@PeeHaa Sure, anyone with a php.net account can use the PhpStorm open source project license... but remember that you're only allowed to use it to write OS software. ;)
Hi guys, "Across pagination selected checkbox should be checked using datatable in php" . I am looking for the solution for that problem. i find so many links regarding this but didnt got right solution. could any suggest me how to achieve this. Thanks
@FlorianMargaine I think we all get why they do it, it's just questionable if they can enforce it. If I write a novel using MS Office Home and Student, am I violating the TOS?
I've written some ugly tests in my day (testing code with DB interaction is always fun) but I'm glad I wrote that ugly code when someone new comes in and breaks something it tested
@ircmaxell It's testable, just some things… like the Bootstrapper fire everything up, and how do I test that nicely… what would I assert etc.
I can test it, I just don't know what to test for…
@ircmaxell Like the file (rightfully) has a few private methods, which are all called in a big public function. How do I test every part of it is working fine instead of the "big mess" … test private methods? Is that fine?
The only things I definitely don't know how to test is these which involve two processes… but that's not the important majority of things needing tests.
@Sean No.....they would still be forcing a single pattern onto two inherently different things. The only thing that is sane is to have multiple level dispatch, so as to avoid trying to make things fit in a single pattern.
I've got a problem: Worker threads seem to work serially.
This is a very simple example just for a demonstration a problem.
I initialize my worker threads and run them. It should work in parallel however the result looks like it was processed serially.
PHP 5.6.12, Windows OS, Apache server
DBW...
the guy hasn't included complete code, the problem doesn't match the code whatever ... he's probably doing something wrong, but if it were a binary problem pthreads module would not load in windows ...
@ircmaxell concrete example where I struggle: github.com/amphp/aerys/blob/master/lib/Bootstrapper.php#L72 builds a VhostContainer… which is injected into Server. I can't get the container back to dissect it. The only way is starting the server and actually try connecting to itself to see whether it bound to the expected port. … I wanted to test the unit of the Bootstrapper and not actually test the server. What now? Private property access allowed?
I might have confused him, judging by your comment.... only used pthreads on nix, and then only a while ago.... I guess I misinterpreted the Windows requirements from the PHP Docs, thought you needed too install pthread-w32 separately
@salathe Just out of morbid curiosity, what the heck was that person on internals complaining about? "I'm a bit uncomfortable seeing this on the mail list."
@ircmaxell so… you're suggesting I'm putting something into public API which shouldn't really be public API?
@Danack it just took him 1.7 years…
@ircmaxell basically you're suggesting that I make some responsibilities public… like, I guess, having a public Vhost builder, which shouldn't be a generic public API at all.
Hi guys, I want to know if there is a (holy) place where people are actually good in magento knowledge. We have some good guys on so, but sad statement, I asked 6 questions, and i got 1 problem solved ( big honor to this guy! :) )
i did tried magento.stackexchange, but it is worse actually...
This regex is driving me nuts. How can I allow only one single alpha character, if the match starts with -, and only more if starts with -- ? (--|-)(\w+)[\s]+(.*?)(?=\s+--|$)
I can't just put [A-Za-z] in the group, because I need the alpha chars in its own group after whitespace
Lets begin with your style.
1. Naming.
As per the unofficial PHP standards constructed by PHP majors, you should name your classes in StudlyCaps.
i.e. for usersession you'd name it UserSession.
Moreover, for properties and methods naming, you should use camelCase.
i.e. for $is_logged should ...
> The POSIX definition of a "character class" differs from that of PCRE. Simple bracket expressions to match a set of explicit characters are supported in the form of PCRE character classes but POSIX collating elements, character classes and character equivalents are not supported. Supplying an expression with a character class that both starts and ends with :, . or = characters to PCRE is interpreted as an attempt to use one of these unsupported features and causes a compilation error.
And yes, a base character class like \w and \s is different from character class.
There are quite a few differences and in PHP even PCRE is slightly different from Perl.
> "I had a problem so I used regex. Now I have two problems"
It does work fine with --, but problems arise when I want it to match -x in the same regex. It's just a lot nicer with a single regex
Yes, kind of. But it's a special project i'm on, that involves building a terminal-like interface, so there's some special requirements, like matching after --xxx until the next --[A-Za-z]+/-[A-Za-z] or EOL
No thats the problem. I don't think users would be able to figure out that values should be wrapped in ", I'm using regex to get the value out and put the quotes for them
I mean, my point is if the user doesn't understand the interface, why are you providing them with an interface they don't understand? Just makes for poor UX. Why not instead provide them with a better interface that they will be able to understand and use easily rather than hack the bad interface and make it do all kinds of dubious magic?
I'm saying there's a reason why you need to enclose strings in quotes on the command line, because otherwise they're seen as multiple arguments. You're trying to break that rule because you're saying the user won't understand how to do that.
So by definition you are breaking the constraints of the interface.
Either you give the user something they can understand or you force them to use the thing that works. Doesn't make a lot of sense to break the interface in order to help the user. You still end up hurting the user, just in a worse, less obvious, way.
@PeterJensen Right, so then back to "why not take advantage of getopt"?
It already does what you want it to do, but you get it for free.
@ircmaxell only one issue left when I decide to extract buildVhost() … where to put it… don't want to put it into Host. Also, putting into Vhost isn't very right… don't want to attach random factory functions to it. Guess it'll be a standalone function then.
It's completely lost on me what it is you're trying to say. I'm just going to go with "did you try using getopt and it did something you didn't want it to do?"
@PeterJensen You can't really. The best you can do is guess, but you can't figure out the difference between someone that made an unintentional mistake and someone that made a deliberate one either.
All you can do is explain how to use your software and then give the user errors that are meaningful like "you didn't supply --option"
Unfortunately the whole "we think you tried to do this but instead it looks like you did this" magicwizardryvoodoo doesn't work.
@PeterJensen assuming I understood minimally and you want to get the position of something using unix like bash scripting, maybe this can help you? stackoverflow.com/a/5032641/576767
When you make a syntax error PHP doesn't really know what you meant to do. It just knows it can't parse your code. You can try to give as much useful info as possible, but you're never going to decipher human intent with code.
Little opinion question... My web app uses data read from a DB. All the data has to be loaded on launch, so there's no need for AJAX. How would you load that data? Include a php-generated JS file to the page?
I mean this sounds very niche so I really wouldn't be overly concerned with providing such explicit error information here. Anyone wanting to use such a tool would more than likely already be somewhat familiar with a command line interface. The one's who aren't will eventually learn.
Actually I thought it was working until now when I just noticed all these problems in parsing. Like when people put --x in the middle of a string. Wonder why I didn't think of that earlier.
@PeterJensen I think you're underestimating the scope of your problem. You say that lightly as if you've just built a car and are just missing the dangling airfreshener from the rearview mirror. That's a key component of your interface.
To clarify, when I say interface, here, I'm not strictly referring to the "User Interface".
Yeah. I mean, I knew it wasn't a good think trying to "hack" the way the input was supposed to be handled. Not sure how to put it, english isn't my first language.
Yes, we all start off with an ideal design, perfectly succinct in our minds or on paper. Until we try to actually materialize concept into code and then we are fraught with disappointment :)
I've not completely given up yet though. What if I simply don't parse --options and arguments with no - identifier? lol
Never mind. Not going to do it :-)
@Sherif Haha, to be sure users understand how to write spaced input, I could require the user to pass "Helo there" as an option to some command, and grant access to the site if they pass that test :D
If they can't pass that simple test, they will have a hard time using the site. It's beautiful actually, I'm doing the user a favor by making him do himself a favor. Almost poetic.
@Sherif Also, if the user already knows how to do it, it's a very small annoyance to him. Like a captcha.
Captchas are used for preventing automation, like spam bots. Ok, let me rephrase it then: Haha, to be sure users <are not spam bots>, I could require the user to pass "<random str 1> <random str2>" as an option to <captcha> command, and grant access to the site if they pass that test :D
Guys, sorry for being a bit offtopic, but what would be the proper way to issue a mysql SELECT with an arithmetic expression in LIKE? I.e. SELECT * FROM whatever WHERE something LIKE 100+1