I was, now listening ... I don't get to listen when I play really, it's been coming out like this for about three days now first thing in the morning, so I thought I'd hit record ...
it's not an arrangement so to speak ... I don't know what I played, I don't remember
I mean obviously, I know roughly what it looks like, but I remember none of the details of what I just played ... I have to listen, which I don't really do much ...
I don't know nothing about typed properties so ... unless something has fundamentally changed under the hood, PHP has no concept of variable declaration. Thus, uninitialized, and not set, are one and the same.
It has changed (or more accurately was brought to the fore) with typed properties. Attempting to access a typed property which has been defined but not initialized triggers a fatal error
Specifically, the ZVAL has an additional flag on it called IS_PROP_UNINIT, the comment is:
/* Properties store a flag distinguishing unset and uninitialized properties * (both use IS_UNDEF type) in the Z_EXTRA space. As such we also need to copy * the Z_EXTRA space when copying property default values etc. We define separate * macros for this purpose, so this workaround is easier to remove in the future. */
@beberlei I'm sure it would have some uses, although with 8.0 and typed unions I wouldn't be trying to pull the workaround of wanting to use PROP_UNINIT as a quasi-union type to see if I needed to initialize a property which could be a null
wiki.php.net/rfc/use_global_elements - why? I mean, it would maybe make sense to have built-in functions be "superglobal" (i.e. strlen, in any namespace is always \strlen() (namespace overrides are horrible hacks :-D))
I didn't have to, I just hit zend_std_read_property instead. The mechanism involved would be functionally identical. The only difference would be the past the uninit_error label
@Sherif you rub me wrong this morning i don't know with the way you reply it feels very rude to me, but you forget that the difference between PHP and C is an order of magnitude, independent of I/O or anything else. please be a little more kind.
@Sherif yes it loops al entries in "one" bucket. which is usually of the size 1, so it doesn't loop at all. please read up on how hash maps work before lecturing me: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hash_table
I'm torn, but I don't think I can get behind arbitrary order resolution order for class vs function lookup, unless I missed something in that RFC? I think having them different is just confusing.
I am using google translate to translate from english to spanish using following URL pastebin.com/wJ1vbZjd but using curl and file_get_contents() it is not working.. any suggestion?
I looked at using the standard read property but on an unitialized error it's delivering back the global uninitialized value from executor globals, so would have to copy-pasta the entire function and return the flag instead
Anyone have any guesses on why Wordpress won't run a scripts.js file in a HTML5Blank theme? I have a feeling it has to do with the functions.php file, but I've checked the script enqueues many times and can't find the culprit.
Surely they don't care about any other languge than c++ in their. Hell I am pretty sure they don't care about anything you say and just want to tell you your face is bad and you should feel bad :P
@NikiC yeah, you get pretty quickly to the point where you are confused with copy ctors, move ctors ... then you start to sort of understand what they do, but you still don't know when to use them except the compiler yells at you ... and then at some point you get that as well - at least that was sort of what I had most issues to cope with.
It's all about encapsulation of state, that's the shortest possible definition of my understanding of "OO". Everything else is just detail which is open to interpretation and doesn't have a Right Way To Do Itâ„¢
When I was designing a scripting language from scratch for my thesis project, I remember having this moment when I added the overloaded assignment operators to my Variant (equiv of zval) class... and everything became so much neater.
@Derick that's sounds like a subtitled video, just turn them into a srt file and make a video with them burned in, ffmpeg can do it, vlc gives you a GUI that prevents you having to build the mad-ass command line yourself
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I think someone of you knows this gif where a guy wants to change a lamp and then nothing does work and he ends up repairing his car. I'm not able to find it right now, can anyone help?
Hi! Does anyone happen to know, when I have an \public_html\.htaccess file and then a sub-folder has another one \public_html.htaccess\subfolder\.htaccess, does the subfolder's htaccess replace the other one "completely", or are only the directives I specify the subfolder, replaced?
(does my question even make sense? i've been staring at this screen far too long) 😜
@PeeHaa oooohhhh, setting "php_flag display_errors off" in .htaccess basically overrides my usage of ini_set('display_errors', '1'); within the .php file, for example if I forget a [damn] semicolon somewhere.
(or I suppose it's actually that my PHP file isn't runnng at all (because of the missing semicolon), so ini_set('display_errors', '1'); isn't running at all....(returning only a blank page)
so i can't see that type of error if i want that folder to default to hiding errors. i think i get it now.