@Sjon Tyson coincidentally created an enum demo himself so unless you're working on something we can also share that in the ML. tysonandre.github.io/php-rfc-demo/enums
@NikiC Do you by chance know what is the proper way to optionally use a symbol from another extension (i.e. depending on whether the ext is present or not), while supporting both the extensions being dynamically or statically loaded?
i.e. all of (my extension is built statically, my extension is loaded dynamically) x (other ext is built statically, other ext is loaded dynamically, other ext is not loaded at all)
Or maybe know where this is already being supported so that i can copy-paste the logic from there :-D
What's a suitable name for something that provides implementations based on some lookup? Factory doesn't seem right, as it doesn't provide new instances. Registry maybe?
@kelunik Provider? ServiceLocator? And I will ping you if I find the really good naming resource I was looking for....I distinctly remember seeing one a mere eight years or so ago, but it seems to have vanished. Pretty sure it was on a Java related site, and they are all dissappearing from the net.
@Danack Thanks! Specifically, it's looking up a type handler by type to handle database rows and converting the assoc array to an object / converting the result iterator to another collection type, e.g. an array.
@Danack Please update me as well(or just pin it here) when you find it, I saw your tweet about it for Marco and I am very interested in something like this as well.
I put a few interesting links in en.reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/l03eio/… - but I am 90% sure there was a really great page that had a about 100-200 different verbs for method names .....somewhere.
got back to php since 10 years ago, i was wondering if there is a nice "common purpose" library to manipulate arrays and other structures, you know the kind of library that "everybody includes"
@ManuelOdendahl not really....most of the time it's not needed. About the only one that I know of is Laravel collections which I've heard good things about, but don't personally use.
"really inefficient" is a dubious statement, this is inherently O(n) and you are looking for an arbitrary piece of data, it's not really possible to be inefficient unless your search is somehow worse than O(n)
though I suspect "depth first" vs "width first" is what you mean by "inefficient"?
i.e. it walks all the way down (or all the way across) meaning that it tends to visit more leaf nodes than needed on average
but the only thing you can do about that would be to flip it, which will make it better in some cases and worse in others
an indexed query tool (like xpath) would probably serve you better
...but obv I say that knowing very little about what you are actually doing
Ok, I'm trying to make a crawler that takes something like site.com/path/result and returns site.com => Array([path/] => Array([results] => url)) but when it runs across site.com/results I don't want it to check if "results" is in the array but that results is in the array at two levels in.
I have the return but I also want to be able to match the second url against the first.
I'm sorry but I must do a dummy question :-(. In foreach loop isn't need to be freed the memory if I create a var inside loop right?. This mechanism how it's implemented, it's correct to think that of each end loop the var lose the reference (refcount goes to 0) when assigned and the memory it's freed ?. And so it's for this that after foreach, last assigned var it's still alive?
Let me prefix this by saying that I know what foreach is, does and how to use it. This question concerns how it works under the bonnet, and I don't want any answers along the lines of "this is how you loop an array with foreach".
For a long time I assumed that foreach worked with the array its...