I can see using @covers later in a project when you aren't restructuring the project each month. You can really nail down stability and coverage then but until then it just slows you down.
And in my experience many projects don't make it that far ^^
@TOOTSKI yes, I can (from master all the way back to 5.0.0): 3v4l.org/8pKE1 It's how you construct the class that matters. Casting from an array changes numeric keys in bad ways (and buggy). Whereas this question was about objects with numeric keys, not casted arrays... — ircmaxell17 secs ago
need help for this quetion: [why timezone_name_from_abbr fetching wrong result?](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/23028712/why-timezone-name-from-abbr-fetching-wrong-result)
Er - no. You've got them the wrong way round. From the links: Current Date and Time in Asia/Kolkata Sat 12-Apr-2014 05:01 P.M. Current Date and Time in Asia/Karachi Sat 12-Apr-2014 04:31 P.M.
http://www.prokerala.com/travel/timezones/Asia/Kolkata - Asia/Kolkata time zone offset is: UTC / GMT +05:30 hours http://www.prokerala.com/travel/timezones/Asia/Karachi - Asia/Karachi time zone offset is: UTC / GMT +05:30 hours
ya,true but according to following code... $timezone = 'Asia/Kolkata'; $time = new \DateTime('now', new DateTimeZone($timezone)); $timezoneOffset = $time->format('P'); the offset for Asia/Kolkata is +05:30 and for Asia/Karachi is +05:00
I've inherited an application with a glaring security hole.
It has session-based security, but file uploads (which are user specific) are not secured in any way and they are stored in the public file tree.
Filenames do not follow any convention as such, making them hard to guess, but the data ...
I am going to ask a favor from you. If you care to spend a part of your Saturday for reading a rather huge mass of bad English, I would be mighty glad to know if you liked the idea in general (or if I succeeded in making the point at all). At least up to the Part #6. And I am also very eager to listen to any disagreements with Appendix #3. On that: phpdelusions.net/sql_injection
you are probably confusing particular API function with DBMS. Mysql in general supports multi queries all right. And most APIs supports them as well. PDO by default allows Bobby to drop tables, mysqli has a designated function and even old mysql_query is rumored to be able, if some secret value is passed as a last parameter to mysql_connect
"As an alternative to putting files outside of the web root, you might also find some combination of file permissions that allows PHP to read the file, but doesn't allow Apache to serve it up to the world, like chmod o-rwx, in other words, remove permissions for 'others'. "
How can I do this if PHP uses apache as it's base? Since php uses the user "Apache" it will not have permissions to access the file.
@TOOTSKI Thanks. I tried to focus on the real benefits of prepared statements. The most tricky part is to slander manual formatting. As anyone can say "I am formatting my values and have them safe" and, strictly speaking, he'll be right.
I'm getting a "cannot access empty property error" on the line with the foreach in this code. print_r($captions) and print_r($updates) show the the expected values in each array.
$updates is an array of checked checkboxes where the user wants to update the captions for the photos. $captions is t...
@YourCommonSense ^ totally unrelated to SQL (I was looking for "empty property"), but check the query and effort of high rep users to hint that they're doing it wrong.
I stopped caring long time ago (about Stackoverflow 1 rep users doing it wrong).
@TOOTSKI Well, I have different view on the word "hinting" :) I'd rather call this way this some my answers, which seldom have luck to escape unnoticed from zealous citizen patrol, like this one: stackoverflow.com/a/23026230/285587 - this I call hinting :)
@TOOTSKI Yup, and this one too. So, it seems instead of just stopping care I am trying to amuse myself as much as I can :)
Sometimes it even works. You'd never can tell if your teasing answer will be upvoted or deleted
Oh, unless it's got reported in the room 11. Then retribution is inevitable %)
user895378
@TOOTSKI Nice. You should install pecl/libevent and pecl/pthreads when you have time. The server will work without them but only for local testing/development. You don't want to ever put it into a production environment without those extensions.
user895378
Also FYI it'll likely be a couple of weeks before I'll have something you can actually hook up to a real phpdbg backend ... just focus on the frontend stuff in the meantime.
@YourCommonSense Haha, I think "review answer" vs "close question" ratio is 1 to 100. So it's mainly questions that suck (inevitably, the answers too).
@rdlowrey Yes, Daniel, that's why it's called like it's called :P :P :P
I know what you mean, at work, we did it like that, PHP just pukes JSON to frontend, and that's it.
@TOOTSKI the bad news is that neither actually works :( 9 out of 10 bad questions never gets even single closevote. And even ones who get, seldom reach quorum, despite of all the rings. So, this is the thing I stopped caring long time ago.
@TOOTSKI That's just s self-delusion. Then I am feeling careless SO much as to enter the PHP tag, beside other things it's question per minute rate that makes me shiver. You'll waste your daily limit in a half-hour. I wouldn't call it any impact...
Yeah, impact is probably weighting to 0 but... I wouldn't say it's a lost cause.
There will always be crappy questions and answers, but when you take down visited ones or straighten them, it's much more effective than mere closing of anonymous questions.
@TOOTSKI It is not and it is quite discoverable for anyone who woud bother to :) but I am looking not for a remote. In fact my primary goal is to leave my mother country that turned to be an aggressor and dictatorship.
@YourCommonSense example from Careers.SE ... It's better to contact a recruiter so they get you "link" to some coding quiz or something, if you pass that, then you're interviewed and should be it. Notice that task is a puzzle like, I suck there, and I've quit.
If you're leaving, leave for USA, you won't get better salary than you have in Europe.
@YourCommonSense Then, that amount is plenty just about anywhere in EU except Switzerland. Have you looked for jobs in Deutshland? They have good foreign policy too.
@TOOTSKI I am not too good with braincrackers tool. All I have is some experience. I suppose they at FB wants not PHPers but rater programmers of any trade.
@TOOTSKI there is even a possible position in Berlin. But I keep it as a last resort. I am fond with English, and consider it quite waste to relocate into non-English-speaking country
@YourCommonSense It's not braincracker, it's pure shit... like tower of hanoi problem... have 'bout the same feeling for Berlin, I could learn the language if given e.g. 5 years, but... Amsterdam.
@telkitty.exe oh, I thought they're going to split in opinions... Wondered what it would be. But that's literally. Honestly, I don't care for meta. It's quite strange place. I managed to tell them once what I think of them and keep my question alive (took me seeveral tries thugh)
Ultimately I think the author of the article is taking the wrong conclusion from the situation. In this situation he's saying "Arrays are bad!" but the problem is that he's mixing high-level and low level concepts. Use one or the other and suddenly there isn't a problem ^^
is there any way to change default port in phpstorm from 63342 to 80, so that i can access http://localhost:63342/bill/admin.php like this http://localhost/bill/admin.php
@LeviMorrison Yes, I couldn't quite understand it, I've read it tho. But I can't see the point of e.g. how it relates to PHP, I can't say that arrays are bad. Again, you're probably into that more with your super 'puter :)
@TOOTSKI the origin is in bcmath which can't understand scientific notation. Because - I don't know:p I've looked into source code and it's just doesn't contain this implementation