@ICanHasCheezburger I code for work at home, however I have agreement that I can make that part open source (i.e. that code belongs to me, not the company).
@ICanHasCheezburger Not really. For instance I've created library that makes TCP packet based and uses json as data transfer format. That is not project specific.
@Petah Well if you're a designer you can easily mention the websites you have worked on, but what about development? I mean I can't say what I have developed for the client coz it would leak their confidential data, no?
@Patrick that's true, but I haven't thought about it, maybe I should
@ICanHasCheezburger I had all the (crappy codeigniter) websites that I did for clients in my portfolio when I applied for a job (with a short explanation of features etc and a screenshot). But that was from freelancing. Even better would be a few things on github, but mine is still empty. Need to get a few things up soon.
i personally try to develop everything in a generic reusable fashion, then if it would be desirable to another company you can release it under the AGPL with out fear of commercial companies stealing your revenue
@ThW Afaik, as long as there is a variable (like in the array entry), the node is preserved (removed from the place in the dom, but still in memory). This can be important if you use different node-classes ("overloading" the standard types)
@Sandeep a mod flag with the reason "aaa". is that supposed to be funny or something? because if it was meant to be funny, I didnt get it. either write a proper reason why you are flagging something or dont flag something. thanks.
Hi everyone, I am new in this room and need help. Can you please guide me how can i perform caching on my web site that loads slow due to heavy image galleries and other content.
If anybody is interested in network programming and sucks at it like me, I recommend reading: Java Network Programming (4th edition) by Elliotte Rusty Harold I am currently reading one and it's quite well written and, more importantly, informative. Note: book assumes that you have some understanding of Java.
So I have doctrine entities/repos and controllers which contain everything from handling input data to manipulating the entities to adding the output to the response class. Now I have to write tests for this, how am I supposed to go about this?
what should be f(1)(2) ? i.e. f(1) should return some function that then be called with 2? or may be some expression to involve that 2? Sure, we can define some behavior in core, but it won't be readable in code
@DaveRandom I think most languages can gain something from functional idioms, PHP included. (Now leaving this one particular example for a moment and getting more general)
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's probably true, I suppose, but still, the element that started this discussion just makes me recoil in horror at what people will write
@ThW Because it is the nodelist from libxml in a PHP shell. At least this is the way I explain it to myself. It's also not possible to overload it with a different classname and such. Also in the XSLT area, you can't return it from callbacks (php:func stuff) nor can you create a nodelist your own.
#ifdef PHP_WIN32
# include <windows.h>
# include <Wincrypt.h>
/* These are defined as macros in Wincrypt.h and types in OpenSSL */
# undef X509_NAME
# undef X509_CERT_PAIR
# undef X509_EXTENSIONS
#endif
@Jack Yeah, I get that. For a moment I thought something about how "floating point numbers are inexact" was going on, though. Glad to see it's not that.