hi guys im in a bit of a pinch here.i have three select dropdown and i am trying to store the selected values into variables to send them through the url. here's a lil bit of the code:
define() is quite a good way of doing things. An alternative is to define a global array. such as
$config['display_ad']=true;
$config['something_else']='a value';
//...
function doSomething() {
global $config;
if ($config['display_ad']) echo 'Ad code goes here';
}
The latter way is what ...
@PeeHaa, the resource (MVC model) has to call the representation (MVC view) so that each view depends on the model called. This seems stupid, it should be viceversa otherwise a multi model view (view that deal with multiple type of data in the same page) would be impossible...
@Gordon minor one .. imho, the view is responsible for UI creation/logic while controller deals with user activity/input .. as whole they comprise the presentation layer. It is possible to have several UIs that cause same form of user activity
@tereško interesting. I'd name it the other way round. To me, the C is an essential part of the UI because it accepts the User Input and the View is merely the graphical representation. So C and V together I call UI.
@Jeffrey IMO RMR is pointless. When you start to use terms like Resource, Method and Representation you are halfway en route to REST. So why not just do REST (including Hypermedia) then?
> So in an OO language, a HTTP resource can be thought of as an object with private member variables and a number of public methods that correspond to the standard HTTP methods.
that's just nonsense
IMO, a resource does not map 1:1 to something in the Model. It can, but there is reason it has to. A resource is something you expose via URIs and which you can interact with. But it's certainly not a Domain Object
@ircmaxell not sure if it does. The responsibility of a Controller is pretty much defined as handling user input, while a Resource points to a specific Data Entity which you will never get hold of except for in it's various representations you get back when interacting with it.
or maybe I'd not have them at all but just map them
from the Request object to an MVC Controller
Like when I know the Request was for DELETE example.com/Order/1234 I need to call DeleteOrderController::handle($request) which then calls DeleteOrderUseCase::run() or something
in that sense, the resource never manifests in code at all. It's just all in the URI and gets mapped
@igorw Another use for symbols I could see if the language's comparison operator compared strings by address, not by content. But that's not the case for neither Ruby nor PHP
@Gordon Correct (I was just mocking up a fatal error for an edit ;))
Mixing traits and overriding/aliasing would still be possible, so long as all of the implementation requirements are met in the containing definition (trait, class)
The mixing class wouldn't automagically implement the interface.
@NikiC yea, not sure if it makes practical sense for PHP. introducing it at this point will probably only produce inconsistency. one place that comes to mind where it is used is for referencing method names. i.e. foo.send(:bar, args) which would be the same as call_user_func([$foo, 'bar'], $args). semantically I can see how it makes sense to separate, but it also sounds like the kind of thing people have flamethrower wars over.
@AnPel If you are telling me that when you type http://test (full address) in the addressbar and it takes you to test.com you should really uninstall that browser
@Bracketworks I think you might need to have an account, but I;m not 100% sure about the process. PIng @Gordon, @NikiC @ircmaxell, @salathe for that (which I have just done) :)
@igorw I have a serious issue understanding that feature. From where I'm standing it just looks like Ruby did a bad design decision in that they force programmers to do an optimization that the compiler could do by itself. But I guess that there is some deep reason to it that just isn't properly explained anywhere
I know how it works, once a flag is issued, and an "Invalid Flag" flag gets issued against it, both flags get disputed, and do not affect flag weight. Why?
What makes the "Invalid Flag" flag be different than any other flag? What's the reasoning behind this?
From my perspective, what should hap...
@NikiC in ruby strings are mutable objects. as in: a = "foo"; b = a; b << "bar"; that will change both a and b. symbols are immutable, which makes a major difference for ruby.
@NikiC imho, ruby it's not all that bad .. it's just that people who are usually using it are clueless ... and almost everyone is trying to write classical OO in it, whole ruby is much closer to prototypal language
> Stan Lemon is the Software Architect at GiftCards.com the internet's number one online giftcard site. GiftCards.com is a PCI Level 1 LAMP shop where we literally print money, yes you read that right - we use PHP to print Visa and Mastercard gift cards in a high security facility every single day.
@PeeHaa Will be @ FOSDEM '13 Brussels / 2 & 3 February 2013 - But probably I should do some holidays in Belgium in between?
@PeeHaa ah, now I understand how that works. If you buy conference only, you are forced to visit the M$ azure talk. Otherwise if you pay the 300 mark, you are free to choose a real tutorial ;)
The format of a length value (denoted by <length> in this specification) is a <number> (with or without a decimal point) immediately followed by a unit identifier (e.g., px, em, etc.). After a zero length, the unit identifier is optional.
A medical professional told me once that if you have ever had a cat there is a very good chance that at some point when you thought you had a cold/the flu, you actually had a mild case of toxoplasmosis.
I only watch it sporadically so it's hard to tell -- I always intend to watch TV and then forget because I don't care enough (except in the case of Futurama)
Grrr I hate the inconsistency of text/xml vs application/json, I write text/json a lot and it's not valid. For some reason I can't seem to retrain my fingers.
I agree JSON is much better for 90% of the tasks people use XML for, but there are some cases where XML is better. It's much more expressive. Just most of the time you don't use that expressiveness. But stuff like entities defined on the DTD so you can let the client worry about resolving them (and alter what they resolve to without the client having to obtain the whole document again) is a really nice feature if you need it.