@ircmaxell somewhat true … and it probably wouldn't be even that hard to migrate all of PHP to NSS while maintaining a compatibility wrapper for the current openssl functions
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I didn't meant it should be handled by how much pressure it is on you to do it. But by merit of content, public opinion should be measured in but it should not be a definite deciding factor.
... an awful lot of people are not offended by Trump inviting Kim Kardashian for a photo shoot in the white house.
@mega6382 that... is even worse? Thought policing is like... a terrible slippery slope? What about the intention of the offended people crying out loud?
I mean, a lot of them probably have very violent thoughts about the people making these games. Those thoughts should be allowed?
@FélixGagnon-Grenier people often get offended by a simple satire content. You can't rely on people for that. The opinions of public I am talking about goes more towards the inappropriateness of content rather than offensiveness of it. And inappropriateness in sense that was not intended and are completely appropriate where the author is. But might not be somewhere else. So, that should be handled locally to that region.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier But any kind of content that was deliberately and intentionally made to be hateful and offensive, should be acted upon by the distributor
@mega6382 I think that's close to allowing users to create their "region", in which they will not see content that they deem inappropriate, yes? I do believe that is what steam intend to allow?
@mega6382 I'm not sure what I think about that. On one hand, it sounds good, on the other hand, it most definitely is thought policing, and I am against that.
unless everyone is subjected to it, and users who are hateful to game creators get banned.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier obviously, something like that should also be a part of it.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier Of course, there should be a protocol and procedure to it, and a line of communication should be opened between the distributor and creator, before any action is taken.
I agree with the steam article I read, that they will not enforce angry mobs bidding, and allow users to filter what they do not want to see, and block games that they feel are "illegal" / greatly incorrect
... as for the school shooting game, is that exists, I wish Kevin from texas would not suddenly improvise themselves great psychiatrists and decide that game will encourage anything
For all we know, or is studied, it could actually serve as outlet for people that would be susceptible to it
Is there a sane way to test that an array of objects is sorted by one of the objects property already in PHPUnit?
I'm doing a usort on the array and then comparing it on the original......which I guess should work, but has a terrible output when there is a problem.
@Danack Aren't you essentially repeating whatever logic you use to actually sort the array then?
Use a fixture that is the correct order, and one that is not where both arrays have copies of the same objects in them. Run the code that sorts it on the unsorted array and then compare the fixtures.
@Allenph no - the initial results are sorted by the DB. I also am doing two queries, and the first set should all be strictly 'before' the second set, with each set also ordered correctly.
@Allenph the code is doing the ordering in the DB query, because it has to, to be able to retrieve paged sets of items. So the code I put above is almost right, except for I need to match the cmp algorithm used by mysql.
I still don't see why you wouldn't use DBUnit, a fixture and manually build a control.
Then you can just use straight up assertEquals and add cases to your fixture as they come up instead of coming up with an algorithm that hopefully emulates what you were testing in the first place.
If it's running your code on the remote system, a local test should be fine. If it's not running your code, it sounds like a large helping of not your problem.
you'll probably need to tune the error message a bit. atm it's something like "failed to assert that the elements at offset 3 with key "key1" and "key1" are considered equal"
but after i read the previous messages i'm not sure anymore that's going to help you
usage is TestCase::assertThat($actual, new SortedConstraint($expected));
Anyone know where Jetbrains stores its setting for the JDK version to use? It keeps changing the setting from using JDK9 to JDK11 after an IDE update, and then breaks the UI. =o(
part of an SQL select query: replace(replace(replace(replace(administrators.level, 1, "Admin"), 2, "Super User"), 3, "Moderator"), 4, "Basic"), did I do this wrong?
or should I use something other than nesting replace()s?
the code accounts for the numbers and names of roles in the application, but trying to pull a list of users and wanted to include their level of access. Too lazy to create a whole new table for it.
Using annotations for anything other than documentation seems like a bad idea to me.
Including in tests. I think it's strange that we rely on inheritance and annotation for out tests when the things we're testing are built with DI in mind in order to be tested.
Guys, as a unrelevent thing, tonight is qadr night .. the most great night in the year .. we muslims believe people's fate will be specified tonight for the next year.. you can read more about it.
@Allenph you mean like Doom, Civ6, Stellaris, Age of Wonders 3, Borderlands 2, Shadow of Mordor, XCom2, Saints Row 4, Bioshock Infinite, Divinity: Original Sin, Metro: Last Light, Tomb Raider, Deus Ex: Mankind Divided?
and that's only the things that I actually have in my library
My algorithm design and analysis course ends in 2 weeks. I'll take a short mental break and then start working on covariant return types and contravariant parameter types.
What are you guys talking about with covariant return types and contravariant return types. When I Google I see examples in Java...and the examples seem to be talking about inheritance, but in PHP you don't need anything special for covariant return types because you can override a parent class anyways, right?
@LeviMorrison pnw is "pacific north west" (I believe it's very good), phpnw is (was) the UK one held in Manchester, last year was the 10th and this year will not be the 11th, although I hope that a couple of years off will put the guys in the mood to do it again
Ahh. Gotcha. I probably never noticed that because when I started strongly typing directly coincided with a complete lack of inheritance in my code. Thanks Levi.
If X and Y both implement T, and T::method() returns type T then X::method() and Y::method() should be able to specify that they return T or something more specific, such as X or Y.
@Danack Which I voted no one because I wanted it to be explicit rather than "oops, forgot a type".