@LeviMorrison To be brutally honest I have never used DomDocument before. That is what I whipped up after looking at docs for a few minutes. I'm not sure that it is the correct method for what I want to do
Found out that I can send POST data using file_get_contents without using cURL by building the appropriate http context: php.net/manual/en/context.http.php - is using this a good practice? or should I use cURL instead?
@tereško I need to know the scheduling website that offers.....these features .... the websites allows a project manager to plan his schedule, to plan a holiday, supervision of employees, create a schedule, check users holiday status.. and so on...
@tereško: I have found that already. Since there is no free sign up.. I haven't tried it.. Are they support what I asked for? More specifically it has feature like: "On this current date the user X is on holiday so look for another user Y to assign a task" kind of stuff? i.e It has holiday planning?
@edorian : hmm, so my DocBlock should mention it with a <b>NOTE</b> . Thanks. I was somehow not comfortable doing it. Somehow, it just doesnt feel right. Though I can't point out exactly what
If you need to describe in with order to call methods on a class chances are your API is flawed
If you need to make sure something is "checked" before you can authorize a "subscribe" then do that in the subscribe method and error out in case it's not allowed
Currently, I have a logger which logs errors together with a backtrace.
The logger serializes the backtrace to JSON via json_encode().
Let's look at some hypothetical code...
<?php
error_reporting(-1); // show all errors
function test($b){
echo json_e...
@edorian so my Subscribe() should throw a RuntimeException , saying that the user is already subscribed . Or I can return false, but thats not very intuitive. Or I can cheat by returning previous subscription identifier.
I am confused. Something doesnt feel right in this flow of logic
@ChristianSciberras Hmm.. My take on it would be that it doesn't make much sense to serialize the real objects so I'd just store the debug_print_backtrace(); and not the objects but then you can't print really pretty backtraces anymore
If thats not good enough (I had one case where I wanted to store the backtraces nicer) and I used to transform it to the desired output format while logging.
So you are trying to store the backtrace as a data structure that can be used to pretty-print the results later on?
If that isn't needed I'd just store $result = print_r(debug_backtrace(), true) and be done with it.
If not my first shot would be something like:
<?php
error_reporting(-1);
fu...
Don't get me wrong: It's completely unusable for any code base that needs to maintain any sort of value over more than 2 month or any project that has any major business impact .. but so are a lot of "current generation frameworks" like the C-Words.
closure factory container
Which is a nice way to go if resolve takes more than one argument
Yeah you can pretty much only redirect him or make him fetch the content via javascript where you have a little more control but not all that much ether
@edorian but this won't be able to modify http headers
I want user download a file from another server by giving the direct link, and I also need to modify the http header to change the default file name when user saving it to his computer
@ijse , why not just create a script , through which the download happens ?
said script would be responsible for translating the "pretty names" to the ones actually stored on the server, retrieving the files and slapping on the pretty name again
consider a bridge implementation, where the bridged component is going to handle Database Interface, (I call it DBH, DataBaseHandler) . The DBH is (loosely) speaking a wrapper around PDO. Now DbhProduct::__construct(Dbh $dbh) { $this->_dbh = $dbh } and when I want to do some CRUD I will do $this->_dbh->updateFoo(), where do I catch the PDOExceptions (or rather DbhExceptions) ?
these are RuntimeExceptions , I am not so worried about LogicExceptions as I believe they will be rare (confidence comes from UnitTesting).
@edorian its bit difficult when you are the one who have to decide those boundaries and places for meaningful handles. Sometimes I wish I dont have to define an Interface, but just code against it. Feels much easier
@edorian exactly! I am doing that only, but what do I do of those DbhExceptions ?
consider Product::Subscribe() { $this->_dbh->insertInto($tableName, $data) } , and this throws a DbhException (assume FK constraint error) , what do I do with this DbhException ?
If you have a way of saying "this should happen when the insert fails" then you catch the exception and handle it.
If all you know is that "if that fails everything is lost, abandon ship" you don't catch it and your global exception handler will show the 500 page or something
@edorian Hmm, okay. This gives a good idea about the case handling. I think I should read up @ircmaxell 's PHP error handling post again
@tereško because I wanted to try out. One might not have any problems writing a .php file with 2K LOC filled with SELECT * FROM . But I just can't do it
I find the PDO API very cumbersome and unnecessarily complex. The DB API i like most for php purposes is ->fetch[One|Row|Col|All|Assoc]($sql, $param[s] ....);
I say because I have tried (and I am using it) but the support is very limited. You only support things that you need. Making a full fledged wrapper is just too short of ORM.
@tereško Yeah. Ether use the vars data type or bind everything as string. It's mysql, it doesn't matter. If I was talking to a DB that wouldn't handle that that might change my way of working :)