@T-- It might be if that string will always be the same. However I also like to keep in mind future changes when it comes to something brittle as parsing html with regex
@Jack Thing is, all you are really doing is replacing a string with an object. A string var can be injected just as easily as an obj var, and it's pretty safe to assume that PCRE is available so there's no sensible decoupling that can be attained from it
I suppose getting match to return the matches array is kinda worthwhile, but a function can do that
@Leri Yeh but like I say, that is kinda meaningless since it will always be PCRE based, which is always available. You can't abstract it to an interface that would have multiple implementations, so what's the point?
@BenjaminGruenbaum someone asked me a similar question kind of thing the other day, he got a pretty good answer pretty quickly by showing me the C#, maybe write up a little bit of that and then I'm not thinking about the wrong thing, code is easy to understand, other peoples thoughts are much harder :)
@bwoebi I didn't get that, I only just saw the mail ...
@user2936213: JSON isn't getting POSTed. $_POST['allergy'] contains some random string that's INVALID JSON, and json_decode() returns null. That's why you're getting an empty array when you print_r($arrAllergy).
@BenjaminGruenbaum EventArgs is my first thought ... which would be just a container for Class<?> and the object, Class has a cast method, giving you a way to get the typed object you require ...
@PeeHaa Presumably it's possible to get Nginx to follow the redirect instead of forwarding it? If you do that it will handle it gracefully next time...
I do understand the problem and there are complex solutions like ngx.lua module than allows parsing of returned proxy contnent but it is easy to drown there. You can just pass /forum requests to internal.com/forum and my preferred way is to make separate subdomain for this forum like forum.production.com — Andrei MikhaltsovMar 12 at 14:05
@PeeHaa ah ok. I need to make a horrid proxy kinda a thing in a couple of weeks for client. It basiclly needs to fetch a http and then transfer the content via. https to the client...
@EliasVanOotegem His English indeed got even worse since he returned from his retirement ban. Not sure about the content of the comments. He has written some stupid shit, but also some shit with common sense.
@Patric: > Variable names follow the same rules as other labels in PHP. A valid variable name starts with a letter or underscore, followed by any number of letters, numbers, or underscores. As a regular expression, it would be expressed thus: '[a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x7f-\xff]*'
@PeeHaa: But can you make sense of the comments he left to my answer, and are they, in your opinion justification for the -1... I really don't mind the occasional downvote, but I do mind not understanding why
@PeeHaa: sorry, I can be overly verbose in answers, and yes, the question was idiotic (didn't even include $dbh = null until after I asked OP to include the connection code, too
@EliasVanOotegem The thing I personally don't like about that answer (besides the fact you are using emulated prepared statements) is that you are telling OP to not catch exceptions when making the connection failed. That's not very nice for the end-users (a WSOD).
@DaveRandom I bet it has something to do with converting byte array to BigInteger that itself should be cpu bit version dependent.
user924016
@EliasVanOotegem I dunno. I just could not help giggle abit at the line. No need to drag his username into the discussion, tell him that you do not understand what he means, rather then being defensive/offensive imo
@PeeHaa: Yes, but I then go on to say that, excactly that makes the try-catch a bit redundant. It's effects are pretty similar to the OP's die() call: app stops. The difference is that I'm used to have an exception handler set, which handles uncaught excpetions, so I just threw a new one
@RonniSkansing: Yes, I got a bit annoyed with the comments I got being vague and I got the impression he just didn't read past the first snippet which is indeed silly, but that was the point of that snippet: to show the OP was being silly in doing try{}catch(){die();}
@EliasVanOotegem You can name a variable anything you like, it's only that parser that can't cope with direct access of it. The identifiers themselves are just used as keys in an HT so they can be any string
@DaveRandom: That's why I also suggested "\0$id", which is what PHP uses for private/inherited properties when casting an instance of some object to an array, for all I know, they pulled the same stunt here
Hello, I have a problem, I have admin site, and login is working great on my linux server, now when I moved it to Windows server running IIS login gives me error Fatal error: Call to undefined function password_verify(). Why? PHPversion is 5.2.11
stupid question, but I don't understand the explanation on how to Install the Translation Component for Symfony: http://symfony.com/doc/current/components/translation/introduction.html it doesn't describe where I should put the git, where I should `include` the files, nor what composer command line I should execute Can anyone help? ^^'
@DaveRandom For some reason ARMemulator was generating negative modulus. I force it to be unsigned and works respectively. Do you have any idea why that was happening?
@Leri Presumably the default signedness changed at some point, if the MSB is set in the generated modulus then that would break it. Although that's a bit of a guess it seems logical. I would say that for things like that (where you are generating a number and not a sequence of bits) it would be best to be explicit about the signedness anyway...
@LeviMorrison No, it's just more descriptive. I often use method names of 20-30 characters to fully describe what a method does. first() may indicate other things other than getting the first, it may mean setting the first or placing the pointer on the first. But getFirst() perfectly describes what the method does
Think of it this way, when you read nothing but the method name, arguments, and return type. Can you understand what the method does 100%?
@DaveRandom Guess what, emulator's behavior was correct. BigInteger is signed and the modulus starts with 1 as the first bit, so result should always be negative. Either java.security package on Jelly Beans took care of sign on my device or something really weird happened.