Then you have (or had) antibodies, but there are indicatiosn these trail off fairly quickly. But that doesn't mean you can't be immune due to memory-T-cells.
@Alesana There is only anecdotal evidence for that to happen.
The really tricky part about it is that it is a respiratory AND bloodborne disease. So once it moves from your lungs to your bloodstream, it can do all kinds of seemingly random damage. That's why the symptoms are so varied.
@Derick I don't like masks. They cut off my oxygen so I can't breathe. I was wearing one in walmart and I started hyperventilating because I wasn't getting enough oxygen. Ended up fainting, the ambulance got there pretty quick but they didn't save me in time so I ended up passing away. My family is pretty upset about it.
@SalOrozco The GOP isn't even pretending that they're planning for a fair election. They've said openly their goal is to steal it. The only question is whether they'll manage to steal it effectively.
I learned something new and useful right now there is a constraint in SQL named check .. very useful to avoid inserting non-expected data in the database
Has anyone ever gotten any refurbished laptops from Apple? It looks like they're much much cheaper and have a one year warranty. I'm wondering if there's any downsides
@brzuchal no, there's a distinction between statement, inner statement and top level statement
statement can be applied in if() ...;, inner statement requires an actual block and top level statement needs to be at the very top level, not within any block
and classes are such inner statements
@brzuchal to be more precise, to be acceptable within if(...) without brackets, your statements needs to be semicolon terminated
@user123456789 Looking at php-src, it looks like that exception is declared but never thrown. github.com/php/php-src/… But you should be able to see in the stacktrace where it is thrown.
@user123456789 E.g. here. You can see what file/line throws the exception (Uncaught BadFunctionCallException in yourfile.php:9)
OK, php-src newbie question. I'm looking at what I think is the source for array_diff_*() in array.c. It looks like all of the array_diff_*() functions fold into a single C function, I think. But the parameter name is nowhere to be found. There is no array1, array2, etc. So... where are those defined? They must exist somewhere since there are tests for them, but... where?
I see basic_functions.stub.php, which has them there. Is that it?
(Context: I want to rename them to something more logical in preparation for named params.)
I think I just need standard, but is there a reason to not just compile everything for later? I presume that means I need to re-configure if I work on anything not in core/standard then, yes?
Though I suppose given how "make clean" happy I am...
After hunting a 1.5 MiB memory regression in ddtrace, it appears that the cause is that I deleted some PHP code. Yes, by deleting some PHP code I somehow use 1.5 MiB more memory.
There's technically a tiny bit of room in the bisect for it to be something else, but if it is something else it's also obscure...
To be clear, it's pure deletions of dead code, code that isn't run.