@bwoebi Not all language designers of PHP, just you, @NikiC , @ircmaxell , @LeviMorrison, @JoeWatkins etc. (Also, not my quote so why are you blaming me for it :P )
Well okay, but maybe think for yourself, facebook is one company, with a unique economy , it would be like concentrating all your efforts on being one element in the periodic table ... senseless ...
Why everyone likes PHP:
- easy to learn
- easy to find developers
- easy to find servers
- easy to find packages
We don't use it for any of those; we have enough money and employees to overcome all those issues. We use it because it allows us to iterate very, very quickly.
Yeah and if I was trading my company on the open market I might only show research that painted me in a good light too, we all do it, the fact is they did choose the wrong language, not to prototype, not to test their ideas and get investors but to take that idea to the world smoothly, to do it today they had to re implement the language they originally wrote in (unprecedented, I think), and I'm just saying this creates a unique economy for them ...
In my opinion, the hardest part about using a compiled language on the web is that it's hard to find good, robust packages that do what you need. You end up writing a lot more code and more verbose code than you do in web-domain languages.
I use java on the web, all the time, it's somewhere between dynamic and compiled, could be described as both (incorrectly, but we'd all let it pass) ....
@MackieeE Yeah, it's likely to look alien to a PHP dev, but we've used C++ on web before and it works. There's a lot less available in terms of modules, but it does work.
People really need to appreciate our friendly neighbourhood devs more.. it's rather rediculous that a german php magazine actually writes a blog post because 1 guy says thx .. phpmagazin.de/news/…
no no, read about dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/commit.html transactions, you want to use that probably there is a point where it's recommended to split files, I think the manual says 600k rows, but I've never found that necessary
@DamienOvereem one guy said on facebook that 5.5 had removed json ext ... it was phil sturgeon ...
news travels fast :)
and its good news ... I'll bet that it never happened before ...
Does gzdeflated data have some kind of header? Want to conditionally store data in a compressed format if compressing it results in a smaller payload than the original data, but when it comes to decompress it I'm lacking some sort of gztest function.
(the header described on wikipedia doesn't appear to be there)
storage, we're having disk space problems due to the frequency we have to (contractually) take backups. Data is encrypted when it is stored in the DB, and the backup file is compressed. Encrypt then compress is obviously backwards, so I'm investigating how much space we would save if we compressed before encrypting (which would then be compressed again as exported SQL ... but whatever)
@Leigh OK well you've got 3 opts in the php zlib wrapper, gzdeflate() should always produce the smallest output because it's just the compressed data, compress and encode both include header info. Disadvantage being that raw deflate also has no checksum.
But in terms of testing whether the output will actually be smaller, the only way to do it would be to basically implement the algo in userland and bail out with success as soon as the compressed data buffer is smaller than the number of input bytes processed. Which sucks in many ways, not least because when you get data that doesn't have a smaller compressed size, you have to run all the way through it to find that out...
(unless I'm missing something, it's a while since I was looking at this in depth)
@DaveRandom gzcompress has a checksum you say... that provides me with an externals way of checking the data I guess. Data is written "occasionally", the overhead of compress, test, throw away is negligible. We have to do 5 minutely backups by contract, on a high availability VM - we don't have terabytes of disk space available, we do have plenty of CPU
yeah if you can, awk or sed it ... tho it does not harm to use php, the initialization of the vm trade off is overcome in the first few cycles ...
the access you have to regex in php is better than that in awk, and more accessible, no slower, at all ...
not that you need regex
the only reason to really do it is lots of people have one php install one php configuration, they fire up cli with an apc cache and opcache running and all kinds ...
Does anyone know if there is a cross browser way to visually scale a html canvas, I have a canvas that needs to raster out at 2494x3431 but show on screen as 610x828
AWK is an interpreted programming language designed for text processing and typically used as a data extraction and reporting tool. It is a standard feature of most Unix-like operating systems. AWK was very popular in the late 1970s and 1980s, but from the 1990s has largely been replaced by Perl, on which AWK had a strong influence.
AWK was created at Bell Labs in the 1970s, and its name is derived from the family names of its authors – Alfred Aho, Peter Weinberger, and Brian Kernighan. The acronym is pronounced the same as the name of the bird, auk (which acts as an emblem of the langu...
I need some help with a sprintf function, when using it on a multi language platform, sometimes the word change between them, thus the values are in the wrong place, is there a way to trick this?
For example %s goes to %eat something at %restaurant, in some other language could be %s blabla %restaurant blabla %something
@LeviMorrison The context is doing translations to other languages where i) The number of items that need to be inserted can change, ii) the order can change.
@ThatHelpVampireGuy If xdebug.profiler_enable_trigger is set to 0 is should generate them for every request. If thats set to 1 - you need trigger the profiler with XDEBUG_PROFILE
@JoeWatkins It's possible for the PHP parser to skip a series of OPs, correct? As in, if the grammar were extended to include "foo" "(" expr ")", could the parser be instructed to not evaluate expr, but still generate the OP codes for it?