Reading the mailing list, it looks like there is a big rush to get PHP7 released... I wonder why. Two weeks ago we had private access broken, sometimes we still reach some weird gc assertions, now this count() issue. It doesn't sound stable enough to me. A delay with a call for testing seems a good decision.
PHP 6 was eaten by purple underpants gnomes. O yes, I can comment now. So, massively multithreaded real-world ALife simulations. Who's got stuff for me?
To put things in perspective – when PHPNG was published, (next-generation) the WordPress homepage required approx. 9.4 billion CPU instructions to execute. As of now – it requires only 2.6 billion – that's 72% less!
Still, a question in between: I'm looking at a massive number of autonomous agents interacting with one another and with the world they occupy. Any thoughts as to how I should deal with such a situation in PHP? Or should I abandon PHP altogether and go for something else?
I love PHP. I've coded tons of game servers in it and I have a google crawler that runs 24/7 and makes millions of searches every month for SEO reporting
I've been playing with nodejs and its really nice once you can wrap your head around how to do stuff asynchronously. Little learning curve there but afterwards you prefer it
@Gralgrathor queues......don't have stuff interacting with each other directly, just put the work to be done in queues and have workers push and pull stuff from the queues as needed.
And I'd recommend Redis for implementing the queues as it is just lovely.
@NextLocal - nodejs? Sounds horrible... @Danack - yes, I was thinking of a queue system for this, fairly simple though. Anyway, all of this runs as a daemon without any direct user interface.
@Danack yeah I've used it for a command handler. Just one Gearman worker, which will delegate to the real Command Handler class. You don't have to extend anything. Just create a Worker instance and add a function to it.
My worker just found the correct Command Handler based on the job payload and passed execution to it. CreateCustomerCommand passed on to CreateCustomerCommandHandler for processing.
@Andrea news.php.net/php.internals/89167 <--- could just replace with objects that implement resource, which as a reserved word in that context wouldn't be possible as a userland interface name, no? and would still pass the check
Hi I have installed vagrant and all setup was done correctly I can boot up on Vagrant UP and SSH into it.. Now I can't access my (project) via browser.. I get 1 of 2 erros.. 1) Porotocal mismatch or No data received
I have found that I can edit hosts file on vagrant to use 0,0,0,0 instead of 127 however I dont know how to open the file end edit it via cmd
> I also think that the resource type hint provides relatively little value in itself. It only says that you are accepting *some* resource. However, resources are many. Is this a file handle? Is it a database connection? Is it a streaming hash context? It doesn't tell.
But would it actually help get to having concrete (or at least separate) objects? I can't see how it provides value....and it would be simpler just to skip adding it as a type.
@gtzinos there is no ultimate guide or implementation of mvc, because the pattern doesn't really apply to web (it was designed for desktop applications) try to read as much as possible about it and build your own point of view
even random articles would be fine. it's not hard, it's just about separating concerns in a sensible way
@Abe yes i try to make it using my own view. But i try to create e.g DatabaseQuery class. I found this method
public function addParameter($param_types){ /* Get the parameters. */
/* returns the sequence of elements from the array array as specified by the offset and length parameters. */ $args = array_slice(func_get_args(),1); $params = array(); $params[] = & $param_types; for($i=0 ; $i<count($args) ;$i++) $params[] = & $args[$i]; call_user_func_array(array($this->query, 'bind_param'), $params);
@Abe really thank you. But what you mean with how is that related to mvc ? Is an abstract class which other classes extends it to make some common functionallity
mvc it's not "reusable code". it's about separating purposes of code in a sensible way.
in fact mvc has very little to none reusable code
@gtzinos also forget (almost entirely) about "extends" and use composition instead:
inheritance (likely bad):
class B extends A{}
composition (likely better):
class B{
protected $a;
function __construct(A $dependency){
$this->a = $dependency;
}
}
@Abe There is nothing wrong about inheritance. As long as it is done well. You can use polymorphism to reduce conditions in your code. The time to use composition over inheritance is when the inherited class would not follow the Liskov's substitution principle.
@DavidPacker << The time to use composition over inheritance is when the inherited class would not follow the Liskov's substitution principle. >> I am a student right now. And i learn it on this lesson. Just this forget it.
@DavidPacker in my experience the only valid use of inheritance is when you extend an abstract class. extending an instantiable class is almost definitely bad in my opinion
@DavidPacker I try to learn everything. The problem right now is tha i cant choose with what to start working with. I like everything cause i read them and i learn them.
@Micaela It may be an encoding issue. I have dealt with the same problem, but sadly I don't remember what was the solution. Had to fiddle with the encodings for a while.
@AniketSingh You need a select first, looking, if an url with the same name already exists. If it does, alter the url for the newly created content.
You are most likely going to need another table for that, @AniketSingh, a table mapping the content to a url. Or you can put it into the content table, if you expect an one-to-one relationship.
@Abe It is simple. If you extend a class, you are bound to provide the same public api in the child class the base class has. It does sound a lot like interface, and it's exactly that, except not. Because classes may also contain data. The base class may define some data, which should be overwritten by the child, giving it some specification, while also enabling you to use the base class yourself.
If you, on the other hand, want to extend a class and the child would NOT provide the same public API the base class has, inheritation is not the way to go, and you should use composition instead. Create a class which acts like a decorator and takes the base class as a dependency.
@DavidPacker i was talking of the implications of having multiple "is a" definitions and applies to interfaces as well. you can extend a class as long you don't add functionality. you should only reimplement the existing functionality
Although that does not mean you should almost entirely forgot about inheritance. But I agree with your point that extending anything but an abstract class rarely makes sense.
@DavidPacker for a beginner it is way better to learn about composition design rather than extending all the things randomly. like what i think @gtzinos was doing (extending a DAL class)
@gtzinos It depends on many factors. As long as the functionality is the same in both the class A and B, meaning you can expect similar results although the implementation might be different, you are set.
@DavidPacker
class A{ function getID(){}; }
class B extends A { /* adds functionality */ }
function foo(A $a){
// is this the ID of "A being just A" or "A being one of the possible child classes the class A could have"?
$a->getID();
}
so the moment you extend A you need to be actually sure you aren't distorting the original domain of the class A
you can add/reimplement functionality as long you don't misrepresent the original purpose of the first instantiable class in the hierarchy. this seems obvious but it's often not...
@Epodax I like snow, but driving a car in the winter is exhausting. Every year there's at least a whole week where the road maintenace is suddenly surprised the winter came after all before starting to salt the roads, so you can drive safely.
I am using fckeditor to copy data from word and paste to fckeditor .when i am trying to copy paste image from ms word it do not show the image preview .it shows only the image covered area like a rectangle only. How can I prevent from this issue.
So after 31 days of cumulative run time, and half a billion executions of the PHP7 binary, my fuzzers have reported another crash... I was kind of excited, until I boiled it down to the minimum reproduction case...
fuzzers created a lot of shit on my filesystem (guessing due to backtick operator) .. but wasn't expecting this during cleanup (yes I've read about switch named files before)
leigh@zaru:~$ rm *
rm: invalid option -- '�'
Try 'rm ./-����' to remove the file ‘-\377\200\377\377’.
Try 'rm --help' for more information.
There's no native way for a method like array map for an array of objects, calling the object method, right?
say each object has a method foo, there's no function which takes the array and a string and calls the method based on the string name for each object in the array.
Which sentence is the most correct in English "We will keep you informed in the next weeks." or should be : "We will keep you informed in the following weeks."
( I have to send out a cancelation email because of IS in Brussels )
@Duikboot probably a bit late now, but if you are writing from a position of present tense (e.g. "I'm on a break at the moment but I'll keep you informed") then "coming weeks" might scan better. If you are writing in a definite future tense (e.g. "I'll do this next week and then keep you informed") then "following weeks" would be better.
I have a field which is basically jsonb representing array of integer values. Now I want to select "where this field contains ALL of specified values". But this fails:
select id, categories from products where categories ?& array[4]
while this
select id, categories from products where categories ?& array['4']
returns empty result (obviously - numbers there are ints, not strings)
any ideas?
Docs says it's for right operand text[] only - so it can not work with int[] ?
You can convert json to array and use array's operator <@ to check if one array is contained in another, but that's gonna be slow probably and not indexable