if you put ifs into the example, that would be more like: if ($bar) {^M ... ` if ($foo) {^M goto done;^M }^M` ... ` done:^M}^M` so the inline/unrolling wouldn't be there.
but true, similar with throw before 8.0. (meh code escapes don't work with spaces...)
I read, that when I write session_start() in PHP all the session variables I'm going to set, will expire after 24 mins. How sites, like Facebook, where users spend hours just scolling manage to keep users logged in?
That's just a default, you can change it using session.gc_maxlifetime, facebook also uses persistent cookies to store a login token between browser reloads
I already changed it to 1h. But I have a gallery, where photographer sends images to users. But users sometimes spends more than 1h picking the images.
Unless you're dealing with things requiring high levels of security, you can set it to as long as you want, although if you get a lot of traffic you might slow things down with the amount of sessions, waiting for them to expire
normally each page refresh resets the time limit......but yeah, unless you're making a site that handles people's money, it's fine to keep them logged in for ages. I think gmail is something like a month.