@JoeWatkins it is behaving differently. When I set it inside, the strlen function is being called, but the mapped cufa is not called. When I set it in rinit, then everything is working fine. It would be good if PHP can support disabling compiler only for certain functions and leave the rest out as it is.
okay, given this snippet of code
private function select(string $key, string ...$keys): Model
{
\array_unshift($keys, $key);
foreach($keys as &$key)
{
$key = \preg_replace_callback('/([a-zA-Z]+)\((.*)\)/', function($match){
return \sprintf('%s(%s)', $match[1], $this->...
@LeviMorrison For PHP whatever. I went to an Angular MeetUp there that was a super good format. They'd have a beginner, intermediate, and sometimes an expert talk every week.
you need exclusive access to an object function __construct(){ $this->foo = new Foo(); } but you want to do dependency injection: function __construct(Foo $foo){ $this->foo = $foo; }
that means, don't touch $foo from the outside
there should be a way to deny this by design in the language
java etc all use what's known as "mod count" and it's a shitty solution. for example if i remember correctly Map map1 = new HashMap(...) Map map2 = ___.synchronizedMap(map); map1.put(1,1);
if you do this it errors,,, "concurrent modification error" or something like that
basically map2 counts how many times map1 was changed
and if it notices that it was changed more than expected, it throws that error
it's a super crap solution but i don't see alternatives
tl;dr oop sucks
not that other paradigms are better :B
composition is nice in theory, but you can't really do it because of problems like this
So question. If I have a User entity, and the user has an address. How do you link those two so when I retrieve the user it comes with the address too?