@Fabien Doesn't apply to this message but one of the oddities of the possessive apostrophe is that possession in the definite article does not have one
CREATE TABLE qst (id int not null, primary key(id), title varchar(999) not null, details varchar(999) not null, author int not null, tag int not null, date int not null what's wrong with this query?
@rodvaN If you want to focus on writing an application based on the async IO paradigm, use node. If you want to focus on understanding how the async paradigm works, PHP is not a terrible thing to be working with, plus it means you don't have to use a language with an identity crisis.
Disclaimer: the regulars of this room are somewhat jaded and have quite a narrow and puritanical world view. Views expressed in here do not necessarily reflect the views of the web development community as a whole. Filling may be hot. Strike away from body. Objects in the mirror may be closer than they appear.
@rodvaN There are some people in here with a great deal of experience in this field, one of whom I would argue is more or less the top person in this particular area.
I am eagerly studying code. Very interested on MVC, SaaS and Logistics(which is my main degree). Currently experimenting with raspberry pi and arduino.
But find it very hard to put together all the pieces and actually learn how to do it. Lacking of time which is actually something that most of us have problems with. time.
One of the best days I ever had in my entire life in Van in late spring, took a couple of Es, went skiing on grouse mt. in the morning, went to the beach in the afternoon, went to a psy-trance club (see first activity) in the evening, not sure what happened between then and about 4pm next day
@RahulKhosla when I say open things, I mean share them properly for feedback from everybody. Any single person's opinion on anything is basically useless...
@Patrick For me, likely to increase workload considerably. That approach assumes you got the API right first time, which for me is basically never the case
@bwoebi Because that's two distinct error conditions, and two distinct error levels. Fetch fails are a fundamental flaw in application logic (or computer is about to explode) and value != expected is just an external data problem
seriously though @bwoebi your "declare var" logic falls down in PHP, the var still exists outside the scope of the if regardless of the success state of the fetch so you gained nothing and lost readability
I almost never do assignments in the middle of an expr, the only time I do is if (false === $var = func())