That's not a good answer at all. I don't think you even can do this with Eloquent without building a separate class for that pivot table and doing a ton of translation.
You're using Eloquent and your DB schema is terrible.
To give an explanation, they wanted to tie one user account to multiple buildings (they're tenants). Inside each building, they want to allow the staff members to change the name of the user, but not affect the name throughout the whole system, only within that one building.
So, because the relation is there, I thought i'd plug it in there, and not have to create a new table.
why does it give me a Warning: PDO::prepare() expects parameter 2 to be array, null given in /var/www/Vitopia/vendor/ocramius/proxy-manager/src/ProxyManager/GeneratorStrategy/EvaluatingGeneratorStrategy.php(68) : eval()'d code on line 32
so, when the default argument could not be found, it uses null https://github.com/zendframework/zend-code/blob/6b1059db5b368db769e4392c6cb6cc139e56640d/src/Generator/ParameterGenerator.php#L81 if i'm not wrong. which doesn't work well if the parameter declaration is: (Array $array = []) (remember, the default argument cannot be retrieved)
in that case you can't pass null to it, only array, or no argument
$obj = new class($dsn, $user, $password) extends PDO{
function prepare($a, $b = []){ return parent::prepare($a, $b); }
};
@CoderDudeTwodee this should fix it imho
clearly it should be solved by making the default argument of builtin functions available in reflection
but in case @Ocramius wants to solve it userland, he can do it with that thing i created :B
lemme know if it worked @CoderDudeTwodee
actually, i think i didn't solve that problem with the arguments() thing
already forgot everything about it :(
yeah now i recall, i tried but there was no solution
on that note, we might consider allowing class Foo{ public function xxx(int $x){} } class Bar extends Foo{ public function xxx(){} } cc @kelunik @pmmaga
the declaration in bar::xxx is contravariantly valid
Just Jenny Wong (miss_jwo) who I like very much and want to continue following, but she live tweets all the talks she's in at any conference she goes to, which completely saturates my timeline, usually with stuff I don't give a crap about
she's done it for ages and a lot of people follow here specifically for that, so I'm not going to complain to her about it, I'd just like to be able to silence here over a conference weekend and automatically unsilence her after so I don't forget
@SaitamaSama Yeh I'd just like to take that element out of it
i have had use cases though. for example when i do wrappers:
function override(...$args){
return $this->wrappee->override(...$args);
}
the type checks are not necessary because i'm delegating to the same type, but more importantly, i can't be arsed to type them twice :D
The point of widening is that you might want to genuinely accept a larger set of inputs, not that you still have exactly the same type constraints and are too lazy to spell them out
.@AMD I haven't bought any of your hardware for more than ten years, and this sort of crap is why ... What the fuck is the point in a RAID array that can only be recognized by the controller that created it, don't you see how dumb that is? ... You get what you pay for @AMDRyzen
I ask because I have have implemented encode/decode for those but missing a lot of other rn, I'm assuming that typically very few applications do anything more than resolve()
Just want to test this code against a real-ish application
I will obviously be implementing everything as it was before release
more, in fact
one thing that you specifically might find useful actually @kelunik is that it will now be trivial for me to implement CAA
previously it wasn't because the typedef system was ridiculous
I think of Italian men in expensive suits with expensive cigarettes riding scooters and saying "ciao" to attractive ladies with unshaven armpits, not face-down in a plate of chicken
Infact @DaveRandom based on what u said about "Typically you would need to set it to a specific value rather than clearing it and even if you did need to do that, setting it in php.ini is probably a bad place to do it" Its a goner. Not just commented out, Gone!! Thanks. Also got my PHP7.2 setup on my live shared hosting site
I think the only time I have ever needed to set user_agent to a specific value is when scraping google search results, because they don't give you UTF-8 unless you look like a browser
also maybe some wikimedia API requires it I think?
which places me at about .01% of what anyone on shared hosting takes advantage of which in turn places me MILES ahead of the competition. Espec with being PHP7 now.
which you have been very instrumental in. (Not sure if you saw the drama laden post I posted yesterday) and I appreciate your help. Thanks a ton. Not everyone is cool here and Im one to always speak up for whats right See aforementioned post
I mean like if I define a class full of constants that point to constants in lots of other classes, loading the top-level class doesn't cause every other class to be loaded
I'm actually going to invert this anyway for other reasons, just wondered
If I have two methods evaluating constant expressions, one doing so directly (may throw Errors or warnings) and one converting all errors and warnings to a certain exception type, what do I call those methods?
@CoderDudeTwodee I was in the same vote, until I got tired of the 17 inch screen. Work is so much easier on the eyes on a desktop. And .. my bad habit, I tend to sit on the couch or bed with the tv infront when on laptop. Desk seems to be like "ok.. it's work time"
@Darius Well, I like to sit on the bed and work on the laptop. Sitting on a desk for more than 30 minutes gives a hard time to my butt.
:P
How do you check for errors like non-unique insertion in a unique column from pdo exceptions? Do you read the error code? Also, how do you get which column it is referring to?