Well, as I am a PHP Dev, I would obviously use PHP :P
And if you want to make plugins for Wordpress you ought to use PHP, cuz' WP uses PHP, but you can create some thing much better than WP, using node.js or PHP...
well, it's easy if you spend some time on it, I started learning PHP, while I was like 12, and now I am 14... And it most of of the thing seems easy to do in php
yeah I'm pretty ok with html and css, barely able to hack around with javascript. Maybe I should stay focused on them. How I've been learning is just picking tasks I want to do and then getting them to work on my site/browser
right now my goal is to create a custom sign up form that integrates with mailchimp api
and eliminates the double opt in process
im 22 lol so you'll be set by the time youre my age
i wish I would have started to take it serious at that age
> In 2009 a chess engine running on slower hardware, a 528 MHz HTC Touch HD mobile phone running Pocket Fritz 4 reached the grandmaster level – it won a category 6 tournament with a performance rating of 2898. Pocket Fritz 4 searches fewer than 20,000 positions per second. This is in contrast to supercomputers such as Deep Blue that searched 200 million positions per second.
something that is more global than globals, which are basically not globals, but root scope variables. superglobals instead are actually globals and available in all function scopes
@FastSnail well, what you are accessing is not an array but an object...
and `->` is more like .... what should i say ... a thing to go to the next level of an object..... for example, let's say you have an object like this: `$obj = new \stdClass();`
@FastSnail $this::DB_TABLE_PK is access to a constant, would be ClassName.CONSTANT in java. in php you access static stuff using :: and regular object members through ->, but you can use $object::member to access static stuff through an instance
i have the action="signup.php" and in that file I call for my header and footer, but when I submit the form it sends me to my uncategorized blog posting archive
@AlexGray I really recommend to not use wordpress from the beginning, not only you would be revealed to several bad practices and also, it's quite complex...
what i don't get most is functional programming. tried to read about it and watch talks but all the time i was like what are you even doing dude. they are either really bad at explaining it or they simply don't have an actual argument
Hi can anyone tell why I get this error...Fatal error: Call to undefined function phpsession_start() ... I have a code line session_start() in my config.php file
[ 5.4.0 - 7.0.4 ] Parse error: syntax error, unexpected end of file in /in/kuLmD on line 1 <br/><i>Process exited with code <b title="Generic Error">255</b>.</i>
there is good technical reason for their omission ... they are global variables and the engine does not have the same degree of control over them ... fixing that is ... not reasonably doable, changing ZEND_ASSIGN would have a huge impact on performance, so would changing static assignments to generate different opcodes (eg ZEND_ASSIGN_STATIC) and pass type information along ...
even if we ignore that, there isn't the same kind of API for objects and static properties, the object API is just that, I think there are two handlers relating to static scope ... there isn't nearly enough control over static properties to do a good job ...
> If your goal was to specifically implement something MVC-like, then you have utterly failed. This setup has absolutely nothing to do with MVC. To be honest, it seems that you are way too inexperienced for tackling something like that.
@tereško that is unneeded and rather unconstructive, isnt it?
on a side note, I disagree with your answer. what the op has isn't that bad. It's not OOP, but it looks MVC'ish enough to me. Certainly not utterly failed.
I agree that the code lacks the four bullet points you mention, but those are not aspects of requirements of MVC
I just got a requirement. The client wants to be able to scale up to 100k concurrent requests. Is this possible? I have worked with load balanced auto scaling setups but 100k?
@bitNinja Well if you really want to, just go with massive virtualization ,sharding ,load balancing etc. It might cost him a bit of cash money though. Or if your not interested in trying, tell him you can't
well ya, he is rich and probably a bit eccentric as well. I suggested an architecture with ELB, auto scaling front end, queue for heavy tasks, CDN, RDS with read replicas, redis cache and elastic search. thats when he came up with 100k requirement.
@bitNinja highscalability.com/blog/2013/5/13/… but seriously, build something one person wants to use first. That's hard enough as a first problem. Then worry about scaling up.
@bitNinja he might. Play it cool and tell him that it will cost him alot of money. If he doesn't mind then its your journey. And I think that will look preeeetty good on a resume
are those good things to be thinking about when starting to learn? my only real exp with php is hacking around creating my own wordpress themes, using the get_header() and footer type functions, maybe copy and pasting some code into the functions to get things to work how I want
@AlexGray Try mixing in as much as possible. Sql / cache / queueing / mails / design patterns . If you are looking to learn. Throw yourself in the deep end and learn to swim. Learn as much as possible as fast as possible.
then after I built that I could look into making it send different emails to different accounts depending on what options were selected at the ticket submission form?
@bitNinja dont get me wrong: I am not saying you cannot do it or that scaling should be an afterthought. But tackling infrastructure for 100KC when there is zero lines of code written yet seems a bit premature to me.
@AlexGray So start out with one thing at a time. First build the database and the php to manage that database. Concentrate on database design. build the initial database. then build the php to handle that database. create / update tickets. assign tickets to users. add tags to tickets. add tickets to projects etc. Then build a queueing mechanisms to notify ticket followers by email when something changes. Basically just play and build until you become comfortable.
@bitNinja in that situation I would have answered "no, I can't do that, and you cant afford anyone who has experience with scaling systems to 100k concurrents"
hello guys, how to echo $this->session->flashdata('error') without producing the tag <p> ?
im using this : $error = array('error' => $this->upload->display_errors()); $flashdata = $this->session->set_flashdata($error); redirect('error', $flashdata);