of the class we want to instantiate for example etc.
@rdlowrey what is there the advantage? I think when I'd use save() and delete() it would be more if I would want to store data to a file etc. I don't like to disguise the real function. It should give a feeling of a database. I just want to handle the input dependent on the configuration.
@PLB I'd be interested to see if you still get the error if you add VC_VERSIONS[1700] = 'MSVC11 (Visual C++ 2011)'; on line 51 and VC_VERSIONS_SHORT[1700] = 'VC11'; on line 59
@rdlowrey I could abstract it away, but then I loose also the control over it. It's often my problem that the result is at the end somewhat disguised that I have problems to see what really happens (In case of debugging for example). I see the code should do this. okay. but sometimes there might a) be a little bug in the depth, one special combination does somehow not work well or b) I don't see from my input the problem, but the output help me to quickly recognize the problem.
@rdlowrey All I wanted is here adding a well working possibility to accept different database engines. Reason: these functions are everywhere available, and if not, emulatable.
@rdlowrey btw. If you look at the rest of the code, there are only very few static calls
@MGE empty checks if $value['image'][1]['#text'] is empty. but you don't get to the #text because $value['image'] is not an array but a string. that's why you get the error.
You know, I'm stumbling through that reddit about features in PHP 17.0 or whatever, and it's become apparent to me that alot of the most requested features bring a whole lot of nothing to the table.
Making <?php unnecessary in PHP only files. What the hell does that really do for anyone? It saves you 5 bytes that most people don't ever type (file templates, IDE, whatever)
I chimed in; basically saying that people are having the tendency to bark about changing features we already have, when there are far more powerful features left unimplemented.
Which way would be the most accurate to check for "visitors" a.k.a. bots outside of Europe... 1. Use GeoIP for country detection or 2. compare client time with the server time and see how many hours that differs and build a filter upon that... are there any more ways?
@Gordon Yes but you don't call the lend() method on the ears, that makes no sense. From the context of Mark Antony, he was borrowing them. If the method was called lend() you'd have to pass an argument because you would be lending something to the ears.
@Gordon You know that was exactly what I was looking for, heard it when I was a kid, but couldn't find it by searching "freak out" in youtube. Thought it might've been in this song for a sec
@Simon_eQ In C++ yes. And you never want to do that.
Always prefer composition over inheritance.
Anonymous
@Danack Its not complex project. It is very simple, and any problem arising is unlikely. So, I dont know what composition is ... yet. But, should I use traits to get around of this problem
"It is very simple, and any problem arising is unlikely." Multiple class inheritance is almost never simple. And no, traits are probably not the answer.
If I have several classes with functions that I need but want to store separately for organisation, can I extend a class to have both?
i.e. class a extends b extends c
edit: I know how to extend classes one at a time, but I'm looking for a method to instantly extend a class using multiple base ...
@Simon_eQ Actually you could implement the composition using traits in PHP, it's still slightly more magic that just writing the forwarding functions yourself.