@tereško according to the PHP documentation examples, you don't declare __constructor as "public" - it always declare it as "function __construct()" I haven't seen "public function __construct()" - which I now take back... the documentation uses both.
@LeviMorrison you mentioned something about checking documented thermal limits ... we were making lots of heat and noise last night ... problem solved now ...
@bwoebi yeah it looks like 2ghz is maximum, everywhere I look it says that turbo boost doesn't set clock frequency of all cores at once, that it's only meant to kick in when some cores are under extreme pressure
I disabled pstate so that cpupower is less useful now ... but since it's no faster, might as well put it back to the way it was ... so we can use cpupower tools ...
there are some slightly faster xeons out there that are not too expensive ... soon as the wife forgot how much this cost, I'll look for some and sell the ones in it ...
so it's the case that if I run an app that fits that description, only uses a few cores and all others are idle, it looks like it can raise multiplier for up to 6 cores at a time, is that right ?
@bwoebi Eh... not really applicable in general. The days of "newer being faster" have been over for a while. They are better in some way but you may not benefit from it.
Hello . To center a text and div in css i could use .centrer { text-align:center; } but it does not work. Only the old div align=center works. can someone help me know why ?
It would: 1) Add a new interface/new interfaces for string-like types, 2) Make the existing string type implement it, 3) Add a new UnicodeString or UString type which also implements it
@bwoebi Ah, I know. RFC: Year 2000-Ready String Types
@NikiC there's at least three viable ways to look at a UTF-8 string which PHP currently supports: bytes (str* etc.), codepoints (mb_*), extended grapheme clusters (grapheme_*)
@NikiC how about equality? if you don't work with graphemes natively you are doomed to normalize the strings at every use. which is the biggest error i made in my previous version of the thingy
@Andrea dunno. I would counter that you need to actually understand what you are doing in order to use unicode correctly anyway, thus it's better to explicitly state whether you are working with codepoints or graphemes. Bytes should be the default because not all strings are unicode, and strings double up as bytes arrays in PHP anyway.
@Andrea OK, different tack. What is goal(s) of adding "unicode support", whatever that turns out to mean. What is that actual problem that is being solved?
I mean I'm not necessarily targeting you with that question
I don't think I've ever seen such a statement of intent in the context of PHP
@Andrea This is my problem with the whole thing. It's a thing that sounds great and everyone has a reflex reaction of "oh yes, clearly we want that" but it means so many different things to different people and actually I have no clue what it is specifically going to do. Clearly you can't just magically make strlen() "unicode aware" because apart from anything else, is it going to give me codepoints or graphemes?
An objective list of concrete problems is certainly something I would like to have, but also not something I feel like I even know where to start with :-/