dave do you remember when our parents bought computers like they would solve all the accounting problems at home and sorta stuff, but at most what they did was running a couple of games
@Wes I knew a mathematician (well, physicist gone rogue) who bought one of these super small laptops. He'd walk around in the corridor, laptop on one palm and typing with the other hand, deep in thought. It looked funny.
reminds me something... is there a way to know how many keyboard buttons i can press at the same time and still work? i have an old logitech keyboard on my tv and i realized i can't play gta online on it, because if i press like more than 4 buttons at once, it doesn't work
Whenever I play a PC game with the directional keys, I can only press two buttons at a time. For instance if I am playing a shooter like R-Type, I cannot hold down the fire button while moving diagonally at the same time. The computer simply ignores the extra button press.
How do I remove this...
@Wes there are very old programs out there that will allow you to check...this used to be a problem for multiplayer games on one computer - but maybe online will be good enough: keyboardchecker.com
@cmb yeah, I've mainly did them as suggestions as they were already meaningful. The main change I asked was keeping the indentation consistent with the other translations
and I've asked him to squash. Will probably need to ping you/someone else here once it is ready to merge
@User99 I have answered your question. Why do you keep reposting it. I think this is the fifth time you have reposted the same question. What was wrong with my solution? Please, do not abuse Stack Overflow
@User99 If you are new to PHP and SQL then I don't think you should be asking questions on Stack Overflow. Please take some online courses and read some tutorials.
You keep putting XAMPP in the tags even though the question has nothing to do with it
Also, your titles are terrible. Title should describe the problem so that other people can find it. Don't tell us that you have a problem or a question, this is why you are presumably here already.
Sorry, about the confusing comment under your question, I posted under a wrong question
If you are only starting to learn PHP then you should learn PDO instead of mysqli. PDO is much easier and more suitable for beginners. Start here phpdelusions.net/pdo
@Dharman Is there a backup for that? I know its wrong, but there are still way way too many people still stuck on php 5. I think it should be moved but not removed
there's an archive, similar to how there was before with PHP 4
question regarding git and squashing. While doing an interactive rebase, I see "squash <commit> = use commit, but meld into previous commit." To clarify, if I want to meld older commits into a newer commit, would I put squash next to the old commits I want to meld, and leave pick next to the last commit I wish to meld into?
it does help, but it's awkward because the newest commit is at the bottom, so I would be squashing newer commits into an older commit, and rewording the commit message of an older commit, which feels wrong
huh, it doesn't matter, it'll prompt me to change the commit message anyway in the next screen, and the hash is changed as well
I'm messing around with a throwaway repo to get a better understanding of how to use this correctly, so I'm making random junk commits in a repo
but the git book already explains this, so I should've just read further 😶
> Notice the reverse order. The interactive rebase gives you a script that it’s going to run. It will start at the commit you specify on the command line (HEAD~3) and replay the changes introduced in each of these commits from top to bottom. It lists the oldest at the top, rather than the newest, because that’s the first one it will replay.
expunging PHP 5 I know is okay, but not sure if the changes should only be done by PR for now, or if it's okay to remove directly from SVN, since 8 is out
IMO, everything should have a PR so someone can review it first. I realize not everyone may agree with me on that position, of course. But I don't trust a single pair of eyes.
When making a new object, I don't see a reason to forbid changes. And if the property is private/protected then you could only reset it via with internally anyway, so you're no worse off than you are today.
@Girgias I have made enough dumb typos of my own over the years^W months^W days that I don't trust me or anyone else to get something right the first time. :-) At Platform, even a spelling fix to our docs goes through a PR and someone else merges it. (Though we don't have the svn dance, so it's easier for someone else to do the merge.)
@Crell It depends. What's the main motivation for initonly? I'd argue it's to allow exposing properties publicly without having to worry about them getting mutated. But if we allow mutation anyway that kinda goes out the window.
Yeah I know it's not "mutation". But you could still allow creating objects in a potentially invalid state that a library might not want to have to deal with. Because at that point any public initonly property could be anything.
@IluTov That looks like an excellent argument for asymmetric visibility. :-)
But yeah, it only works when the properties could reasonably be modified independently of each other. if not, you need to use methods like we do today.
It has to be writeable in the constructor and deserialization at least, or the object doesn't even work. And that then makes with-er methods infeasible, which makes it a no-go in my mind.
The alternative would be to force with-ing to go through the constructor again. Something like:
$p2 = new Point(y: 5, ..$p1); // That's what Rust does.
But then that only works for properties that are also constructor args.
@Danack I'll try to experiment with unlocking during __clone() as soon as I have some rest and my personal life calms down. :) And I actually started implementing the "with" stuff , although I haven't gone too far with it yet.
tbh, I don't like with at least in part because it's new and different, and I fear change. But also, it feels like you're trying to work around 'unlocking' the immutability of te objects properties on clone, for aesthetic reasons, and then keep suggesting 'with' as better. But I'm still not hearing an answer to the question of "what's wrong with unlocking the mutability during a clone call?"
aka inventing a new syntax, when there is a much simpler alternative, smells like the wrong thing.
I mean I think making __clone basically similar to __construct ni the sense that you're creating a new object and any immutability rules do not apply would make the most sense to me IMHO
The fundamental question is, do we actually need clone for objects with initonly? For value objects it's probably going to be trivial to just create a new object with new. For service objects allowing to change any public property seems like a bad idea to me.
@Danack Allowing mutation during clone seems like a reasonable approach to me. Because that will happen inside the class and be in the control of its author.
@IluTov It would only work if clone() took parameters, as in my last gist. But then in either case you're forcing an awful lot of data through a single hole and pushing lots of boilerplate to user-space.
My thinking was that with would be used mostly internally in single-expression with-er methods.
At this point I'm not sure it's even worth it. Maybe we should just focus on accessors with asymmetric visibility. I'd say that's enough even for ADTs.
@Crell Well, same as having methods that aren't on any other enum cases. I was always kind of uncertain about that as a whole but if we do allow it interfaces probably also make sense (if you want to enforce/check their signature).
@Dharman you may want to check whether the info contained in changelog entries has been propagated into the rest of the documentation. In this case e.g. whether it's documented somewhere else that OpenSSL is supported.
@Wes I was watching a movie where the setting was Rome, Italy. The girl was a tour guide and she was riding a Vespa and did not signal. The guy said he did not understand why all of those people did not signal and she said in Italy, using a turn signal in Italy was considered a sign of weakness. I love learning about culture, so I was curious if this was true.