Yeah, I've only used comments for columns which aren't obvious what they're used for in the system at all, but I'm talking maybe once or twice every 25 tables or so
@NikiC doing good so far :B do you have any hint about the strictness of the functions? like... idk... abs(INTMIN) should return an exception or behave like \abs() ? i mean while we are at it we could change something
Define serious? Do you mean that it must require a PhD-level intelligence to write programs? Does the language need to be Turing compliant? Do you mean it must be closed-source and you need to pay for the privilege of using it? Do you mean that it should require a compiler?
@whatever - so your starting point is that only object-based languages are serious?
while coding in C# and C++ I think they were more versatile than php .. but I am yet discovering the object oriented aspect of php but its not matching C# I think
@FlorianMargaine I like var actually, one of the hundred bajillion things I hate about Java is likes like Foo myFoo = new Foo(); - it's a Foo, we get it.
@ScottArciszewski If you want a specific patch reviewed, send a mail to the docs list (you can attach .txt files if you want to attach the patch to the mail).
@crypticツ I'm getting into it a bit to do some theme work for my wife and I really wanted to understand Wordpress rather than just do what she wanted. It's uh… worse than I thought :D
@NewbieCoder I'm pretty sure multiple people here could figure it out, but no-one will want to spend the time doing so. this is one of those cases where you need to debug your own code, to either solve the problem yourself or be able to produce a short simple self-contained example, not just "here's my code, figure it out".
Okay well in the code I have narrowed down the problem! In the public function login. The first if(!$username && !$password && $this->exists()) is passing false. I ran each statement separate and $this->exists is returning false.
I'm thinking I read the string, strip out leading zeros, do the adding, then add the missing zeros, but I don't know if that's the best way of doing it.
I would like to thanks everyone today. I am not much of a chatter but I learnt so much since I joined this community. Your experience and knowledge helped me achieve things I wouldn't be possible before. All of you, who ask and answers question, who chat and everything; you helped me, and will certainly continue to do so. I don't thanks people enough
I have a string like 001. I have to increment it. Is the best way to read the string, strip out leading zeros, add my number, then add the zeros back? This seems hacky.
@Andrea Function calls are finicky business, better not deal with it. Though based on that case sample, I suspect that we're incorrectly emitting a shell_exec() rather than \shell_exec()
@Danack thanks for the phped idea but it downloads just too much black box stuff for my liking. My minimal requirement is to have a relatively simple vagrantfile for ubuntu x64 trusty that allows me to run a php project driving selenium. Anyone got any starts?
I don't know if I could write a query in SQL that could take 1 column field and increment, which is why I'm trying to pull this value out by itself, increment outside the db, the send a query with the new value.
I don't think what I'm trying to do is very sophisticated and this may be an XY problem. I'm doing this before I do my real query which will have the number incremented, based on the latest record.
I have a record in the table with 001 in col A. Before I enter a new record for the same user, it needs to be 002 in Col A, and increasing everytime I insert a record.
I was going to read the latest record, descending, limit by 1, which would give me the last number used, increment, then use that in my insert query.
That's the problem, the column is acting as an auto_increment, but it's actually not an auto_increment...it's a manual thing, which is stupid; however, I'm going to double check to make sure this is true...thanks for the reminder.
@Waxi your snippet of code suggest you are going trough the whole result set to find out if a particular value is the first of the array. Am I correct?
The result set will only be 1 record because I limited by 'top 1'. If there is no record, then it returns nothing and I know my count is 001, otherwise whatever it returns, I need to add 1 to it for the record that's about to be entered.
I'll rephrase my problem. I need to insert a record into the database, but I need a unique ID, depending on what the latest ID that was used. This unique ID is actually a string such as 001. My first thought was to pull the latest record out, and do some string magic to increment this number to be used in my insert query, but maybe the query itself can be written in a way to increment automatically?
@Nikos I don't have any great resources. You could look at the simple setup I have for dev which uses relatively simple bash scripts for deploying everything because Chef+Puppet are overkill for my needs. It's Centos based, so a lot of stuff would need changing, but it's relatively sane.
$ sapi/cli/php -r '$arr = [1, 2, 3]; function foobar($bar) { $bar = 2; } foobar(&$arr); var_dump($arr);'
& argument!
Fatal error: Parameter 1 of foobar() is not by-reference in Command line code on line 1
The error, "No such file or directory" means that the file ./configure isn't in your current directory. did you try changing to php-src with the command "cd php-src"
Quick question. I have two integer variables. I want to find out which contains the highest value and know the name of said variable. e.g. $a = max($b, $c); will return me the value of the highest variable but how do I figure which variable contained that value?
@Abe Because without the correct tools to do dependency injection easily, they get better results from writing bad code that is easy to use but hard to test, rather than writing good code which is a pain to use but easier to test. aka what I was saying the other day.
@Purify $name = ($max = max($b, $c)) === $a ? 'a' : 'b'; <- if/else as ternary, it's not that readable and harder to wirte. Also if ($a === $b) the answer is two names.
I'd say (and it's not me who said it originally), you should normally not need to care about when to create objects. It should just work. Normally works well. Just don't care. Defer it.
You normally already write those part who build things. The DIC most often just stands in the way to that (sooner or later).
DIC have the use (and therefore the tendency) to couple concrete instances to static names. Most often you break layers with that. Which then renders layering in an application useless. However proper layering is a powerful concept, so I'd prefer well separated layers over a DIC. That could be such a design decision.