@hakre Basically I want to implement some form of error handling if for some reason my autoloader fails to find the file my application needs to continue, figured the easiest and/or only way to do that was to throw an exception in that condition, but the exception is not being thrown if the autoloader is called from a static method call rather than a normal method call.
@edorian So you're saying that if I want some kind of autoloader error handling I shouldn't resort to Exceptions, any ideas on what other kind of error handling I could implement instead?
I'm saying you maybe don't want error handling in your autoloader because there will be multiple ones in your application and you can't have on error out. What I've seen is people just not doing anything when a class it not found and letting PHP just die and show a 500 page in those cases. If a source file is not where you expect it thats usually a major issues with the application anyways
If you want to say "see if that 'plugin' class exists" I'd go for class_exists("MyPlugin"); and let that trigger the autoloading
@Willempie The eval class you create could have a the magic function __callStatic to catch non-existant functions (and make that throw an exception then). But I really question if that is actually what you should do.
Well, the eval only get's called if the class doesn't exist, as such the method of that inexistent class won't exist either, so the current eval() implementation does work, I just don't like having eval() at all :P
It's actually the first time ever I resorted to using eval();
@hakre Yeah but that was kind of the issue, the whole reason I wanted this kind of functionality was to handle situations where my file structure for whatever reason was compromised, using include in that situation would require a intact file structure, which, if the autoloader fails, isn't guaranteed :D
@hakre In terms of verifying a classname, how would you implement that, wouldn't that require some form of array with valid classnames, or were you thinking of some very minimal value checking to make sure it can't mess with the system
A valid classname meaning: no whitespace, only [a-z][A-Z] ( not exactly sure what range of characters are considered valid there ) Should do some googling.
@Willempie For example. Visitor converted himself to customer by regsitritation and for some period of time he was missing and when he comes back earlier I got needed information from cookies, but later I got info., that such information can't be there so therefore I don't know how it would be better to check if such customer exists and if so, then log him in automatically.
@NikiC Wanted to ask you about Twig again. If I have wrtitten a function and usually it is used with one certain parameter, but sometimes I would like to pass an array defined in template to this function as second parameter. How could I do that?
@NikiC For example. One time i do {{ include_block( 'block_name' ) }} and other time I call {{ include_block( 'block_name', array/or template variable, that is an array ) }}
@NikiC Odd. Tryed it like that {{ include_block( 'admin/adminLogBlock', { 'log_filter' : order_info_log } ) }}. Where order_info_log is a template variable
@NikiC An exception has been thrown during the rendering of a template ("array_key_exists(): The first argument should be either a string or an integer") in
@Eugene ah, I thought that order_info_log was a variable, sorry ^^
I stayed with the lazy initialization now
What I really wonder is why the heck they made token_get_all return strings for single char tokens and arrays for others. That is just such a pain in the ass to work with and I don't really see much reason to do it.
For example getting the line number of a token is slow + error prone because of that. If they just made all tokens arrays that problem wouldn't exist :(
Can i tell get that certain files should be ignored when merging branches? Case in point PHPUnit has a 3.6 changelog and a "master" changelog. 3.6 only has 3.6 changes master has 3.7 and beyond. When i `git merge 3.6` into master i always get a conflict in the changelog (when that was changed). It's ok that that happens and i see why but it's annoying to deal with and given it's git there is always a way to "do things right" isn't there?
Does anyone want to review/check out this thingie: github.com/robik/Graphix/tree/dev ? I want to know if you suggest any major/minor changes in API or something so I can continue working on it :)
Say I'm collaborating with someone via a git repository, and there is a particular file that I never want to accept any external changes to.
Is there any way for me to set up my local repo to not complain about a conflicted merge every time I git pull? I'd like to always select my local version ...
There are some other methods in that class that could benefit from some validation
Such as public function getSize() { return new Area(imagesx($this->img), imagesy($this->img)); }, imagesx() and imagesy() can return false instead of null if $this->img isn't an image
/// some logic
echo "<em> Okay, now try to resize image. Oh noes! You forgot to load image, dont worry, I'll do that for you! </em>";
// some more logic
@Robik I wasn't implying you should try to fix their mistakes. I was -trying to - imply that specific error messages could guide the guy behind the PC to the solution faster.
@Robik well, in some cases you do return error messages if the programmer is being silly, was merely trying to steer you towards applying that on a broader basis.
@Gordon Well, from what I read on that page is that making more money than others will be ethically frowned upon and that universal welfare of people will be the pillar of society. But the function of financing doesn't change in that model, so making money is still a goal for everyone, thus nothing really changes
@Willempie financing has a much less central role in that model if i understood it correctly. they want to cap having/earning money at a certain amount and give that back to society.
Putting a cap on success ( as that is linked in most cases to financial success ) seems very unintuitive. Wouldn't that hold back progress / innovation as it seems very unrealistic that every person would follow that mindset. A person at or above the cap would simply say "If I don't personally gain from improving, why would I'
@Willempie I didnt understand it this way. success doesnt equal income. Compare with Maslows Hierarchy of Needs. Success is a highly individual thing. In their model the well being of society equals success
@Gordon But success for most people is somewhat correlated to their financial situation and I doubt that mindset would drastically change for everyone.
@Willempie i dont agree to that. Money is mainly a motivator for achieving safety. Check secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/… and in a society where the first two steps of that pyramid are covered anyway, money becomes less important.
well, i mean evolution can change and you can adapt. take dogs for example, at one point they were wild wolves and over the course of thousands of years they came to depend on humans. that's certainly a change in instinct from "prey hunter" to "scavenger", no reason to think humans couldn't adapt as well
but i already found a number of things that sound fishy to me in their pdf describing how to calculate that balance score. like we should mainly be vegetarians and vegans or requiring 50% of leadership positions being women.
I think most of those ideas come from people who weren't properly economically educated (quote "author and political activist", not "PhD in economy"). People just see that other people have that and that many billions and the EZB again spent that and that many billions and oh I only earn three thousand per month and I want to earn a billion too and oh is everything is so unfair ...
@NikiC that might be true for some but I doubt its true for all. At least, I know a number of well earning people who just agree our society is indeed too unbalanced nowadays.
@Gordon That book I mentioned above (it's not really about economy, but it says something about it) does a pretty good job in explaining that I think. It says that with a normal job in a large corporation it isn't possible to see how much worth a person really is and that's why everyone earns equally (low). How much the CEO is worth on the other hand is pretty easy to judge (by the companies revenue).
@Gordon So, yeah, I would agree that you in particular are treated unfairly: you should earn much more than you do ;) [though I have absolutely no idea how much you earn, but I assume that it's less than what you're worth]
@NikiC hmm, to me it sounds like that very CEO's lame excuse for getting paid 100 times more than the employees. And tbh I dont think a CEOs worth can or should be measured in revenue alone.
really, it's like the CEO saying: of course we do value our employees. we just dont know them well enough to pay them what they should be payed. but we think they are all great unique snowflakes. i feel bad for earning more than them. really.
I don't quite understand why it is so hard to grasp that a CEO might actually be a hundred times more worth than the average employee. If Google now just replaced their CEO with 100 random people there would be no doubt that the company would go down the hill quickly.
An even simpler example is football players / baseball players / ... Do you think that a team would replace their best player with 100 random people from the street? I doubt. So maybe those players are 100 times more worth?
@Gordon He is the one who makes the big decisions. By the way, you can follow (using the reverse logic) that as the CEO is payed lots of money he actually is there for a reason ;) No company hires somebody and pays him millions just to sit around in the office.
@Gordon Sorry, I still can't follow. My point was that even if the best football player is only ten times better than the average, it doesn't mean that you can replace him with ten average people. What is important that it is one person and that one person being ten times better can actually be hundred times more worth ;)
I think this discussion isn't leading us anywhere ;)
@Gordon I obviously do not support that people should be payed 100x more for doing nothing. But I think that in most cases people are actually payed 100 times more because they are hundred times more worth ;)
@NikiC i think your overestimating the worth of the individual in a connected system. and you are somewhat comparing apples to oranges because no one is saying replace the professional with an untrained person.
and i didnt say CEOs do nothing. they do CEO work but CEO work is not worth 100 times more than the work of people implementing the CEO's vision imo. without those people, there would be no business value.
and when you say those people just dont get paid well enough because they have less exposure in a company than the CEO, then thats somewhat cynical.
@Gordon I'm not sure that it isn't 100x more worth. You know, I never really liked Steve Jobs, but after all, he was the one who saved the pretty much grounded Apple and made it into a very reputable and profitable company. If it were for some other person, it could have well been the contrary. Sure, I'm not saying that Jobs alone is to be attributed for this. Without all the other employees there would be little to do. I am only saying that Jobs (generally the CEO) has much more leverage...
... than the average employee. If some programmer at Apple did some really big fault that wouldn't hurt Apple much. But if the CEO does an incorrect critical decision that could well be lethal for the company.
also, i dont agree that the CEO's decisions are much more risky. of course a secretary might not be able to drive apple against the wall. but a hardware developer creating a faulty iphone that melts in someone's hands would pretty much harm apple big time. and the CEO has no part in that whatsoever. its not like only CEO work is critical. a surgeon in a hospital with a history of surgeries gone wrong has an impact on the entire hospital. even if the director is smart at directing.
As I already said, I won't argue further as this is leading nowhere. The only thing I would like to comment on is that a nominal salary of $1 doesn't mean that that's all Jobs gets... though I think that you should know that yourself.