Hmm guys i'm getting a near correct output, I'm counting the amount of columns this table has I have but i'm getting the total amount but I need something like:12345 instead of: 5.
this is getting to the point where it is not even funny anymore: project manager told me that I need to add an ability for client to set custom HTML banners for product categories which have sales .. thing is: project has no CMS, because client said that they don't need it
@SecondRikudo I need the result of that Count(All the numbers) in a for loop that would check values in the database written as integer. Usually i'd use field_count but since i'm on WP I can't use mysqli. That's why i'm trying to find a work around for it.
also .. what the fuck is which project managers, who think that the best way to finish project today is constantly pester me about "did you read the mail?", "can you write an answer to the client?" , "have you read that post, which I wrote 5 minutes ago on Basecamp" .. and he's on sype again
just now asked "what functionality is provided by languag-based filers in your application? Is it what client expects? How does it interact with their API?"
.. I am tempted to just go up to him put a resignation on his desk
hey guys, quick quesiton. Does anyone know if this empty function will work in PHP v 5.1.3? (!empty($_POST['action']))
i saw this note in the php manual: Note: Prior to PHP 5.5, empty() only supports variables; anything else will result in a parse error. In other words, the following will not work: empty(trim($name)). Instead, use trim($name) == false.
As an experiment in good practice, I'm requiring a given getter function to receive an instance of a given type of class so as to ensure that only functions that have an instance of that class on hand can use that given getter.
Only issue is, a static method of that particular class cannot use it because it's own static self isn't an instance of itself.
In web programming (to be more precise in environments where nothing is shared between sessions) there's no actual reason to use static scope. While using shared resources you add maintenance problems while solve nothing unless resource can be shared between different sessions/processes.
@Leri Without using static methods, I'd have to refactor my code to use singleton classes for performing functions originally meant to be within scope of other classes, which would mean also refactoring those classes to control for what gets to access those functions from the outside (such as via. my example).
Unrelated: What's the term for a static method that generates an instance of its class instead of using a public constructor?
What you are trying to accomplish is called RANKING . Unfortunately MySQL doesnot have ranking functions like in SQL Server ROW_NUMBER() , DENSE_RANK() etc..
You can try below query for MySQL
SELECT t.ID, t.Value, count(*) as Counter
FROM tableName t
JOIN tableName b ON t.ID = b.ID AND t.Value >...
@Leri Which I might consider doing, now that I think about it. While static makes sense for many things I'm doing, I don't like some of troubles it gives me.
mysql> select * from t;
+------+-------+
| id | value |
+------+-------+
| 1 | x |
| 2 | x |
| 1 | y |
| 1 | z |
| 2 | y |
+------+-------+
5 rows in set (0.00 sec)
and after:
+------+-------+------+---------+
| id | value | num | @id:=id |
+------+-------+------+---------+
| 1 | x | 1 | 1 |
| 1 | y | 2 | 1 |
| 1 | z | 3 | 1 |
| 2 | x | 1 | 2 |
| 2 | y | 2 | 2 |
+------+-------+------+---------+
so it's re-ordered, yes, but num is id-value dependent
New question , mysql related. I'm holding sessions in the database using zf 1. The garbage collector cleans up the old sessions, but increment keeps increasing, is there a possibility of it topping out? like char(32) not being able to hold any more sessions because of how larger the sessionid is?
Could anyone help with my mess as I'm sitting at home no one to ask and banding my head against the desk in working it out every possible way to find it just does not want to work. I have made a mess of it but the bit I'm concentrated on is the retrieval of URL's at the moment PHP does not like my query coming back as an object for which I tried few answers found on here but they pull up more errors
@Duikboot //Query to fetch URL Select externalpage field which contains the url from the content_description table $q = mysqli_query($dbc, "SELECT externalpage FROM content_description", MYSQLI_USE_RESULT);
//convert query object to string $url = (string)$q;
It triggers from the PHPcrawl library files becuase it expect a simple 'http://blabla' url but instead I push a query generated URL into it so it does not like that
@AlmaDo just fyi: it was to optimize LIMIT + OFFSET lookups with a WHERE clause on the id column. Getting results from the memory table in less than a millisecond now :-)
Takes maybe 2-3 seconds to generate, but it's generated just once every 24 hours, so, no problems :-)
@bwoebi it's done with statement: first, select id for first portion of data (i.e. LIMIT 0, COUNT). This will be fast since it will be done from 0 row. Now, we know what id corresponds COUNT. And to select next page, i.e. LIMIT OFFSET, COUNT - we are able to get rid of LIMIT and do WHERE id>@found_id LIMIT COUNT
@bwoebi you don't need to generate it - just quick find desired @id and that's all. But - yes, the way that you're doing it now is good if data won't change too often
@vp_arth Before, I had only docblocks above my classes with @method for using with __call(). It worked great. Then I moved the instantiation of these objects into a factory. Now, these methods are undefined and I don't want to have to add /** @var ... */ above every single one
> I’m currently looking for a Senior PHP Developer for my client based in Berlin to start work ASAP. This is a 3 month contract and will be paying €400 - €450 per day. If you would like to know more information please send me your updated CV. To clarify, you will need to be willing to work in Berlin to be considered.
I lose about 16% of my income to the taxman, with another 20% going to social security (healthcare, retirement fund, etc...) the rest ends up in my bank account.
@JoeWatkins is there any way to kill a pthreads Worker thread by doing something stupid in a Stackable? I know fatal errors are generally swallowed and the worker transparently recovers. Is it totally impossible to kill the worker even with something like an out of memory error?
@TobiasGies 10% on everything, 0% on food. Except for by my house, which is a "economic development zone" which means I pay 3.5% sales tax on everything instead ;-)
@rdlowrey I highly doubt that you can kill the worker via killing the Threaded; except if you kill the worker directly by something else…
It's a zend_bailout() black box…
user895378
@bwoebi That's what I figured ...
user895378
(which is good for my use-case)
user895378
I'm keeping references to socket streams in worker threads once they're used there (avoids segfaults from sockets being GC'd in the worker). I periodically clear those references later after the sockets are closed in the main thread.
user895378
As long as the worker doesn't die (and prematurely close a socket that's still open in the main thread) everything should be fine.