@bwoebi Caus eI wanted it to be a part of abstract class contract
The reason is that in my mind an abstract could be declared without value
When I combine it with readonly and with enum type
Each class extending the abstract are required to declare the value of abstract property
In this case these values would be enumerations
I could see the abstract property that is readonly and being type of my enum on abstract class level
Sure I can just define it in all classes but then it's not a part of abstract class contract, which means I still need the method - a getter with enum return type to be visible on abstract type level
@brzuchal in an abstract class specifically... you can just declare the property as public on the abstract class without value. The classes would have to set the values is their constructor probably. There's no reason abstract classes should enforce the time where a value is written. I specifically recommend a constructor arg on the abstract class then.
@bwoebi anyway there is no possibility to force property value declaration, one can skip declaration of property or skip parent ctor (shrug)
So if it could actually be abstract it could force it's value declaration on non-abstract (dunno the word here, concrete?) extending class level
You wrote I should not force it's definition but then I can end up with uninitialized state
Maybe I'm wrong but I still see a benefit of abstract property here, it forces value declaration on concrete class, maybe it's just one use case when combining with readonly
@brzuchal that's sort of the difference in semantics of readonly. It's writeonce. If we had a flag "enforce writing during ctor", then your issue would implicitly vanish. It's not related to abstractness.
there are some important security headers that must be set...as I understand there are two ways to do it: either through thr header function or .htaccess apache file...am I correct?
@ircmaxell in the end it does not matter much, just need to shift some processing around
2 hours later…
user17161735
8:42 PM
if i have a callable function that is validator of scenario ... and i implement call_user_func_array() to call the funtion how can i differentiate if the false return is equivalent to an error or the validation (function) returns false?
When writing CLI scripts is there a good / sane way to redirect to STDERR? For example var_dump, print_r etc. Something in the line of { print_r($foo) } >>STDERR;
OK, thanks. Hoped there was some redirection option. I tried to fclose(STDOUT); $STDOUT = fopen('php://stderr', 'w'); and that "works", but not able to reset STDOUT after the fact.