> For example, if the child class defines an optional argument, where the abstract method's signature does not, there is no conflict in the signature. This also applies to constructors as of PHP 5.4. Before 5.4 constructor signatures could differ.
btw @zerkms only difference is 3v4l.org/8qmtr vs 3v4l.org/LX0s9, LSP is not applied to ctors unless you do something (stupid) that implies you want it to be - i.e. declare it abstract or in an interface
@John anyway, I suggest you to make 2 selects, at least, the first is the select of the first letter, or even better - two letters, the second one is the filtered one that you load dynamically
> Kids these days, with their tags, and their releases, and their distributed version control systems. In my day, we used Visual Source Safe, and we ....actually didn't like it.
Prototype based programming, with a good implementation, allows you to abstract and express the domain of your problem in the language in such way class-based don't. Take as an example the encapsulation by closures.
@zerkms I would argue that PHP's behaviour in that case is correct, the incorrect thing is the people who use that "feature". The alternatives would be to outright ignore what the developer wrote and allow signature variance anyway (this would be a bigger wtf IMO) or to throw an error when people try and do it (would personally be OK with this but can see why others wouldn't like it).
I've one HTML string <img src="http://54.174.50.242/file/pic/emoticon/default/smile.png" alt="Smile" title="Smile" title="v_middle" />
I'm getting blank for the above HTML string. why so I'm not understanding. The above string is passed as an argument to the below function i.e. the variable $fee...
@user2839497 Break the problem down into smaller chunks. Isolate the bits and pieces you don't get and run them independently just like I did with your strip_tags predicament.
It's called debugging.
You could also try stepping through the code with something like xdebug and figure out at which point you made an error in your logic.
@HaskellCamargo sticking to the original word without changing things when more information is available is a dangerous approach. See the guys who follow books that were written a few millennia ago...
@Patrick Well, half the books these kids read in college these days were written about a decade before they reached their desks. By the time the information is disseminated the students are already trying to apply outdated knowledge in practice.
Then they go get a job and the real world hits. They suddenly realize 90% of what they learned in school just doesn't work in the real world anymore. When half the companies in the Valley are using technologies that have only had books written about them in the last 12-18 months, you just can't count on the schools keeping up.
@Sherif This happens because, today, universities create codemonkeys, not academics, as should be its purpose. I don't say that it must have no market in this, but that this is not the main focus.
I mean it is a nice way to take the academic side of the things, the concepts, the true concepts about computer programming and how a language works, no by creating Java/PHP codemonkeys.
@HaskellCamargo That's my point. As a software engineer, no one is going to hire you for your academia and theory, because businesses don't run in a lab. They run in the real world where things aren't pure and safe.