is it possible to use a similar method with something like for_each to see if it matches?
or.. I just realised, what if I selected the entire original statement and use ["nameImComparingFor"] and if it returns undefined, Ill continue the operation
Thanks for the if statement help, Ill use this and see what I can come up with
I am 100mph until (I'm guessing) ~3 days into lockdown, whenever that happens, then I am hoping to get some of the stuff done that hasn't been getting done for years
there will be a bit of dribbly idiot mouth wiping for a few days
@JBis No, I just didn't expect it to be that complicated. The problem seems deceptively simple at first. It's just a sorting problem. But then you realize all the edge cases.
@Tay I highly advise you to not try auth until you have more experience and learn what hashes are, how they work, and other secruity concerns. I'd suggest looking at owasp/
well, ive gone this far with the JSON writer, and I want a JSON writer for an online api that Im going to start working on soon. so I might as well finish this one first
@DaveRandom I tried implementing your solution into the project, and Im getting a wierd error about using a string offset as an array? repl.it/@skylerspark/CWS-CDN
PHP has a lot of stuff to help you out with things like that, a lot of the time there is a kitchen sink function that does 50 line of java in one fcall
@Tay file_get_contents() does what it says on the tin... opens a file, reads it into a string and closes it. You don't get an fd to work with, but if all you want to do is read the data from a file it saves you a lot of code. There's also file_put_contents() which writes a string to a file "atomically" (from PHP's perspective), in general they make for much more readable code unless you really actually need a handle to work with in several steps
> PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Amp\Socket\SocketException: Could not send packet on endpoint: stream_socket_sendto(): The requested address is not valid in its context.
really triple sanity check that you are dumping out the right things though, and not accidentally dereferencing false instead of 1 from an array, for example
(which is a thing I did yesterday so it's fresh in my mind :-P)
@DaveRandom Sorry to bug ya, I tried moving that merge forEach into a seperate function for multiple uses (Im going to be using several different JSON files)
And after a ton of bullcrap, I thought I had fixed all the errors. And I did, however, now its setting the json file to NULL https://repl.it/@skylerspark/CWS-CDN
@Tay I suspect the person who just said they're about to work for 15 hours after just finishing their normal days work, isn't likely going to take a look at random stuff that needs debugging.
this is something I dont think I can solve though... If I clear the JSON file, and click run, it works perfectly, but if I run it again, it deletes the inputs 1by1
@Danack He was the one who gave me the snippet, Im still a little confused on how it works
@Andrea I've vaguely read it, but one idea I have is that since now all RFCs need a 2/3 threshold to pass. We maybe could change the "cool off" period for RFCs which is currently 6 months
As in if an RFC has between 1/3 and 2/3 it's considered "contentious" and needs more work so that the author can work on it again and throw it back into a vote/discussion period quicker
@MidnightlyCoder Nevermind, I found the bug. I was using value instead of sort so for things like 10, J, Q, K, it was considering it a tie when it wasn't.