I don't get it... I need to make an equilateral triangle. I know that is easy if I have a circle... what next? I have circle and almost perfect triangle but no 'Well done' :s
@zerkms I think some people are lazy. tbh for me there is a positive cognitive difference, I find it easier to read the constant first (no thinking required) before reading the expression (thinking required)
@tereško I am now stuck at 11. I do not understand, I used the compass to make the exact triangle to draw the ray, but it doesn't accept my solution...
I did an ext yesterday to access opencv, I made it extremely simple, poking around the rest of opencv some of it looks interesting, there's an unfinished pecl ext, wondering if I should do the whole lib
started on a black guy because this is an issue we have with current implementation
that, and low contrast and sepia and a list of 20 other things ... opencv has none of those issues ...
I Want Give Common Associate Array Like This Code :
<?php
//get rows from database
$json_data = array();
foreach($rows as $record){
$jason_data[] = array('id' => $record['id'], 'brand' => $record['brand'], 'name' => $record['name']);
}
i want get common arrays of $jason_data array ...
@RajendraYadav Sorry, we're not here to answer the phone right now, but if you'd please leave a message someone will get back to you as soon as possible.
What's a good naming strategy for helper methods? Say, a function that merely operates on a string to produce a differently formatted string (like, strtoupper, or similar) if it's an instance method. getUpperCase sounds like a property fetch, toUpperCase sounds like it returns the object itself in some "upper cased" state; asUpperCase similarly. getStringAsUpperCase is too verbose but captures the helper method intent (better, at least)
If you think of it as "toUpperCase sounds like it returns a new object that has been converted from the old object to some "'upper cased" state'", is there a problem?
new string() seems wrong to me, just as new int(), or new bool() would be. The only case I can think of directly invoking a scalar type constructor via new is when you're creating the object in a way that a literal cannot articulate, such as new string('f', 200), given string::__construct(char $c, int $len)
Oh, @ircmaxell wrote an RFC (IIRC) on the subject.
class MyString{
private $value;
public function __fromScalar($value){
$this->value = (string)$value;
}
}
function foo(MyString $myString){
}
foo('hello world');
MyString::__fromScalar is called when a scalar is cast to it (while we don't have explicit userland type casts, it'd be implicit from the typehint)
@DanLugg for me - absolutely yes - because it's breaking type-hinting. If I wrote MyString then I'd expect argument to be exactly an instance of class and nothing else (even is it may be "casted" to it somehow)
I understand that it may be useful - but I'd prefer to leave type-hinting as it is - explicitly and clear - and, perhaps, implement boxing in some other way
@AlmaDo It is still explicit and clear. You just don't have to call new because boxing, because that's the reason for any of this to begin with.
I've explicitly stated I want a MyString, which has a method that explicitly converts scalar types to an instance of MyString at any time that I want a MyString. The boxing is implicit, but there's very little "magic" happening.
@AlmaDo As with anything, there are ways it could be abused and misused; further, it may not be the most performant in cases where you're dealing with 100's of 1000's of scalar values.
However, given the other (well conceived) options, IMHO the boxing technique as described in the RFC is probably the most sane.
From what I know, it aligns predictably with the boxing conventions of other languages.
Which is always a plus.
As far as I can tell, there's 3 distinct ways to go about stuff: 1) keep scalars "untyped" 2) keep scalars "untyped", but with boxing facilities 3) type all the things
In order to implement any sort of hinting, in the case of 1) the most sane route would be the casting approach like function foo((int) $i, (string) $s) { } which errors on data loss.
The case of 2) has been discussed ^^
The case of 3) is probably meh, whereby ("string" instanceof String) === true
I hope that a feature as "central" (for lack of term) as scalar type-hinting will also pave the way for a potential specification. It seems to me (and I may be wrong) that too much of the language is ad-hoc'd.
Which is why a well written, carefully collaborated attempt at it would be critical, if not for the feature itself.
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@DaveRandom in Russian language there are words which are not just offensive. Meaning of those words is so horrible that if you'll use it in normal conversation and got a punch into your face - then it's justified
even worse, many people use them without even thinking of how offensive they are