@NikiC @bwoebi I've been using Python for my algorithms class and I wonder if we could adopt a package/module style similar to theirs. Namespaces are sort-of defined by the library author but the real namespacing comes into effect by the user when a package/module is imported.
I'm not sure how if we could feasibly migrate to such a solution; have either of you thought about this sort of thing recently?
I know it's been a perpetual wish-list item but have you seriously considered it? If so what challenges did you find?
@LeviMorrison in Python each module has own symbol table, there is also one merged symbol table not split like in PHP and in Python import with * imports everything what package vendor put into __all__ this is cool, but other cool feature is import don't allow importing symfbols with _ prefix because this is official prefic for private stuff and that's awesome :)
I would love to see import * and private symbols in PHP, can help somehow also
But AFAIR the problem for PHP is lack of context info which can be used to forbid usage of some symbols in VM, or something like that
@A-O Here is almost the same in JS: (you can use the same pattern in PHP)
var x = /^[^a-zA-Zآ-ی]*[a-zA-Z]/; // is ascii
var isAscii = x.test($("#textarea-edit-"+post_id_for_edit).val());
if(isAscii){
$("#textarea-edit-"+post_id_for_edit).css("direction", "ltr");
} else {
$("#textarea-edit-"+post_id_for_edit).css("direction", "rtl");
}
No......the ph scale is more about whether something has free protons available in it, or if it can accept free protons. 7 is where those two values are zero.
@tereško so, after (somewhat) extensive testing with removing most pieces, I am pretty sure the mobo is fried. Do you have a current manufacturer preference for mobos? I've mostly ever used Asus and as such have a superstitious disdain of other ones, and might need some convincing.
well... newegg replacement policy lasts 30 days. Back to asrock support for me. At least they said they would contact them on my behalf if they still don't answer.
Most of the time the reputable companies do respond eventually. I had a video capture card from Black Magic that was a week past their 1 year warranty period. They tried to troubleshoot it with me before having me mail it to them. They sent me another one a week later no questions asked.
I find just continuing to be nice while be firming usually works better.
Reason being is if you're talking to an associate who doesn't care and you piss them off, they're usually going to see how little they can assist you.
If I do get mad at them or have a more angry tone I usually follow that up with "I know this isn't your fault, please forgive me for taking this out on you- this is just very frustrating. I loved this product and I am hoping to at the end of this have a good experience." Usually they'll start moving mountains- if it's possible.
OH MY... I think I have seen photos of this guy but never video. This is just... stupid. Guy turns himself into real Ken doll... I cannot understand. youtube.com/watch?v=_WRQRNkpDh4?x
@Aurelius free hint: don't use mail() function. It's a low level function. Instead use a mailing library, SwiftMailer (if you use composer) or PHPMailer (if on legacy)
@Shafizadeh it means: if your are not using composer to keep your dependencies up to date and the coder is not using DI containers
@Aurelius it means that it write raw email content. There there is no simple way to make sure that headers are properly set, no address injection protection, no simple way to add attachments. You can do all of it with mail() but you need to actually have a deep understanding if how email are constructed, transmitted and handled to use it correctly.
@Shafizadeh "legacy" (as in inherited, old) :D
and, no, @Shafizadeh don't just jump on changing that right now
if you get time, you can revisit it later
at it as a low priority ticket somewhere in backlog
This may sound like a stupid question, but: which is faster when using it to extract keywords in a search query in php:
$keyword = preg_split('/[\s]+/', $_GET['search']);
or
$keyword = explode(' ', $_GET['search']);
class Foo {}
class_alias('Foo', 'Bar');
interface I {} // Delay early binding
class A implements I {
//public function test(Foo $foo) {}
public Foo $prop;
}
class B extends A {
//public function test(Bar $foo) {}
public Bar $prop;
}
@bwoebi ^
Currently this errors, but the same works for parameter types
We have assert.exception default to 0, which seems useless when doing assert($condition, new CustomException()); That option didn't exist in PHP 5 so there's no need for compatible errors in this case.
:/
I wonder how many installations leave it at 0; probably nearly all of them...
Basically, that option should have only applied to old-style asserts, and the new style should always throw if assertions are enabled...
Well I got a fun "feature", SF4, supports argon2i, new registrations are argon2i properly, but when using a fixture (dummy data) it encodes password as argon2id which isn't supported yet.