@Patrick not really, realistically. In practice, it belongs to the request I think. I'm not totally happy about it but I can't come up with anything better
@PeeHaa so all the post raw data stuff doesn't seem to work with multipart/form-data. I guess I just have to inject both and let the user deal with it if he wants to use the raw post data?
The thing about a request object is that it is implicitly constructed from global state. I'm still not 100% on board with the idea of "all the superglobals should be injected" but that does make a bit more sense
The point is that it's an abstraction to convert global state to shared state, but some part of your application somewhere has to access the global state in order to do the conversion
@Patrick Well you shouldn't use $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA because it can be disabled (and has the potential to be horribly inefficient). If you need the raw request body, just fopen('php://input') directly inside the request object (it's constant, it's not going anywhere)
@Patrick I'm undecided on this point. I used to think like that, now I'm not so sure it's worth the effort.
I am using MAMP Pro 3.0.5 to run Apache/PHP on my computer, running OS X (Yosemite DP2). I just installed an old project on my server, but I get an conflict with the intl package that is now being initialized (I guess this was not on my previous setup).
The phpinfo() provides me with the fact, t...
IIRC in wamp you have some wamp menu where you can enable / disable stuff like that. No idea whether that is still the case and/or whether it is the same for mamp
Unloading the extension with the naming collision (esp one as common as intl) is not a solution to anything because you have a crippled PHP install and a completely unportable application. It's lose-lose.
Regardless, just namespacing them is simple grep replace operation, rebuilding PHP to remove an static ext is going to take longer and not actually fix the long term problem
@PeeHaa you really consider portability of whole web applications to even be a thing ?? a library perhaps, but if we are talking about applications then they don't need to be portable, they need to work, they need to work in the environment where they are deployed, I don't see that it's sensible to invest time and effort getting it to work anywhere when the thing will be deployed in one place ...
Oh yes indeed, I wasn't suggesting anyone was saying that, only that everything seemed to be focusing on why that's a bad idea rather than what the replacement good idea is
@PeeHaa yeah course, I'm just saying that nobody ever handed over software with MAMP or XAMPP as a requirement, making it silly to develop anything there and making it a non-option for test purposes or anything else ... it might aswell not exist ...
I am using jQuery calender plugin, you can see its demo
http://www.web-delicious.com/jquery-plugins-demo/wdCalendar/sample.php.
Now, the problem is that whenever I am trying to refresh data by clicking on refresh button it give me duplicate values.
How to clear event before refreshing or click...
@c.jespersen The very quick fix is to write namespace App; at the top of each conflicting class file, and then add use App\<classname>; to the top of each file that references that class by name
I was under the impression that only subdomains could have CNAME records: main domains need to define all their own records. However, apt-get.com seems to have only a CNAME record. How can this work?
$ dig apt-get.com
; <<>> DiG 9.8.1-P1 <<>> apt-get.com
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
...
@Patrick I would have said A, but assumed it referred to something to do with GET and POST requests. Then when I read B, I changed my mind. Still like A though. What about getRequestParameters() that returns them regardless of whether they're GET or POST?
I might say, go with B if it has to be one of them. getGet isn't nice :-)
@Jimbo but is the difference between query and request parameters clear? (They are called that in the http specs, but I think people just know them as get and post). Mashing them together is another option I guess, but overwriting is an issue and afaik they fulfill different purposes and it might be better to keep them apart.
I can't seem to find a way to switch versions of PHP quickly. Is there something equivalent to ruby version manager for php? I need to switch between 5.3 and 5.2 on OS X.
@Duikboot There needs to be exactly the same number of fields for each line or it won't work will be needlessly complicated. But your data is in a stupid format, how did a CSV file end up as a flat array?
but if you are importing data into a db you should just prepare a stmt and call it for each row as you read them from disk, there's no point in loading the whole file into mem
So then he can use $main['contacts'][] = $row;, if I am not mistaken
What's better then, multiple insert queries or loading it all into one variable?
Depending on the indexes set and the size of the dataset, it might be better off batching the inserts, right? Because of the rebuilding of the index on inserts, if I remember correctly
On an off-topic note, I'm officially the most soccer-ignorant in the company I work at. I'm at the bottom of the soccer-poule we're using xD
I don't usually listen to death metal so I was not entirely sure what to expect, but I am not unpleasantly surprised :P Though somewhat taken aback by the roughness, but that will come with time