posted on March 13, 2016 by Niklas Keller (kelunik)
Let’s Encrypt, the free and automated CA, started late last year into their public beta. They offer a pretty comprehensive client to automate the process of getting SSL clients and installing them. It will soon be moved to a new home at EFF. If you’re already using PHP and don’t need / want the automatic installation of your free certificates or don’t want to install Python, here’s a client f…
This way, you'll have code in vm_gen to handle it, you'll have to change the original opcodes and you'll still need the type specialization code in the optimizer because it's not just a matter of assigning type info, you need to reorder and normalize operands, convert opcodes etc
Hi All, can you help me on the below issue, i was trying to load an xml using the following script "LOAD XML LOCAL INFILE 'sample.xml' INTO TABLE table_name ROWS IDENTIFIED BY <row> " in php but it is not loading any data in the specified table_name , it is not even showing any errors too. I am able to execute the same code in mysql console/using phpadmin page
How can i sort out this issue ? i am stuck with this issue now :(
I am working in windows os with wamp server installed for running php(if this helps for finding the root cause)
> A class is an array with variables and functions. An object is an array with variables and functions. So, yes, an object and a class are exactly the same thing. It is already bad enough that PHP added redundant syntax support to enable distinguishing between both. Javascript didn't and they were obviously right.
@Andrea @bwoebi already has one of them anyway, he's the only person I know who (presumably) knows the alt-code for the unicode ellipsis off the top of his head
nobody type a minute while I hit you with some more knowledge from this guy, will take a few messages ... it's worth the wait ... he tries to justify his "an object is just an array" ...
Anybody who has ever programmed seriously in, for example, javascript, will known that in php, this code:
class A {
var $r=null;
function __construct($r) {$this->r=$r;}
function f1($x) {return $x+1;}
function f2($x) {return $x+2;}
}
$a=new A("whatever");
echo $a->f1(5);
Javascript has got it right. It compiles $a["f1"](5) to exactly the same bytecode as $a.f1(5), which is the same as $a->f1(5) in php.
$this just means "this array". It is unfortunate that you need to write $a["f1"]($a,5) in PHP instead of $a["f1"](5). You do not need to do that in, for example, javascript or lua.
OOP is just redundant syntax. There is nothing that you can do with OOP that you cannot do with arrays and first-class functions. The other way around is not true. There are lots of things that you can do with arrays and first-class functions but that you cannot with OOP. In othe…
I'm creating a theme, but I'm having trouble serving some js, css, and font files that are under wp-contenct/themes/my-own-theme/assets/ they're just not reachable from the browser, I'm using the default .htaccess, Is there anything I should do in order to access to those files?
Thanks.
@bwoebi they probably wouldn't be much different, most things you can do with Java-style OOP can be done with prototypes, retrofitting isn't very restrictive here
@NikiC they … well … the main issue with them is that you pass them in and after the call they can be randomly altered
basically for everything which doesn't communicate, but allow to have state set to something
for a database object (like PDO), PHP 5 objects are great … they're communicators and may have internal state for this connection attached … but value objects…
(under value objects I now understand everything which has setters and getters without direct logic (to the behind) attached to the objects)
@Danack I'm talking about objects whose point is to be mutated ;-)
The issue with the PHP 5 objects is that these mutations happen "automagically" … sure, you can make your objects immutable, but I consider that a workaround…
The issue is basically when you abuse by-object to pass state around
@Wes I never replied to you. I think having a 'clone' keyword for a function definition would be a 'better' approach than making objects 'copying on assignment'. But tbh I just don't find the current scheme to be a big problem.
} } ?> ■ ■ Note In PHP 7, you can enable Scalar Type Hints. PHP 7 provides the developer the ability to declare the data type that is expected to be returned. The function in Example 3-6 could be coded as follows. declare(strict_types=1); function get_properties() : string
how can you write a whole book entitled learn php 7, then refuse to use it's features, and then explain the features you don't use completely wrong ...
7
and who is the editor of that, and why don't they know what they are doing ...
there will be a huge selection of people that actually learn from this kind of material :(
It gets worse. The guy is also actually teaching that shit by the looks of it
> Steve Prettyman is a college lecturer/instructor in web development/programming, specializing in PHP. He is also an experienced web developer and author.
> ...including enhanced password encryption using password_hash
now it actually give me tension and was abt to sleep but now i can't. I want to know php 7. it's feature already disscused in room but some points i always miss or don't know abt that.. now it's matter of concern of i thought after reading that book i will able to know php 7 features but it's not..
Hey, PHP noob here, having a wee problem with my page content flashing on load. I've narrowed it down to the section of code causing it, but I have no idea why. Here is a Gist I've made since I'm unable to show you the actual website as it's local. gist.github.com/Deus-Rex/dc293c864cf59a8791f0
The master.php has a section that includes a php file depending on whether they are logged in or not. The problem only happens if they are logged out, so it's the not_logged_in.php causing it. If I change the file it includes to the logged_in.php for both, the page loads fine. So I assume it has to be the not_logged_in.php
Sorry. Ehm, when I load the page, the main page content (i.e. not the navigation, header, etc.) is a white page before it shows properly. It's a split second, but an irritation considering it doesn't happen when logged in.
@Gilgamesh Look at the network activity in the browser. Chances are that some blocking resource like a huge CSS or JS file, or a very large image is preventing the content being rendered
hmm, it uses the same resources as the master, so all that should already be called. When I compare the time for the page to load between them, they are the same.
@Gilgamesh I actually don't see any difference between that page and any of the others, it may be simply some kind of weird local caching issue in your browser, have you tried with another browser?
@NikiC Isn't your static method binding problematic with opcache when the class is defined in two different files and one of them is conditionally included? … Yea, I know, you'd prefer to not support these cases :-P
@Gilgamesh I still don't really see any practical difference between any of the pages. There is occasionally a slight "jump", you might say, where some of the page elements are not quite in the right places, but I'm 100% certain that would be resolved by making the CSS cacheable. I certainly don't get any periods of completely unrendered content
How fast is your computer? The difference between what I see and what you see could be as simple as that, specifically because I am running on an SSD it may make Chrome render stuff faster (I'm not sure on this one as I'm not overly familiar with the inner workings of Chrome)
It certainly does not seem to be a server-side problem, all pages load at the same speed from the server