Morning, Is it possible to get the ID from this like so? $projectNumberStmt = $db->prepare("SELECT * FROM projects WHERE featured = 1"); $projectNumberStmt->execute(); $count = $projectNumberStmt->rowCount(); // THIS LINE NEEDS TO BE THE IDs $id = rand(0, $count);
Please, stop using ORDER BY RAND(). Just stop. This operation has complexity of n*log2(n), which means that the time spent on query would grow "
entries | time units
-------------------------
10 | 1 /* if this takes 0.001s */
1'000 | 300
1'000'000 | ...
@JoeWatkins However in PHP 7 I feel like your copy process should be relatively simple. Copy the hashtable structure, copy the pHash+pData (this is one allocation, you'll have to get the base address first) and then go through pData and copy zvals / string keys
What I have so far: $projectNumberStmt = $db->prepare("SELECT id FROM projects WHERE featured = 1"); $projectNumberStmt->execute(); $count = $projectNumberStmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC); $id = rand(0, $count);
@JoeWatkins I'd suggest looking at lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/zend_hash.c#1686. It's very optimized code though, it can be cut down to be much simpler if you don't handle all cases separately
@FlorianMargaine Interesting. Would be very interested to see if that ever gets finished, seems like the sort of thing that will end up with a few packages that outright refuse to work, but it's certainly a nice idea
@ScottArciszewski Thanks, but that again isn't giving me the IDs from featured, it's giving me the IDs 1,2 (as I've only set two projects to featured = 1). Those IDs are 1 and 3. So what it's doing is just giving me a number of rows, not the actual ID of rows. So I really need the ID 1 and 3, not strlen(1\,3) = 2 kinda thing.
@DaveRandom this is getting some traction, the issues are handled one after one. I don't see this being blocked by technical issues, they even figured out how to handle timestamps (via an environment variable). And Debian maintainers are usually not afraid to patch packages.
Anonymous
I have an array with keys 1 to 4. When I use the sort function on the array, as expected, the keys change to 0 to 3. Is there any way of maintaining the 1 to 4 structure while using the sort function?
Ok, @JoeWatkins - do you have a minute? I want to implements this (first, squaring numbers only, to be precise). Am I correct it's possible due to native threading?
the buffering mechanisms they all use will crash php if you write to the buffer from multiple threads, there is no internal API to introduce synchronization for streams, they were only ever meant to be written from one thread because share nothing ...
I want to protect some web page (html/php file) with username and password, so with a login phase.
So I have created this private.php file:
<?php
session_start();
include 'MyLibrary.php';
$object = new Manager ( $conn );
if ($object->checkPassword ( $_POST ['username'], $_POST ['password']...
@AlmaDo well, go is vastly superior to pthreads+php, if there are programmers ready to write, then don't stand in their way, I wouldn't ... I would say a different thing to a team of php programmers, pthreads fills a nice gap, in my opinion, but to run, you should use the shoe designed to be a training shoe, rather than a boot styled like a training shoe ...
you can hardly blame anyone for not knowing go ...
if 5 of 50 want to work in go, and the rest don't and can't, then the 5 that can should be getting on with making life easy for those that can't ...
why can't those bits of the application that require the kinds of features go provides (and it sounds like such parts exist) be written in go and the rest be php ?
@JoeWatkins CTO is among those 5, so we can't do anything. However, I want to prove that whoever is blames PHP for missing threads support at all - are wrong (pipelines are next step, but as I see, it's not native support of course)
How can I achieve something like this with ReflectionMethod and ReflectionClass $Class->before(); $Class->index, but with 1 more thing inside of before method I have $this->var = ''ccc, which doesn't work in method index.
I can be wrong, maybe there's someone out there with such vast knowledge on the subject they could do a better job than I could, and it wouldn't be fragile ...
its not goroutines you can't replace, someone smart enough can define their own threading model for their application regardless of the model used in pthreads by default ...
that wouldn't even be hard, pools exist, the hard bits would be getting parallel I/O right
@JoeWatkins do you have in mind something I should read to get into the topic better? (before I started to google that, it won't harm to ask a professional)
@AlmaDo with regard to what, pools or I/O ? theres documentation for pool, and some examples on github that cover it, or else give it a go, and I/O, not really ...
@PeeHaa I know yet at the same time a) protected methods feels much nicer than protected properties (in general and especially in that specific case) b) they are definitely related, it doesn't make a whole bunch of sense to have some place where you can pass an immutable one but not a mutable one and c) the same logic belongs in both (at least for addHeader) and this approach is the DRYest way.
I'd go down the interface road to satisfy typing, except that an interface that will only ever have one implementation seems a bit weird.
I thought about this for quite a while, I'm very much open to suggestions