I find them to be pretty useless in a language PHP. Especially Doctrine's implementation.
This guy's just realizing how crappy it is for the first time. Basically the regex that reads this doesn't allow for expressions to span multiple lines so he's screwed.
I guess I've really only seen it done with annotations, but anything that's basically "let's code in comments instead of, ya know, the language we're coding in" gives me a case of the WTFs
Annotations are useful in a language like Java where you want to separate the responsibility of how some class control is turned over, for example, from the actual logic of the class.
@Sherif Nice article in principle, don't like your example interfaces but since discussing that would entirely miss the point of the article we should probably just agree to disagree there :-P
Although the one thing I will say about that is that it would be good if you make them valid (you can't have protected members in an interface)
@Gordon I have been given an old interface an written new implementations that are entirely and cleanly encapsulated by that interface (only twice, with the same interface, but I have actually done it)
@Gordon Well, think how much harder it would be to maintain your application controllers if the framework didn't abstract away the logic of the parent controller's core functionality from you.
That's evidence of maintainability in abstraction to me. If DateTime didn't abstract away the logic of a Date/Time from me, I wouldn't be able to easily maintain my code in the long term should the underlying implementation of the Date/Time change. I'd have to think long and hard about everything that logic touches and look really close for what breaks and what side effects it has.
@Sherif imo, base controllers are a design smell, so I avoid them when I can.
in our current sf app we use controllers as a service and only inject functionality needed for a certain request. the "shared stuff" is in a controller helper that gets injected.
@Gordon Maybe so, but they are common and an abstract way of solving the control-flow problem in the underlying architecture. More to the point, they are the evidence you asked for.
@Gordon Right, but a service is yet another means of abstraction. So there you have it.
long-term benefits aren't typically apparent in the short term, but if you don't see a benefit to abstracting something it's quite likely you don't rely on it very much.
But I personally think this is less about general design principles, and more about the OCD-like tendencies of any given developer. Also, a bit of highly unscientific personal experience leads me to believe that software development attracts people with a higher tendency towards this sort of thing (call them "perpetual fiddlers")
@darkyen00 Well, today the 16 year old sitting at the corner cafe can pull out his phone and Google "Laffer curve" to get regurgitate a wikipedia article at an ecomic's major from Harvard, for which he would have access to just the same amount of information this Harvard Alum paid over 6 figures, with no more than the cost of a $40/month internet connection.
To be fair, independent thinkers are not rare at all, they just don't necessarily spend their time and effort on the same things that you or I think independently about.
@Gordon I have no scientific evidence. I just modeled this based on large code bases that I've personally worked with.
@darkyen00 My point is, we are in an information age where the problem isn't a lack of information, but a lack of what to do with that information. And the people with ambition to do things with information are not the norm.
The problem is that the majority of people don't feel they have to think very hard in order to accomplish something, or that they aren't ambitious enough to accomplish something big.
I learnt to code when i was 13, I had no shame pushing up a terribly written game with all math.random for ai's name sake and crappy graphics. the community at scratch.mit.edu took it well, I became confident ... 8 years later :P I write servers as my day job while multiplexing college :D
@darkyen00 I disagree with that analysis. People's morality isn't the issue. It's that they are generally afraid to take big risks. It's because society has taught us from a young age that risk is bad.
@Gordon Hmmm... Not sure how you would go about that. I guess you could try to measure asymptotic complexity, which is not that hard to do, but then you'd also have to figure out how you could normalize that on a scale that measures the caller's instructions. Even then you still need to figure out what the level of effectiveness is for all the inputs, which would be a massive regression model.
There's also the fact that PHP sucks at static code analysis and there are million and one runtime edge cases.
@Sherif For every request, yes, but requests with an entity body are different. Without a stated length how can the server know where the request ends, unless it interprets the entity body as well?
(which it shouldn't, payload format is not part of the protocol)
Works fine for requests as long as the implementation allows it
It's not a requirement of the HTTP specification.
@DaveRandom Sure, it can safely assume the EOF is coming though since large requests are generally multipart encoded, but you will find that apache has a time out for this reason
This is also how you can DoS an apache server with incomplete headers :)
Open the socket, send the request line and just wait indefinitely...
> Recently, Symfony went from Zend-like bloat and rigidity to extreme decoupling and modularity. With the new Developer Experience initiative, Symfony has done a Laravel-style 180° and dove right into making its components more end-user friendly, its docs more complete, and its AppBundles unbundled, simplifying entry and further development almost exponentially.
and in the context of the article: this makes no sense. such var_dumpers are available since years, perhaps the author means that by it then: "pushing out of new components that are incredibly useful outside of Symfony’s context." - ref stackoverflow.com/q/2141585/367456
If you claim to be larger than you actually are, roughly equivalent to a small man in a big car. If you claim to be smaller than you actually are, chances are your end will get cut off
All in all, probably better to just tell the truth
The glass delusion was an external manifestation of a psychiatric disorder recorded in Europe in the late Middle Ages (15th to 17th centuries). People feared that they were made of glass “and therefore likely to shatter into pieces”. One famous early sufferer was King Charles VI of France who refused to allow people to touch him, and wore reinforced clothing to protect himself from accidental “shattering”.
== The delusion ==
Concentration of the glass delusion among the wealthy and educated classes allowed modern scholars to associate it with a wider and better described disorder of schol...
@Sherif I suspect much of the behavior was due to a blockage in natural movement of humours throughout the body, likely due to poor understanding of the importance of mastication at the time.
@Sherif still, it's a movie. and given by the receptions in en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caligula_%28film%29#Reception and the fact that it was produced by Penthouse, I wouldn't expect it to be unbiased but rather focused on certain things.
@Sherif added dramatic effect? I haven't seen the movie, but when an adult publisher hires a sex film director, I would assume they don't take it too serious with the historical accuracies but rather focus on their main business.
quoting the wikipedia article: "Producer Bob Guccione, the magazine's founder, intended to produce an explicit adult film within a feature film narrative"
so the focus apparently was not on making an historically accurate picture, which would be quite funny given that Penthouse is Penthouse but instead make an adult movie.
@Sherif given by the description, it sounds like they just the use the historic figure as a vehicle to portray various depraved sex acts. that doesn't make it an historically accurate movie.
You're asking me if jumping off a cliff will kill me. That's a factual statement. It either will or it won't. Seeing a movie and formulating your opinion about its artistic intent is the same as the proving a scientific hypothesis?
You're really bad at formulating a strong premise, BTW.
@Sherif well, you said I need to watch the movie and read scholar's accounts to form an opinion. I don't have to because people did so before me and they wrote down their opinion. And taking these opinions into the context of what I know here and now, I can perfectly form an opinion. Just like you dont have to jump off a cliff to know that it will likely kill you although you never did that before but only read so somewhere.