While it has a lot of Latin and Greek roots, they often are inherited via neighboring languages having Latin and Greek roots.
through the mix we don't very well recognize what language exactly it inherited from, but we still are able to see the grand-parents Latin and Greek though.
@Sherif ultimately … Dubito linguam Latinam ultimam felicitatem fore ;-) [This one shouldn't be very hard for google translate I hope… But maybe the accusativus cum infinitivo will confuse it…]
I'm looking for a solution/suggestion to what I want to achieve. I have my page and you'll see I have the table with three rows of data in it.
I want to create something where I can have a page where you have to be logged in and then you can either directly click on the data you want to edit or click and edit button that allows you to edit the data and then update the db.
so all on the logged in page. I don't mind page refresh when updating the db but I'd love to not have to create a page with forms to update the data
Unless that's changed from PHP 5, an init just gave you a null initialized bucket array in the struct.
hmmm, I'm no longer sure I'm looking at this correctly. I might be missing something terribly obvious, but at first glance I would think this didn't allocate everything in the array twice.
Just look again at the php_splice function: it loops through the in_hash array until $offset and inserts every encountered element into the out_hash array. Then skips $length elements in in_hash and inserts the remaining elements into out_hash.
Not exclusively, no. I mean there were other factors involved. But at the end of the day it just wasn't fun anymore and I have plenty of other things I could devote my time to.
@bwoebi You know there's a saying that says you can reverse engineer the department heads responsible for a product's design just by looking at it. Just take a look at your TV remote. How tiny is the mute button and how BIG is the on-demand button?
strict type hinting allows for method signatures to enforce type on both arguments and return type... implementations are different but the end goals are the same.. insuring type within a context.
I still am not sure of all the typing in PHP. But when it comes I definitely want it to be done right in the least magic and redundant way possible while still being as dynamic as possible.
@Orangepill Wrong. Type hinting doesn't enforce types at all. function foo(int $a): int { return $a * 2' }; $b = "$" . foo(1); Strict typing is about enforcing types. Type hinting is about encapsulation. Two completely different concepts.
@bwoebi Right, that's just some magic. I just wanted to clarify the obvious difference between enforcing variable types in a type system and merely initializing the variables in the stack frame or doing some type check on them.
PHP isn't a strictly typed language because it doesn't enforce types at the variable level.
@bwoebi I can't recall, exactly, but I used to work with someone that explained it to me. I'm no expert on compiler design though. I could just be confused.
@crypticツ thanks for your response! My header and footer themselves are wrapped up using other HTML to make sticky header and footer, which prevents the middle content to get centered.
@bwoebi Oh yea, any systems-level programming work is going to be more interesting than application stuff for sure. Just depends on how deep you're willing to venture, I suppose :)
Personally, I lack all the theoretical background necessary to get involved in that stuff. I could explain to you how preparser and linker work, I just couldn't give you all the text book names...
@bwoebi The half adder is just made up of an XOR and an AND gate and an XOR gate is just made up of an OR/NAND/AND combination, so yea all you really need are AND and NOT gates, technically.
Well, it would have been nice to be more prepared learning a lot of these things in a controlled environment where it's OK to make mistakes. Unfortunately, learning things on the job is not quite so stress-free.
Also, one thing I learned from Richard Feynman is that it's important to know the names of things in order to communicate with others.
Being that I learned much of my computer science knowledge on the job, I really wasn't very good at communicating with others.
That's why my theoretical background is so week by comparison to those whom I work with that actually have a degree in computer science.
I might know a lot more about the practical application of some things than they do when they're fresh graduates, but they trump me in scholarly understanding.
@Sherif sigh names for things… IMHO, you should first learn the things, then learn their name. It makes you think about the things yourself first, before being even able to exchange yourself with others.
@bwoebi Yea, I can relate to that, but it's still very frustrating to know something, but not be able to explain it to someone else in a way they can relate to.
@bwoebi Feynman once explained this in an interview where he stated he never used to care about the names of things, but was rather more intrigued by the nature of things... until one day someone walked into his lab trying to tell him about a particular experiment (the name of which he did not know). Then he realized that learning the names of things is important for communication even if not its understanding.
//Obteniendo fecha date_default_timezone_set('America/Caracas'); $fechaabrev = strftime("Sat, %b 17, %y"); echo $fechaabrev.'<p>'; //Obteniendo xml de baseball $xml = simplexml_load_file('http://sportsfeeds.bovada.lv/basic/MLB.xml'); $partidosnum = count($xml->EventType->Date); //Bucle principal de partidos for ($i=0;$i<=$partidosnum-1;$i++) { //Seleccionar partidos del dia if ($xml->EventType->Date[$i]->attributes()->DTEXT == $fechaabrev){ $partido_fecha[$i] = $xml->EventType->Date[$i]->attributes()->DTEXT;
Because the foreach construct abstracts away that logic for you. It takes a Traversable object and iterates over each value. Why do you need to know about $i here? It serves no purpose.
@jcrashvzla With that said if you really do want the key you can always get at it from foreach($xml->EventType->Date as $i => $something) ... even though you clearly have no legitimate need for it here.
The only reason you would need the key inside of the loop is if you had another level of indirection you must inadvertently circumvent somewhere in that loop logic, which you clearly don't here.
@LeviMorrison At least I'd consider putting null into the chain as else it might be weird with union types (Foo | Bar | null) … going to put allow_null on all two element of chain, only on first, …?
i have class a and b .. and i am starting memecached server on class b constructor and assigning values by call method of class b from class a ... but its not working why?
I am making own template engine parser for custom syntax.
Want to replace some code.
I want to replace {{ $code }} by <?php $code ?>
Below are test cases for replace code
<p>{{ $data . '{data}' }}</p>
<p>{{ 'data' }}</p>
<p>{{'data'}}</p>
<p>{{ 'data'}}</p>
<p>{{'data' }}</p>
<p>{{
...
I am using memecached to store values. I its working fine when start and inset key value pair in one file but when I do this In obj orienter approach its not working fine, I think I am doing something wrong while starting server but not sure what
cache.php
class cache{
function __construc...
recently a small team, possibly one guy, from intel has volunteered himself to take over the windows/intel optimizations and posts profiling results to internal daily ... so they possibly don't do that anymore ... not much point ...