@Danack "In programming languages and type theory, polymorphism is the provision of a single interface to entities of different types." - can work for both ints and floats
It's not a problem for simple cases, it's a problem for more complex cases, where the added complexity of having to think in two schemes at once makes thinking about the code harder.
@AndreaFaulds I meant have you used "In programming languages and type theory, polymorphism is the provision of a single interface to entities of different types." in a real world project?
Although it sounds nice, it's just one of those things that as soon as you start actually using it for stuff that isn't trivial, the benefit of not having to duplicate stuff is far outweighed by the increased amount of magic in your program.
Yeah, but then you have to remember to think about whether something is float or an int, and whether they need different handling.....and people forget to check.
Yeah...if you're just doing a simple one line function it's not a problem. If you're doing anything more complicated and calling other functions on the parameters then you've suddenly got to 'be careful' when writing code. Having to 'be careful' is likely to lead to surprises and surprises are bad - other than birthday parties.
Hi guys, I'm trying to get lost connection via sending data (fwrite), But I get a warning that It couldn't send data After precisely 19 seconds: Notice: fwrite(): send of 2 bytes failed with errno=10053 An established connection was aborted by the software in your host machine.
I tried to change the timeout stream_set_timeout($socket, 5); before fwrite but It prints the warning after 19sec ?
I don't actually need to define it (it's a check macro and doesn't have any effect on the mingw build), so can I just do ifdef([AM_PROG_AR], AM_PROG_AR) ?
What column datatype should I use in oracle if I am storing a large amount of text? Like in question/answer website for example, what datatype should the column be that holds the answer text?
"Columns defined as LONG can store variable-length character data containing up to 2 gigabytes of information. LONG data is text data that is to be appropriately converted when moving among different systems."
@JoeWatkins turns out that this is the problem with ->dump(). In a nutshell, you can't pass file handles across DLL boundaries unless they use the same CRT. So unless I can get libjit to compile with VC then it just isn't going to work. My vote would but to simply not define the ->dump() methods on Win for the time being and doc it as *nix only
I can hack libjit to make it work with stdout, but that's it (and probably not something that should be done)
PHP is supposed to run on webserver serving the frontend. In a typical environment you have multiple users (web clients) in parallel making full use of your CPU cores. Splitting the work up from one thread into multiple ones usually makes no sense in such an environment. As the system is already ...
> For actual threading there is the pthreads extension in PECL which doesn't create a copy of the process but shares the same process which messes with PHP's memory model (which assumes there is one request in one thread at a time which shares nothing with anybody else) some people use this, but offloading to other systems is typically better
hi. Is anyone else having this error recently? $array = [];
I have to use $array = Array();. I checked if it's a change in PHP but I didn't see it anywhere. I was thinking maybe someone from my web host changed something.
Does forking create a Thread ?
When we fork a process, the process space, that is to say the region of memory where the libraries and code the process requires to execute reside, is duplicated, the distinct but related processes then continue to execute at the will of the operating systems sched...
@AwalGarg you're missing the top-voted and accepted answer to use filter_var() including a link to a tutorial on how to use it where the very first example includes stripping html. The example in the answer itself, on how to sanitize the email address, is just that - an example.
At my previous job they bought a active collab license which ended up being pretty fucking horrible and useless
> Earlier today the freenode infra team noticed an anomaly on a single IRC server. We have since identified that this was indicative of the server being compromised by an unknown third party. We immediately started an investigation to map the extent of the problem and located similar issues with several other machines and have taken those offline. For now, since network traffic may have been sniffed, we recommend that everyone change their NickServ password as a precaution.
Guys I went to HP for an interview . but then I told them I am comfortable with php and mysql . after a month they called me and said to me that I passed the interview and I should come for an assessment test and I should revise Java and dot net . I would like to know what kind of questions or tasks should I expect.
@VeeeneX If it's PHP paths, then doing something like $pathToRoot = __DIR__."/../../"; is probably what you're after. If it's paths on a webpage, do everything relative to the root.
Is there generally a performance boost to querying with SELECT ... WHERE id` IN (2, 4, ...)`versus using a loop in PHP to query for individual items with a prepared statement?
The slides from my DI the Right Way talk http://static.basereality.com/PHPSW.pdf - you might be able to tell that fitting it in 20 minutes was 'tricky'.
you should NEVER keep the DB login details in DOCUMENT_ROOT
also, the db login that you have in your site's config should only have rights to insert, update, select and delete (maybe even more finely granulated if you can)
and you should not be able to access the DB from outside the localhost
@AndreaFaulds well, there was the saying that return &$this; being the work-around in PHP 4 to have a reference to the object instead of duplicating it all over the place when passed by value.
Or was it the other way round? $obj = &new That();
@LeviMorrison I'm still not sure on that count. Basically, my dilemma between "fully strict" and "semi-strict" (as proposed) is this: The fully strict approach invites people to cast arguments before passing, in which case they get infallible, accepts-everything casts. The semi-strict approach will work "usually", but has the danger of randomly breaking when instead of '123' the form contains '123 '. And breaking as in fatal error.
An additional complication is this: I think fully strict types will play a lot better with generics
The point is more: Semi-strict hints may work with casual testing, but may break down with unexpected input. Strict hints on the other hand force you to actually validate and cast your data
just think get_user($_GET['id']). Will work when you test it, but will also fail spectacularly in production.
of course similar issues already exist with l zpp, so nothing really new
no, that isn't the question. if it doesn't satisfy the hint, yes it should fail. the question is more whether we might catch this outside production by making it stricter ;)
@NikiC Well, it's a choice between people doing get_user($_GET['id']) and it erroring if id doesn't look like an int, and people doing get_user((int)$_GET['id']) and getting garbage