@JoeWatkins With that code, the cneg_negotiate_type() function still had the correct rules for the parameters applied, even though I passed NULL to the second arg of PHP_FE()
@JoeWatkins I've been using it for some time, most of what I know about PHP internals (and to a large extent, C itself) was learned from reading it. It comes up in quite a few comments/answers on the main site these days, when there's a good "how does X really work" question
Conundrum - are there any other ways of getting varibles from the global scope into a function scope, without the global keyword, nor by passing them into the function as a parameter?
@AlmaDoMundo yeah, bad practice, so don't do it ... if someone wants to kill their boss, you don't go about telling them how to get away with murder, you say "no, don't"
@Jimbo i have a sample (i think that's terrible practice, but it seems, it will do the stuff) - where there's possible to access hight-scopes levels of variables inside a function
Okay, if there's a way to place globals into another array without typing $GLOBALS... maybe if I encode each character and place that into my code - they won't know!
@AlmaDoMundo I'm not have a go, I just don't understand the mentality that causes people to just abandon vertical whitespace. Also I don't quite get why you've gone for eval() instead of function() use() ?
@Jimbo That's because you added the $ to the string, it should just be GLOBALS
Dear god why on earth are we still discussing this?
@DaveRandom as for eval .. another solution is to use create_function - may be. How you will restore full context in simple closure definition by function keyword?
@DarkHorse Reasonbly sure you're in the wrong room, that isn't PHP code...
@AlmaDoMundo Yeh I'm sure you do, I'm not questioning your abilities, merely questioning whether that's the best way to achieve what you are doing (ignoring for a second the fact that what you are doing is hateful :-P)
@Jimbo That's decidedly interesting. Not only does it not work in a function scope, it doesn't work in a function scope even after you've accessed it directly.
@HamZa if you'll be in the Hell the Devill will come to you and say: 'that regex (gist.github.com/noprompt/6106573/raw/…) handles word 'Hell' wrong. fix it'
Can someone knowledgeable please write a response to that awful Veekun post that gets spammed wherever you mention PHP? The one that mentions a bunch of crap that was fixed in 5, a bunch more crap that was fixed in 5.4 and stuff from documentation of 2.0.
hey guys..i am very new to php.. I am an android app developer but There is requirement of a web app using "amazon simple db and php" SO can anyone help me please
@Leri I learned C before PHP, but I started with PHP on the web and for about a year I was following horrible tutorials. Rolling my own crypto algorithms, using naked sessions and bad tokens, no CSRF protection... it took a while for me to realize I was doing it wrong.
@Leri.. i agree..but if you are a developer for a technology and u need to learn and implement a app only within 15 days.. so u cant go in deep.. so it sucks..by d way thanks @HamZa
@AlmaDoMundo it's so popular among webdevs because its widely available and easy to get shit done with it quickly even without knowing proper development techniques.
@Alpesh If you are familiar with language basics (as you have stated you are), you should be able to implement db connection with the help of manual in 15 days.
my opinion - is that PHP is like IT itself. It has many bad practices, many bugs e t.c. - but it simply works. When you need things done - you don't need beautiful whitespaces in syntax like in python or digits-objects like in ruby. You simple need that damned thing work properly. And you do it
An important note: $GLOBALS are dirty and evil. Don't use them. Ever. Never ever ever.
This is a rather weird one. I'm attempting to construct a variable variable using a string named $GLOBALS.
From the global scope
Let's see what we get when var_dump()ing this in the global scope.
$g = s...
so learning new tech is very painfull . at least when your selected technology(in my case android and j2me) is at boom.. but the only reason behind : urgently i got assigned on this project ..so i have to do it in any how..@SweetieBelle
Lately i have been learning how to code in java. I have also had some interest with learning about operating systems. I decide to try to create my own java-based OS. Would i have to compile it before hand and run it? Anyways, if you have any tips, i'd be more than happy to try them!
@Jimbo deceze has a fair point, the problem is that ${'GLOBALS'} doesn't work, how you create the 'GLOBALS' string isn't really relevant to the question
@Jimbo It's just a string. It's about how $GLOBALS is created really, I mean I imagine it isn't created for every scope because that would be wasteful, it will only be created when you try to access it - and obviously using variable variables bypasses the mechanism that would cause it to be created.
@tereško "There is no place for UI logic in the view, therefore you push the UI logic either in controller or model layer. The usual choice is "controller", because most of people understand that UI logic has no place in model layer." But is not this SRP violation?
The first answer was actually spot on, but the user deleted it (probably due to peer pressure). Basically, you do not want any logic in your template. In an ideal world, you had a tag for all the model data, but since we are in an HTML world, there isn't, so you either have to use XSLT or use Vie...
@tereško we are keeping sync table in the localhost where insert any recodes when user do any CUID.And later we will click any button to run the restore DB according to the Sync Table .Is that sound good?
> If you want to have designers work on templates, don't give them scripts. Give them templates. And if you do, isolate the logic from it and replace it with easy to grasp function calls. Use function names that clearly communicate what the function does. So the designer only needs to know if "I use this with that input, I will always get that output. I don't care how that output comes to be. I'll leave that to the developer".
Honestly have to say that, although templaters like Twig etc tout themselves as "designer friendly" - it's a developers job to do that. It is code, I don't care how the function calls are named - it's code! Unless they're a developer + designer, they shouldn't touch that stuff :P
well, I always felt the argument "our designers are too dumb to grasp a foreach" to be somewhat belittling and I dont share that idea at all. But, I have worked with designers who definitely had problems working on templates including logic. They had no problem using markup, but logic was confusing. Hence, if you want designers to work on templates, turn the logic into markers, so it feels like markup
I want to create a regex in one line to:
remove bbcode
set maximum amount of characters
ex.
this is some [b]bold text[/b]. (29 characters)
To check the maximum number of characters should be 22 characters.
I have successfully created the regex in 2 lines but I need to make it one line.
...
@tereško that's the second one. good enough. obviously, you can just put the div inside there as well. there is no difference to just having a dedicated element except for making it feel more like markup. technically, all elements in an html document trigger some sort of rendering function. you can think of markup as nested function calls
@tereško hiding the details is on purpose since designers dont care for where the data comes from. all they care for is that writing <userprofile/> creates the box. with the link or login form.
@HamZa C# is tagged there so if you want write regex for .NET and post as an answer with a note that it's for educational purposes. In real-world it's useless unless you are doing some dirty one-time stuff.
@tereško tbh, I don't care if you pull in the data via global state there. These markers serve a specific purpose. They don't need to be pristine and solid. They are basically a DSL on top of your proper code. Plus, I never said you have to use them that way. If you want $this->userbox(), use $this->userbox(). If you want <userbox/>, use <userbox/>
Hello guys, I have a question about performance. Which method is better. The first option is to use query with two joins and after that I will use array_unique php function for every column. The other option is to use 6 queries with two joins(I have 6 columns) with DISTINCT. My porpse is to get unique values for every column. Btw I have 200 rows in the table. Can you give me advice, prease?
no offense but blah. I told you that this depends on your implementation. You know I don't believe in any of the MVC quibble you are trying to drag me in. My point was that if you want to work with designers, make sure their templates feel as much as markup as possible. And yes, abstracting the logic away is taking out the logic from the templates.
There is no functional difference between <h1>Foo<h1> and <?php h1('foo') ?>. It's only form. Somewhere something will check how to render that into a headline. And it will do so on the basis of some sort of state, be it global or neatly injected.
@Anton_Sh write both queries down. Put EXPLAIN in front. Execute. Make an educated guess.