@JoeWatkins Not sure I understand properly, but you're trying to increment a strict string with an integer. Are you expecting it to cast to an int first?
Small question, ist it bad to send 40 emails in a loop to a few email addresses in an array? I have to send also some to 15k users but then Im using mailchimp.
@DaveRandom I actually saw "$709,000" number on one site ... but it looked like a small right-wing rag .. the only part I could verify was the link the the paper's abstract
I cancelled the stars ... sorry ... but I wish people wouldn't star swears ... I've no problem with swearing, I just done it ... but there are multiple problems with starring that kind of language ... first and foremost it gives people the wrong impression about what we are doing it and what is acceptable here ... if somebody new came into the room and started to swear every other word, none of us would like that ... we ought to set an example ...
selfishly, I don't want to have to explain to either of my kids what any swear words mean because they saw them in my office ... think about what kind of damage it would do to have to explain to my 11 year old what "cock sucking" or whatever means because she saw it on my screen ....
@JoeWatkins @rtheunissen do you see any problems with returning (using JS as example) "0123".indexOf("") // 0 "0123".lastIndexOf("") // 4 maybe would be better throwing an exception
but negatively, -1, might sometimes be a valid index ... so it depends on how you are expressing errors in general I think ... if contains() should throw NotFoundException, then so should indexOf, if one just returns negatively then so should the other ...
not really sure which is correct, I don't think either, so long as consistent with itself it doesn't really matter ...
@tereško Yeah.. that tool is basically the main thing that can save the younger generation from looking like an arse when potential employers google their names.
Guys, I have a class that needs to use some data from some parsed files. Loop through $files, each $file might be YML, or XLIFF, or XML. If I say $parser->parse('xml|xliff|xml', 'filePath') and the parser does a switch on the type, is that effectively a factory? Or a registry or something?
But yeh, seriously, FileParser. If the API is parse() then it's a parser and the caller does not need to care about the underlying implementation. If it were ->getParser()->parse() then it would be a factory or whatever
@DaveRandom It'll be parse($file), actually, figure I can gather the type from the $file. It's then choosing the correct parser to do it that I'm trying to figure out the best way, Gordon suggested that's where I'd use the factory
@Jimbo Yeh but in terms of naming the public API class, the consumer does not care about any of that if your public API just directly exposes a generic parse() method.
on my "if statment execute" it is always going to the else which means i´m always getting an error, but my variables and binding are correct, so i don´t know what error is, so i have puted this on the else: print_r($pdo->errorInfo()); but i don´t really undertand it, is this the best way to know what error i´m gettiing?
Okay so you mentioned depends on the complexity of the logic, what would be the case where what I suggested wasn't okay? The opposite, basically, where you would recommend an alternative
Logic would go: FileParser::parse($file), and if $file, get the extension, pass extension as $type to FileParserFactory that creates the right parser and returns it
No no, no searching or anything, just grabbing data out
others have approached with some percentage of a patch, in one case you could build it ... but I never heard from them again after I explained just some of the complexities of finishing ...