@ircmaxell I can't check if a path really exists until I reach an existing item because of memcache limitations (no way to get any value without knowing it's exact key)
The Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which unskilled people make poor decisions and reach erroneous conclusions, but their incompetence denies them the metacognitive ability to appreciate their mistakes.
The unskilled therefore suffer from illusory superiority, rating their ability as above average, much higher than it actually is, while the highly skilled underrate their own abilities, suffering from illusory inferiority. Actual competence may weaken self-confidence, as competent individuals may falsely assume that others have an equivalent understanding. As Kruger and Dunning...
@Tom Once you begin doing stuff to (say) awesome.foo, make a class member in awesome called fooComplete, and set it to false. Once you've finished doing stuff, set it to true. Then, in your if statement, check for fooComplete
On the Web Builder Zone (a part of DZone.com) there's a recent post from Giorgio Sironi reviewing the Mockery library, a mock object framework created by Padraic Brady. Mockery is a mock object framework (more properly Test Double framework) from @padraicb, independent from testing frameworks like PHPUnit. It can be used to quickly prepare Mocks, Stubs and other Test Doubles to use inside y…
hi guys, quick question,i made a php form(page A) when i submit it and there is a input error i check it in page B and include('pageA) else print 'page B'. now when there is an error and it opens page A again all the fields become empty, is there any way of keeping all the fields same beside the trivial way of filling each field with the value in $POST array
@ultrajohn kind of, my problem is that I can't know ion what point the user will break the chain. Just keep adding the aforecalled discrete properties together until I reach an existing key.
@ircmaxell you're right, it's totally sweet to traverse your memory like a simple PHP object with chaining and stuff, yet it's not nearly as efficient as accessing a flat hashtable.
@Tom I stand behind the opposite. I find non-chained method calls are far more readable and provide more semantic meaning to the people reading your code.
Occam's razor (or Ockham's razor), often expressed in Latin as the lex parsimoniae, translating to law of parsimony, law of economy or law of succinctness, is a principle that generally recommends selecting the competing hypothesis that makes the fewest new assumptions, when the hypotheses are equal in other respects. For instance, they must both sufficiently explain available data in the first place.
Overview
The principle is often inaccurately summarized as "the simplest explanation is most likely the correct one." This summary is misleading, however, since the principle is actually fo...
The Law of Demeter (LoD) or Principle of Least Knowledge is a design guideline for developing software, particularly object-oriented programs. In its general form, the LoD is a specific case of loose coupling. The guideline was invented at Northeastern University towards the end of 1987, and can be succinctly summarized in one of the following ways:
*Each unit should have only limited knowledge about other units: only units "closely" related to the current unit.
*Each unit should only talk to its friends; don't talk to strangers.
*Only talk to your immediate friends.
The fundamental noti...
@ircmaxell The @ before $_SESSION will suppress any errors that invoking that variable might cause. Notably: if an array element with the given key does not exist, a E_NOTICE error will be thrown if you try to access it. Using the @ operator prevents this error from being thrown and just returns null.
@Michael So rather than deal with the error, just ignore it since you expected an error? What happens if you expected a notice, but got a fatal error? Do you still want to ignore it then?
@Michael The only case I have ever found which can possibly justify its use (which is flaky IMHO) is with unlink since it's not atomic, so there's no actual way to completely prevent the error if another thread deletes it...
The term x86 refers to a family of instruction set architectures based on the Intel 8086 CPU. The 8086 was launched in 1978 as a fully 16-bit extension of Intel's 8-bit based 8080 microprocessor and also introduced segmentation to overcome the 16-bit addressing barrier of such designs. The term x86 derived from the fact that early successors to the 8086 also had names ending in "86". Many additions and extensions have been added to the x86 instruction set over the years, almost consistently with full backward compatibility. The architecture has been implemented in processors from In...
@Tom No. There are extensions that added registers (such as MMX), but the core instruction set and register count is the same
@ircmaxell I'm just looking for a good, scalable in-memory cache to use in my next project. Memcached is almost perfect, but it lacks some almost basic functionality that make it unusable for me.
let's say I cache some CSS files... I'd like to clear them from the cache when updated; so the logical way to proceed would be to either give them a prefix css_ and clear css_* but that won't work. or I'd store them in a namespace css and clear the namespace, but that won't work either, cause I'd have to keep track of every item I store there in a separate key.
So I'm left with flushing the entire cache, only to update a CSS file... seems unfair
@teresko It's not slower. At least not in any sense that matters (I don't consider it slower until the difference for a single call exceeds 0.001 seconds)
No. Big O notation has nothing to do with actual run time. O(n) can run shorter than O(1) for a given n value depending on the actual implementation.
Big O notation is about comparing how algorithms scale. Meaning as n increases, how much do they change relative to each other.
So, an example...
Now it's a little more than O(1) due to hash collisions, so that's not quite accurate. But since it's nothing more than a linked list, it's not much off of O(1)
@Michael and this wourl create a whole new text box, i want to put value in the text box already generated before, i plan of populating validated fields, and leave the one on which there is error empty