It's still a debate whether array_filter() should have a magic flag to also pass array keys in the callback or whether I should write array_filter_keys().
Having the key value at your disposal in the callback has the advantage that you don't have to do a separate array deref.
I bet you £10 that if you implement array_some() it won't be long before you get a question on SO that's "what's the difference between array_some() and array_sum()"
@Jack Yeh in know, I just meant that if you look at the current std lib and follow the current stupid naming convention, that's what it should be called. PHP + functional programming don't work very well in that respect because all the function names are overly long (out of necessity) because you can't do the "everything is an object" deliciousness that you can in ECMA
Why doesn't PHP has a function that returns it's parameter built-in? Like deref($value)? That would allow to overcome of some of it's parsers shortcommings. Valid featur request? Or does this just lead to bad code?
The thing is, array_sum() and array_some() have nothing to do with each other in reality. array_sum()must visit every element, it's reducing the array to the sum of the values. But array_some() is just checking that some element in the array matches a user-defined condition
OK but that seems like convoluted logic, array_sum() is just adding up the values of the array, you want a) short-circuit eval, and b) a conditional test. It's much more of an extension of in_array()/array_search()
@zerkms Can't picture it, do you mean "turn" or do you mean "pull"? I'm actually more of a fan of the wall-bracket solution to that problem myself anyway (if you are looking to buy something)
In mathematics, an identity function, also called an identity relation or identity map or identity transformation, is a function that always returns the same value that was used as its argument. In terms of equations, the function is given by f(x) = x.
Definition
Formally, if M is a set, the identity function f on M is defined to be that function with domain and codomain M which satisfies
:f(x) = x for all elements x in M.
In other words, the function assigns to each element x of M the element x of M.
The identity function f on M is often denoted by idM.
...
@zerkms I'm trying to find a link to the thing my sister has, basically it's a vesa mount that screws down, I can't find but I've emailed her to see if she has the link
I still prefer the screw-down stand idea though because the straps won't really let you swivel the screen, I would check to see if the manufacturer supplied stand has base mounting points and if not then look at buying something
@DextOr Existing solution has nothing to do with files. If you want to be sure that it's a pdf file you need to check binary format of file and unless you download file there's no way over http.
@zerkms You mean to actually validate that it is indeed a PDF? But that's determining existence AND content scan whereas it seems that @DextOr is only interested in the former ... I could be wrong of course.
@HamZa I guess the regex is fine then, it has to be the way the results are inspected for output then. I added the function that matches and echos out the results. still wont show for new cisco IOS's. — LethalGimmick2 mins ago
function myCheck($in)
{ return isset($in); }
$var1='Something';
$var2='$var1';
$var3='$varNonExitant';
What I'm trying to achive is to use myCheck to evaluate the existance of the content like this:
myCheck($var2) returns true;
myCheck($var3) returns false;
Thanks!
@salathe Good morning. My PR has just been accepted on php-src and merged into master, so presumably it will be in 5.5.2. I've just created a couple of doc patches documenting the feature it adds, should I submit them now or wait until 5.5.2 is released?
@Mr.Alien I know that. I just wondered about <br></br> though. I know it's not valid html 4 (as not even <br /> is), I know it's not valid html 5 (as <br /> is valid only because people had gotten used to writing it, and through the rule that such a slash has no meaning) but I do really wonder if it's valid XHTML
Jekyll is a delightful piece of software. A Ruby application that turns your Markdown and html files to a nicely constructed static website. Since the generated site is static, you can deploy and serve it from anywhere with no security or performance concerns. As a matter of fact, this site is built with Jekyll. For websites that don't need to offer dynamic functionality this is in many ways …
@Mr.Alien no, because the question didn't ask about it. A question about <br> and <br /> in html 5 not saying anything about whether <br></br> is valid XHTML does not automatically mean it's not valid XHTML.
@Jasper <br> <img> and I don't remember else, are self closing tags, so either you leave them <img> is completely fine in html, but if you use xhtml, you need to use <img /> i.e <img></img> = <img />