You can do it like this:
class Example {
private $__readOnly = 'hello world';
function __get($name) {
if($name === 'readOnly')
return $this->__readOnly;
user_error("Invalid property: " . __CLASS__ . "->$name");
}
function __set($name, $value) {
...
What are the highest number of queries you have ever run in a single execution of a command or page opening? (ex. navigating to a page that runs a lot of queries before presenting data or information.) Any idea? @PeeHaa
@PeeHaa hm, not sure if it's database or code. There a bit of code where it pulls all of the children pages and adds them to the (slowass) page. I can't imagine that's doing well for performance...
I wonder if I can write a sample page that does what this page does, and test the speed that way, instead of including the microtime functions inside this file
@PeeHaa I have a table that stores the staff, their usernames for this system, as well as from another database in another system, activation status, and a missed_goal_flag. I have another table that stores their daily goals (each day is different), weekly goals, monthly goals, plus the team's weekly goal, and monthly goals...
I have a table that stores their personal records (production stats) for gamification. And a table storing their raw production data.
One of the tricky things is we're on a 4-4-5 calendar month, aka a retail calendar. So October for us starts on September 30th and ends on October 27th.
Our next 6 week December is in 2020- I have one section of code that I did right after our last interval that I basically skipped factoring that in that I have to go back and add in in 2019. =/
@StatikStasis Yeah it always amazes me the things businesses / industries can come up with sometimes even actually make sense for them and their business
It's so that every month starts on a Sunday and ends on a Saturday. So that when comparing this year to last year you are not comparing a month that ended strong on a Saturday versus a month that ended weak on a Tuesday or something.
"The 4-5-4 Calendar, which is widely followed by retailers today, was derived in the 1930’s during an informal inter-industry discussion. Prior to and during the 1930’s, retailers used a straight calendar to report monthly sales."
"This calendar became problematic as Saturdays and Sundays became an increasingly large percentage of sales, since the number of weekends in a month varied year to year."
The 6 week month: "Due to the layout of the 4-5-4 Calendar (52 weeks x 7 days = 364 days), which results in one remaining day each year, and the occurrence of Leap Year, it is sometimes necessary to add a 53rd week to the end of the calendar for sales reporting purposes only. This occurs approximately every five to six years"
@Tpojka I'm not terribly proud of this- but I didn't want to be bothered with creating a class at the time for calculating the start and end dates of each week for a given month, while factoring in whether it was going to be a 4 or 5 week month- or even a 6 week month. So I just created a table and put all of the dates in there for the whole year. // cc: @PeeHaa
I add in the dates for the next fiscal year towards the end of each year.
It's on a to-do list... that is several years old now. =/
@PeeHaa That's good to hear! I felt like I was being lazy... well I am. But it was the easiest thing to do at the time so I can get started on the functionality.
@PeeHaa When I look at that task id on my list I have thought about progressing a little bit by just creating a button I could hit that would take the dates from the last entry in that table and generate the next month for me so I don't have to manually do it.
@PeeHaa I'm going to pretend I didn't read this and have the mindset that "Well- one of the PHP contributors said he would have done the same thing so..."
@PeeHaa HA! I've actually built into any parts of the codes that use dates to handle execution properly if a date range is not in the table- in case I'm on vacation and forget. I think it reads out something like "Statik is an idiot- please call him."
@StatikStasis 6-7(10?) tables on page through 7-8 queries with lot of joins on page as far as I remember. I remember there is some query every 20-30 lines of code. It was years ago.
Not 100% but something like this. If I find that code I'll check, worked on old machine and I am not sure of source if available. It was PHPBB plus some add-ons/modules as like/liked for posts etc maybe something more.
though, looking at the C code, I'm not sure which of these do the formal definition for the function
@StatikStasis I plan to. "It says here you've committed to the PHP source... what'd you do...?" "Oh...you know...bug fixes...tothegrammarinthecomments..."
@Tiffany Ah. See I don't have the luxury of code reviews. The shit I work with (not to say I don't put out more shit but hopefully its less shitty) is type and publish. No checks.
@Tiffany I'm not to good at that. Maybe I should take a lesson. :)
@JBis as long as you're not working on a team where politics reign, you have to have the mentality of working together as part of that team. Acting like your code is better than someone else's will make you appear arrogant and people will not like working with you.
@JBis learn humility ;)
being humiliated several times helps... I have firsthand experience with that
@Tiffany Sorta. He started on top and I climbed ranks eventually working side by side and then taking over the project, he asked for help on something and I offered to teach him. Fortunately, he did not seem unhappy.
@Tiffany Mentally? No, I don't think so. Although it depends how you measure it. Do I think I know more about PHP? Probably. But that doesn't make me 'mentally superior`. And there are plenty (basically anyone in this chat) of people who know 10x more than me.
What I'm getting at is don't let your head get bigger than it should. It is easy for it to happen when you're not used to keeping at a certain point. I was egotistical and proud growing up. I had to unlearn this (to some degree).
@JBis I feel that people have differing strong areas. For example, I know a lot about computers. My sister does not know as much. However, she's does really well at socializing with other people, I fail at this.
I've learned social skills, but I am not a natural at it. She is.
No, not offended. I find it humorous. A lot of my in-person social characteristics can be drilled down to that diagnosis. I've had to learn coping mechanisms for it so that it doesn't negatively affect my job and work.
@Tiffany I don't believe that all are mentally equivalent. And if that is true then a comparison can be made in which one will be superior and another inferior (or equivalent ov). If one makes that comparison, while it may make someone feel bad (as people value mental abilities), that does not make it false. But having the superior mindset may lead to negative things, such as that person not liking you/feeling bad.
Or vice versa, a person may not try if they think they are inferior.
@JBis I have felt superior to people, but I've had to learn that people are different, and people have a variety of strengths and weaknesses. Where I can write code (though it's bad), I can't do a back flip. It's a matter of valuing people for their strengths, and supporting them through their weaknesses. Don't have a "me vs them" attitude.
And I know, there are times my behavior in chat is counter to what what I said. I strive to be like that, but I'm not perfect. When I'm having a bad day, it sometimes feels good to take it out on another person, and I shouldn't do that.
I've never had a tattoo or piercing. I've wanted some over the course of my life, but ultimately didn't. Tattoos last forever, and I can't think of anything I'd like to have on my body permanently
I've considered numbers of pi
my sister has a tattoo on her wrist of our mother's signature. I really like it. She got it shortly after our mom passed away.
Apart from formalities, I'm finished with university now and looking for some interesting work... Feel free to contact me at [email protected]. My main interest is in compiler and performance work, as well as Rust.