apropos of nothing, wouldn't it be amusing if an abusive person had sent emails through his company's mail server, rather than it being through an independent service?
Something for Herr Knacker von Hof to have a look at...
@NikiC any reason why we do not warn for non public visibility for __clone() and __destruct() ? (I understand that __construct() is very special so most normal rules do not apply for it) 3v4l.org/6NqUv
Howdy. I'm trying to sort out what I think is a longstanding bug in the mongodb extension for ZTS. We allocate a HashTable to use for persisting connection objects across requests in GINIT. Later, in MSHUTDOWN, we destroy that HashTable (and its objects) and then call a library cleanup method, which frees other allocations (e.g. internal memory, OpenSSL, SASL). AFAIK, this means we leak connection objects on ZTS.
The first fix I considered was moving the HashTable destruction to GSHUTDOWN; however, that opens a can of worms because GSHUTDOWNs all happen _after_ MSHUTDOWN, and our library's…
I follow that they run per thread (and presumably execute within their respective threads), but does the main thread outlive all others?
Sara suggested use a true global to count threads (e.g. have GINIT inc and GSHUTDOWN dec) and having checking if the count was == 1 to infer the "last" GSHUTDOWN. However, I think that would warrant using a mutex around that counter, and that means I'd need a thread-safe way to allocate that mutex.
I found prior art of PCRE using `tsrm_mutex_alloc` (which it only does from the main thread), but the mutex itself is only used for RINIT, while I'd need to use it in other GINIT/GSHUTDOWN handlers.
are sugar over type definitions that are like these
interface CallableWith2Parameters<out ReturnT, in Arg1T, in Arg2T>{} interface CallableWith1Parameter<out ReturnT, in Arg1T>{}
that because c# (afaik) doesn't have variadic type parameters
with variadic type parameters you'd have interface Callable<out ReturnT, in ...ArgT>{}
similarly some languages have class Tuple2<T1, T2>{} class Tuple3<T1, T2, T3>{} class Tuple4<T1, T2, T3, T4>{} class Tuple5<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5>{} etc, because they don't have support for variadic type parameters (if they are a thing at all)
It can be a tad odd at times when it spits out a 6 line error listing all the properties it doesn't have, but it's not the end of the world, and is worth it for all the other bits. It is without doubt my favour typing system I've used
@d7l2k4 just to be clear, you do understand that it's not anyone's responsibility to help you? You can ask someone to stick around, but it's their choice if they do or don't.
ok. now it says [Composer\Downloader\TransportException] The "http://repo.packagist.org/p/friendsofsymfony/oauth-server-bundle%244a31b3713294f9e468e13e0c03810776095325113d004f45f416fb6e8e12af89.json" file could not be downloaded:
And a normal PHP string is also null terminated, it just keeps track of the length as well to deal with the case when a null byte is present in the string
This may be a rubber duck message... I need to recursively check for an array value... I have an array $multimedia which may contain zero or more arrays, and within those arrays there's a type key... I need the value of that key... wanted to avoid using a foreach... blaaah
In software engineering, rubber duck debugging is a method of debugging code. The name is a reference to a story in the book The Pragmatic Programmer in which a programmer would carry around a rubber duck and debug their code by forcing themselves to explain it, line-by-line, to the duck. Many other terms exist for this technique, often involving different (usually) inanimate objects, or pets such as a dog or a cat. Desk check your code is the original term for this technique.
Many programmers have had the experience of explaining a problem to someone else, possibly even to someone who knows nothing...
Does anyone see any error here: gist.github.com/HeadOnFire-sudo/…, in the query or something? The script stops running where I have that big arrow (line 27)
You can mix procedural and OO code. The mysqli procedural API does this: You pass around the mysqli (stmt) object as the connection / link handle, the functions simply call the relevant method on that object and return the result.
Does anyone have English as a native language who would be able to help me improve "The SQL statement may contain zero or more parameter markers represented by question mark characters at the appropriate positions."
@cmb Thanks. So, I wanted to add PHP 8 into array|set of revisions of print_r function (yey, found where to put it :D), but I can see that none of other function have included PHP 8 (except get_resource_id() which is not used before). Should all of those be fixed also or to leave print_r as is for now? Actually question is: is ok to add PHP 8 to print_r function's revision?
@Tpojka yeah, all functions which are supported by PHP 8 should be updated; doing it for each function individually is too much work; maybe doing it for each version.xml file separately is an acceptable compromise?
@IluTov I don't. I'll check it on Monday (or maybe tomorrow if I'm bored). I finally completed all of the change requests and bugs associated with a major PR, I think it will get merged on Monday
I think I deserve some time with Path of Exile and the new league that launched today :D
@Tiffany Cool, I just know for me personally not being able to dump stuff properly (or alternatively using a debugger) is a huge productivity killer. Have fun gaming ^^