I have a form with a post method and action to another php page. Once I click submit, I am directed to the new page. I have several variables stored as session variables. If I use session_start() at the top of the page, I am given the error: {Warning: session_start() [function.session-start]: Cannot send session cache limiter - headers already sent...} but if I {var_dump($_SESSION);}, its NULL. Is there something I'm missing on how to pass a session variable?
I assume that error means that I already have an active session
I put a lot more value into being able to enforce certain preconditions using interfaces and type annotations than being able to dynamically monkeypatch all the things
> I would strongly urge the PHP dev crew to reconsider adding a friend declaration in a future version of PHP. Allow friend classes to access protected, but not private, properties and methods - similar to inheriting classes. This will allow for the development of complex, multi-class modules that expose reasonable and well designed public interfaces.
How can I convince my client to use PHP where he wants to use Python for a website project. The project has a REST api and Payment system. There will be community inside it (like forum etc). I am quite equal experienced in both. But when it comes to website I want to use PHP. It has many good frameworks and solution to a lot of common problem exists already. But when it comes to python there isn't that much frameworks. I mainly use python for running tasks, celery, scrapy etc.
@bwoebi if we talk about Connection, ResultSet example then you return from Connection something like new ResultSet(function () { return $this->doSomething(); });
Also, Symfony is now just a black hole, the appalling remainder of a code supernova that exploded and breed the universe with heavy composer packages now used as building blocks for other frameworks.
@bwoebi ones never knows what happens inside the bundle system because of the singularity of YAML files being compiled to arrays so enterprise systems can have at least 400ms response times on hello world benchmarks.
@bwoebi At least in part that's why Symfony's 'every thing is done through a single event manager' sucks. I'm trying to find a bug report, but there was a guy complaining that his code was slow.....because 1200 classes were being loaded for each request.
@bwoebi I know - and it seems a deliberate trap. Fast initial development and system processing times, and it's only 1 year down the road when you've written a years worth of symfony code that you realise how fucked you are.
@FlorianMargaine no, not just then. Upon each request, opcache still needs to copy the op_arrays, do pass_two() on them, copy all the hashtables of default properties etc. etc.
@LeviMorrison I personally prefer a warm peachy white....I think if the white is hurting your eyes it sounds like a problem with the lighting level, rather than the wall color.
Another problem with Synfony, at least last time I actually check some internal code, is that sometimes it uses too much exceptions to control flow execution. The exceptions need to gather stack trace.
of course, but I've seen loop code with try catch blocks AND the catch block were executed many times... actually the useful logic was inside the catch and not the try xD
@LeviMorrison You may be sensitive to flickery tubes....I don't really have a suggestion for how to address that, but I used to have a large headache at the end of the day, and then if I was working late, I would switch the lights off, and the headache would go away almost instantly.
@marcio that's the worst, but the issue at its core is that exceptions generally shouldn't control flow. Exceptions should be bail out situations for whole libraries…
@marcio that might very well be true, considering that spaghetti code php programmers don't give a damn about github and there are a shitload of those around...
Does anyone has a small(ish) framework(ish) thing in mind, that could be used in a personal project (so something new, I haven't used before but could use again) to mainly output json (to be consumed by js/java/c#)?
@SaraGolemon So you have beefy work machines basically? Because if that's the case my beefy home machine can't be too far off spec and it's still what I would consider to be "too slow"
@marcio I doubt it - but people can find it again by going to the RFC page, or just being sent an updated link. Having the wrong name for something that is going to be in PHP for ten years, just to avoid a few people having a 404 today is not good.
well, the name is just for discussion... most languages have this feature without baptize it of a name.. but but ... yeaa, better move the RFC and put the right name.
@zerkms I hear several people say just that, but for some reason I am totally clueless where to find stuff with it. Perhaps it is just not Pieter proof
"undefined" is a string, and undefined is a variable containing the primitive value undefined (Thank you elclanrs).
if(typeof x === undefined) should only ever be able to return true if undefined is reassigned to a string matching the type of x.