@bwoebi did you see what I said earlier this morning? The requirement is 7.0.0-dev, which allows early development versions (without some features) to be accepted when installing dependencies via composer.
hi ... I got" The requested URL /About was not found on this server." error whenever I try to access an html page hosted on my (latest version) of MAMP server, mod_rewrite is enabled
@AlmaDo your question is really hard to answer without seeing the query. And I don't think your reason for not giving the query makes much sense. If you're currently using a query builder, then almost any answer people give you would involve chucking that away and doing the SQL by hand.....
@JAHelia Looks about right. Do you have AllowOverride All set in your Apache config? On some distros it's set to None by default, which means per-site htaccess files are not parsed at all.
Hard-coding functionality in SQL is just a waste of time. It's far more productive to write a generic query that gets the data, and then write a simple function in PHP to format it how you like.
this is my problem:hi ... I got" The requested URL /About was not found on this server." error whenever I try to access an html page hosted on my (latest version) of MAMP server, mod_rewrite is enabled
whenever I open mysite.com/test.html it opens but mysite.com/test does not open
possibly talking at cross-purposes - packagist doesn't have namespaces. It only has names. So if there was already a project with the same exact name, that would clash, but I should be able to publish lt/pojfpsjfpsjdpfojpodjfpojdpofjsodfj as that shouldn't be reserved.
@PeeHaa I think that if you take the time to ask for a discount or free ticket that they'd accommodate you. I mean the venue and presenter rooms don't come free. Either way, it's a shrug for me. Not worth the energy since it's said and done
meh. Came across a question in a review queue that was kind of interesting, but was flagged as unclear. I edited the question, make it completely clear what was actually being asked, and was 3/4 through writing an answer when the question got closed anyway.
This is certainly possible using static::class in the base class to get the name of the child (which is initially called at runtime):
<?php
class Foo {
public function __construct()
{
var_dump(static::class); // string(3) "Foo"
}
}
class Bar extends Foo
{
}
$bar = new Bar...
Is there a constant in PHP holding the current sub classes name? So that I can write a function like:
namespace test\that;
class MyClass extends ClassA {
}
abstract class ClassA {
public static function getClassName() {
return __THIS_CLASS__; // like get_class($this); in a none sta...
Yes, to an extent. In PHP 5.5, the ::class class constant was added, which returns the class name of class to which it is applied. You can then use this in conjunction with parent, self, or static. Consider this code:
<?php
class A {}
class B extends A
{
public function foo() {
ech...
@ScottArciszewski Rather more like < 10 source IPs … after all, I do not want Aerys being shot down by some skript kiddies… For serious attacks, there are things like cloudflare, obviously… but some simple DoS …
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i have a e-commerce site that lets the users to post their product. Per posts there are 2-5 images. A user has a limit of 25 posts. I am expecting of 500-1000 users as our initial launch. What type of hosting do I need and what hosting it is ? I need something that is more in disk space because I will store the images in my folder
Oh, @JoeWatkins, and re: your blog post. I know those feels. Kinda-mentoring Sammy through implementing the random stuff for PHP7 was pretty rewarding.
@JonasDulay By unknown proportions, we mean you haven't provided nearly 2% of the information that someone would need to accurately guess what type of hosting you'd need. But that's a moot point anyways, because in 2 months when your site goes through its first incremental changes, we'd be wrong.
What you need to do, instead of asking people questions that they can't answer, is to set your site up on a server, benchmark it, then do some educated guesses that, as the person most intimately involved in the project, only you can answer.
You can pick up all the C you need by reading it, maybe a little bit of special care around pointers, but "not knowing C" is definitely not a barrier to entry