oops - the repro code is actually: $fn = to_closure([$obj, 'wowsuchmagic']); rather than two params.....and it's doing something different now. It appears to be calling the function recursively: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted
@kirugan by "big" I don't mean well-known or even heavy traffic, but that have a level of complexity where you would expect better development practices
online stores and user systems and such. nothing difficult but the development is definitely sub-par
I'm tempted to hack his portfolio website right now
PHP errors displaying right next to the contact form
@kirugan Yea I know it just still surprises me. BS in Computer Science, 10+ years experience. This isn't someone who has been programming for 3 months and decides they want to make a social network. Somewhere down the line he had to have learned this is bad practice haha
He's my potential replacement too. I'm leaving this position and moving to a company called Gigasavvy so I get to sit in on interviews with my future replacement :)
@kelunik actually you can store two fields in the user table, unencrypted_pass and encrypted_pass, only use the encrypted one when the user is connecting, but when they forget their password you can send the unencrypted one
@Riccardo990 so when the else executes you want to send the data back? you can use GET or a session for that
@kelunik right, so the 'expert' users of the system know that leaving it blank will also log them in. Makes the login process so much faster, makes for a great UX
another idea.. since we can save the password in plaintext after the third login attempt we can just tell the user what the password is... and if they have an invalid username we can offer up the closest match. this will be huge for UX
@Levi Seems like that might be a more reliable solution ;)
@Riccardo990 You can also use GET for that and just add more parameters in your query string, then in the view set the form that way, or you can use sessions
@Riccardo990 this is such a broad topic with so many solutions already online no one is likely to help you further, as you can easily search google and find something, say, here: sitepoint.com/form-validation-with-php
@HassanZia That just means that the message was accepted by your MTA... there are a metric fuck ton of ways that mail can break past that point... first place I would look though is in spam folder and spam filters
@HassanZia I remember having this problem once too. Truth is, PHP's built in mail function isn't that great, take a look at something like PHPMailer github.com/PHPMailer/PHPMailer
@NikiC Regarding to closure RFC I'm planning on posting. You said that you'd prefer a language construct.....I have no idea how to implement that or probably even what it would look like. Is there any reason to not raise this RFC on internals aka would it make doing it as a 'language construct' be harder in the future? Or is that a separate matter?
the strange part is even if i changes the SMTP settings to default then still i get the same success message "mail sent" and even my net isn't working still then the same message
@bwoebi That sounds a lot like it should be called just closure($foo)....as a callable will remain something different until/when the consistent callable RFC passes.
As said, if we want to just transform, then clsoure($foo) is fine. When we want to allow constructions like callable(my_class::static_method), better to use the language construct then
How do I execute code when a for loop is finished? The statement after my loop seems to run before loop completion which is effing up my ajax response.
@bwoebi Some of them aren't really type errors. e.g. currently [$obj, 'somePrivateMethod'] is a valid callable, but isn't acceptable for the function. So I can't rely on ZPP.
@AmericanSlime Because your code is doing something other that what you think it's doing. This is a great time to learn how to step through it with a debugger, so you can see what it's actually doing: youtube.com/watch?v=LUTolQw8K9A
The success callback in my ajax is not firing and I've narrowed it down to a for loop in PHP. If I remove this loop, it fires, but it doesn't with it. I have an echo json_encode after this loop.
@AmericanSlime Because your code is doing something other that what you think it's doing. This is a great time to learn how to step through it with a debugger, so you can see what it's actually doing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUTolQw8K9A
@Gordon I am not saying that it is bad. I just havent heard about that company before. You should jsut look into some benchmarks. The thing seems extremely huge, but I am not all that certain that it actually is all that powerful.
@bwoebi No.....it is magic that makes you think it exists but it doesn't actually exist. e.g. trying to get ReflectionMethod on a non-existent method for a class that has a __call fails......because it doesn't exist.
btw, @Gordon, with these huge radiators you also have to make sure that you have enough clearance for ram and gpu .. and also have to make sure that you can actually fit it inside the box.
@ircmaxell btw, I don't think any code that relies on needing the third parameter would be directly portable to a version of PHP that had that RFC applied. It's used in cases like this:
@Orangepill I instinctively don't like that. And the first concrete reason I've come up with is that it implies that a new closure is returned, which is not always necessary:
$fn1 = closure('foo');
$fn2 = closure('foo');
There's no reason why the same closure couldn't be re-used.....so long as they're not 'constructed' with new closure
There's another one that's not as provably valid.....which is that I think in general if you can avoid making stuff be OO without having a downside, you probably should....as procedural stuff can be combined together in many ways, but OO stuff is hard to combine in ways that it wasn't designed to be used.
@Trowski yeah....I thought that initially however I think the closure is the right choice as they are closures not callables......It's not just an implementation detail, and until callables become less insane there is a separation between the two.
I see your point. The fact that anonymous functions always return a Closure can be relied upon, so I can see relying on a Closure being returned in this case as well.
@Trowski Yes, though it's just closure() now. the to_ was because callable does parser things and the function name couldn't be just callable() when I was thinking it should be callable.
actually I dont know there are a group of frontend developers, Im working only on server side (sometimes few changes on frontend just jquery and old plain js)