because __hashKey does a different job, you can reduce to anything suitable for a hash key, that's string, integer or double ... so they do different things ...
@Sherif and now, if i have a complicated query with some ...AND (id IN (...)) AND (type IN (...)).... and so on... how do i manage multiple "$place_handlers" in a query? i guess i have to send only 1 parameter ($params in your example) to fill ALL $place_holders in the query?
Does anyone use any sort of RSS reader that not only syncs with Safari's reading list, but also can be accessed via chrome?
I'm looking for a solution I can use on my mac at home and on my iPhone (so safari reading list is a necessity for me), but also on my windows desktop at work (maybe via Chrome?)
well, here i'll have something like : $db->prepare("SELECT * FROM table WHERE ((id IN ($place_holder_ids))AND(type IN ($place_holder_type))AND(col IN ($place_holder_col)))
how do i manage the execute($params)? what should be $params... guess it's ($id,$id,$id,$id,$type,$type,$col,$col,$col) is it?
@Julo0sS you can have on $place_holders string for each clause and just merge the $params array. Like $params = array_merge($params1, $params2, $params3);
The definition of a subtype is DateTimeImmutable extends DateTime, but the manual explicitly gives you the class definition DateTime implements DateTimeInterface {
DateTimeImmutable implements DateTimeInterface {
They implement a common interface. They aren't subtypes though.
My form post has a title value set as:
$title = "Company & Sons";
$xmlDoc = new DomDocument('1.0', 'utf-8');
$node = $xmlDoc->createAttribute('title');
$node->value = $title;
...
$completed = $xmlDoc ->saveXML();
When I check the saved XML it saves as:
Company (& amp; excluding space) Son...
Initially there were only DateTime. Then DateTimeImmutable was introduced because having mutable DateTime is a really bad idea and it have bit a lot of people already. Of course in order to make it as drop-in-replaceable as possible we must've made it compatible with signature of the DateTime and because it can't just extend DateTime, DateTimeInterface was introduced.
Note to commenters: He doesnt have trouble setting the &. He was wondering why it will be auto-encoded by DomDocument! So using & is not his solution! — ToBeyesterday
Urgent was removed, and this ^
He's asking why, and the answer is that he's not 100% familiar with what is valid xml
The question should really be changed to "What is HTML encoding?" for any answer to be reasonably useful in the future.
The answering being along the lines of "Characters like &, >, <, have special meaning in X/HTML and as such they must be encoded properly in order to avoid breaking your X/HTML. However, they are displayed correct in your browser so that & looks like &, but is coded as &, etc..."
What does everyone think about object composition based on a config file? You state the name of the object you're going to be instantiating and to be injected in place of an interface, in a config file, so you can create a new object any time and change this one string and it's injected instead
Question: is that a documentation problem or just intentionally not defined behavior: bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=68282 (that array_diff copies the next key to use from the first passed array)
Not something crappy like Pimple or anything like that. Something that recursively instantiates dependencies for me, based on object signatures, with mappings between interfaces and concrete objects...
I'm just saying that dependency injection is about giving the object only what it needs to do its job at the time it needs to do it and nothing more. The idea that you have one massive object that holds all of your dependencies and works them out for you is actually contradictory to demeters law, which is what DI tries to impose.
@Sherif So, the difference between me going manually through all my objects and writing "this object relies on this on and this one etc" for my DI in the bootstrap, and having something automatically read these in via reflection, is what, exactly?
You just know that you've stumbled upon something awesome when the method signature goes like - (BOOL)splitViewController:(UISplitViewController *)splitViewController collapseSecondaryViewController:(UIViewController *)secondaryViewController ontoPrimaryViewController:(UIViewController *)primaryViewControllersigh
@Sherif Well, you first of all need to go into the store, unpack it, place it and then plug it. Then eventually after driver installation goes through and network provision works out well, you can eventually print.
@Jimbo The downside is that you're painting yourself into a corner. If your dependencies are being discovered by reflection and introspecting your method signatures, you fall into the traps of the language. For example, what happens when you want an array of DateTime objects?
Well, C# for example would just have DateTime[]. But we have PHP, and the rfc didn't go through for typed arrays. So I would have a DateTimeSet, which you would addDateTime(DateTime $dateTime)
If you ever have to rely on the computer to do your thinking for you then you want to atleast consider, is the computer actually any good at doing this kind of thing?
@Sherif A plan to fail? Would you please be more specific, I'm trying to understand here and coming out with things like skirt around what you're really trying to say is not helping at all
You only realize this when your code grows over the years and one day you look at what was once a genius idea that is now holding you back from all of the things you're trying to add/improve/fix
@Jimbo What does a DI container do for you that you can't do better yourself?
@Sherif Save me a huge amount of time having to type out which objects should be provided to which objects, and which object should be provided in place of which interface
@Sherif Not at all, I can write my code as SOLID as I like, and not worry about how I'm going to wire the things together when I actually want to use them. The DiC does that for me
@Sherif No, it's genuinely saving me a serious amount of time
Because if you don't do this in the planning/design/architecture phase you miss the boat on a lot of edge cases. You also don't get to learn from your failures.
You only try to learn from the failures of the DIC, which takes longer.
@Sherif Answer @tereško's question, and I still am not seeing anything about why this is an anti-pattern. So far I've gotten "put into a corner" and "holding you back" and "anti pattern".
@Jimbo The ServiceLocator knows about and cares where the dependcies come from, the di container typically does not.
Also, please don't make unfounded assumptions about what I do or do not know as I do not claim to make any about your knowledge. I'm perfectly happy answering your questions.
I have no problem if you disagree with my argument. I do have a problem with people that want to turn that disagreement into something personal, however :)
@Sherif No, I'm not disagreeing with your argument, because you haven't provided an argument. I still fail to see what the problem with DiC's is apart from "you just don't like them"
@FlorianMargaine in a single sentence, it's kinda hard (because one is a class and other is a library). SL is an injected dependency which masks the real requirements, while DIC is external system which assembles a complete object graph. Basically, a SL will act as localized global state.
When I spoke at a conf in Europe on DI and best practice, everyone loved it apart from one person. When I asked him why he didn't like DiC's, all he could say was "I just don't"
@FlorianMargaine If you use symfony, or some other framework, that uses the following code $app->get('DependencyName'); within a controller, that's a service locator, because you can't tell from the method signature exactly what is required by that class / method.
There are plenty of objective reasons not to use DI containers. Take the God Module as an example. Loading a lot of things you scarcely need with every request is not always efficient or sane.
@Sherif But not all DiC's have to load everything for every request...? In fact, that's terrible. You load the things you need for that specific request
@Sherif And what about caching these object graphs, the reflections can be cached, and then the benefits far outweigh an argument you can say about reflection being "slow"
@rdlowrey Just to confirm I'm not using those extensions...I only need the concurrency, not the omgwtfbbq of performance. Do you still need more info...I don't think giving you a list of urls would be that useful, as the requests are Oauth'd so wouldn't help much. I can set up a key/config file for you to be able to test inside my application.
@Jimbo you do what you think is sensible for you needs. I'm just speaking from experience. In my experience all of the hacks you can come up with are just about making you and your code happy :)
@FlorianMargaine you probably could figure it out on your own from that nugget. The best way to understand it would be to attempt implementing a DI Container. It is kinda tricky.
@Sherif I'm speaking from experience also. I'm trying to understand yours.. I'm not going to just say, "let's agree to disagree" like you just did. I'm trying to understand your point of view, which you say is from your own experience.
@Sherif Then be more specific would you? The only thing we can do in this chat room is explain our reasons behind a choice. You say you don't want to use a DiC, still waiting for an objective reason...
I've given you an example of one. Sorry, I'd love to give you more specific examples, but 1) I have a feeling you are waiting for me to convince of you something and 2) I have a meeting to get to.
@Sherif You are right, I want you to convince me :-) That's how people exchange opinions...
I'm trying to convince you, and I want you to convince me. Because I'm here to learn... and so you should be too... and if one of us convinces the other, with objective reasoning and knowledge, then that's good!
@tereško Hmm, so the restrictions one seems valid.. What restrictions specifically? I mean, you build your objects forgetting about any framework and DiC, and then if you have Auryn set up then you plug and play. And if you don't, you use a few more new keywords, right ;-)
So a couple of my colleagues just ran into a bit of legacy code which calls date(), and passes a value for the $timestamp. This value is not always provided and was being initialised to null and conditionally set with a value, resulting in some 1970-01-01s being produced. It seems to me that null here should result in the default time() value. Does anyone have any thoughts/care about this if I suggested it for 7?
See, Java Spring does that mapping but with one massive xml file (I believe). Ninject for C# you put the mapping in a single method in-code. I don't even know if there's another way apart from annotations, you still need to somehow state this interface must use this object
@Jimbo yeah, but as I said, I don't like how the workaround is implemented. I know there must be a better way. And. no, massive XML files are not the answer. I want something that can do both: reflection + configuration
@tereško So right now it uses reflection to read that an object requires an interface. To get it to inject a concrete object you have to call $injector->alias('InterfaceOrAbstractClass', 'ConcreteObject');. And all I do is loop around a config file which reads interface => concrete and calls that method on the injector with them
@rdlowrey you forgot to greet in the other room :-P
user895378
1:55 PM
@Danack I think I've narrowed the problem down to the amp dependency. But if you have a simple URI (or set of URIs) that demonstrate what you're seeing that would be helpful too.
Question: is that a documentation problem or just intentionally not defined behavior: https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=68282 (that array_diff copies the next key to use from the first passed array)
@Danack Okay, don't worry about it for now. I've discovered a massive memory leak that grows very quickly so I think you'd see it even if you just requested google.com over and over.
So that guy came in, trolled everyone about why DiC's suck, and then left... I genuinely thought he would involve us with intelligent conversation, being an engineer at tumblr.
I've really come around to Stas' default proposal from a while back, although it would be a huge change, literally every function everywhere would be touched by it