To make matters worse, I am working on a wordpress site that is supposed to work like accounting software accountants and clients ... and ... it was initially made in India. @MadaraUchiha
at this point, I will invite you to get your beef up with the doc
> Returns a resultset for successful SELECT queries, or FALSE for other DML queries or on failure. The mysqli_errno() function can be used to distinguish between the two types of failure.
and I would have told you that about 30 min ago, if some fucking snowflake hadn't got offended by telling a stupid asshole to use a cactus rectally, because he suggested, that OOP can be added by "using MVC framework"
exception 'mysqli_sql_exception' with message 'No index used in query/prepared statement UPDATE users SET Confirmed='1' WHERE Name=?' in D:\XAMPP\htdocs\onlineShop\update_confirm_status.php:22 Stack trace: #0 D:\XAMPP\htdocs\onlineShop\update_confirm_status.php(22): mysqli_stmt->execute() #1 {main}
probably the object oriented
this is the db_connect if you can clarify to me what is written: https://paste.ofcode.org/v77RdtqX2Tz9R3VdsN9358
@ThW @tereško can you please explain more or give a link i can read about? i have a key of the table which is the id and the name,pass,email are not given to indexing
does indexing mean there can't be twice the same value?
@Gordon The contact form system is already built, it uses rot13, I'm not planning to change it. My intention is to make this easier for people so they stop putting email addresses on the website.
exception 'mysqli_sql_exception' with message 'No index used in query/prepared statement UPDATE users SET Confirmed='1' WHERE Name=?' in D:\XAMPP\htdocs\onlineShop\update_confirm_status.php:22 Stack trace: #0 D:\XAMPP\htdocs\onlineShop\update_confirm_status.php(22): mysqli_stmt->execute() #1 {main}
one thing that's concerning me at present is that normal class entries seem to be implicitly declared, whereas enums always result in actual DECLARE_CLASS opcodes. not sure why. I think there's a second pass that removes them maybe, and it's ignoring my enums for some reason.
possibly opcache is broken for DECLARE_CLASS in some cases
@shadowhand You can't pass a function name as a "callable" value. When you pass that to the function b() you are passing the constant because there is no option to pass the function in this way.
Anyway, @shadowhand, function names don't work as symbols the way you seem to be thinking they do (i.e. like a language where functions are first-class objects). Since the function name cannot be resolved in this way, it looks for a constant -- which it finds -- and all hums along.
Nah, I realize you mean the signal in response to faults caused by the runtime. It just looks at a glance like the OS is just like, "YOU GET A SEGFAULT, AND YOU GET A SEGFAULT, EVERYBODY GETS A SEGFAULT!"