We simply have way too many notes and way too few people moderating those notes. Now we just have way more people with the ability to help with that moderation process (being you the end-user).
@GoogleGuy OK well I'm prepared to give it the benefit of the doubt and see how it works out over time when people have had chance to cast some votes etc - but if it's not working for me I shall blame you. Be afraid. :-P
@DaveRandom It's working just fine. In the last 3 weeks alone over 5K users have helped organize user notes significantly more than moderators have been doing in the last 3 years.
@Charles I dunno, does it refer to the standard IO for the current process? What I actually want to do is a little convoluted, I though fd was the answer: I want to fopen('php://memory') and pass the resulting stream into ZipArchive - but it only accepts a file path so I want to be able to somehow reference an existing file pointer with a URI.
Basically I'm trying to avoid creating a temp file.
Yeah, I've always wanted an excuse to play with such things.
Anonymous
@DaveRandom Which takes more bandwidth/server memory resource of these two ways of storing page visits/refreshes. 1st approach is to create a.txt file and write page visits in it, 2nd approach is just to update a database row directly from the PHP page?? I need to this, thanks
Your code may be suffering from a race condition.
Mid way through, you re-open the file in w mode, which truncates the file to zero length. If another copy of your script opens and attempts to read the file while it's been truncated but before it's been read, the counter will be reset to zero.
...
Both APC and Memcached have things to do atomic count operations as well.
Anonymous
12:49 AM
Actually it is a sessions based hit counter for a very minor task, so to learn redis/memcache is too much of an effort, I only wanted to know if it cosumer less resources with db, or a file.. I will go with db for now
if those two are the only options, db is probably safer because then the database can handle the locking and you don't have to do your own filesystem locking.
@webarto In that case, if you're using the normal file-based session handler, that's totally it. PHP grabs and keeps an exclusive lock on the file from session_start to session_write_close.
A concurrent request is going to block on session_start until the lock is released.
@Charles FYI, ZipArchive doesn't work with streams. Just tried it with an FTP file - no errors, no effect, checked with wireshark, no network activity.
And @GoogleGuy: your point about BDLFs is way off mark. They get to say that shit because they have the authority to do so. They are not looking to create a constructive environment of collaboration. They are looking to dictate what they want. Which is their right due to the D in their title. Stas, in this case, is neither D or has the authority to make such claims. Hence the destructive component of it...
not at all. What I want is a vision that we can all use as the baseline for discussion
As far as You see that this vision is lacking, or unrefined, or even completely diluted to the extent that it is not a vision (and for whatever reason). That's fine. How are you solving this issue That's simple. I wrote a post where I identified what I feel is a problem, and made a suggestion on how to fix it. Don't like it? Good for you. In the end, At least I tried something, rather than sitting back and ignoring the problems plaguing development...
I don't see problems that are plaguing development. I see the same problems I see in any project I've worked on. People who happen to disagree on things.
If there's anything we should agree on it's that PHP continues to get developed. Which has been happening for the last 15+ years now. Whether or not we agree on annotations, or feature X or feature Y is moot. So someone people don't want this feature or feel it doesn't belong in PHP. shrug tough shits
I see the same problems I see in any project I've worked on. So if everyone jumped off a cliff, you would too? You don't see the danger and problems in a statement like that?
I've worked on projects (large ones) without the bullshit that goes on in internals
I don't find anything not fun about PHP. It's fun to me. I feel quite productive after I've fixed bugs or introduced improvements in PHP that I know will benefit millions of people.
Now whether or not you like the mailing list is a matter of opinion.
Join the Linux Kernel Mailing list for a year. Let me know how your anus feels then.
@GoogleGuy Stockholm Syndrome. Justifying bad behavior because other projects do it too. If you don't see the problem in that line of thinking, I'm afraid this conversation is done...
Your right, I am pissed off right now. Because I posted what I know for a fact many people think. Yet I'm the asshole... Because I pointed out something that people have been laughing at for years. And I'm the asshole. I pointed out what I feel is the root of the problem, and even offered a solution. Yet I'm the asshole. I said something rather than shut my mouth and let status quo reign. And I'm the asshole. So yes, I'm not thinking logically.
Commend? If this is a commendation, I would hate to see what talking down would look like: One courtesy I will offer you that you -- yourself -- have not offered your peers is the acknowledgement of your own contributions and opinions among the rest of the contributors in an impartial manner. <-- definition of back-handed compliment.
user895378
Count me as passenger #2 on the @ircmaxell is-not-an-asshole bandwagon.
@ircmaxell Says the person that publicly insulted their peers.
We call that "being the bigger man". I neither insulted you nor told you to shut up. I stated outright both what you brought to the table and what you lacked. That is all. You did not offer Stas that same courtesy.
Look you apologized and I commend you for that. I in no way meant to insult you. I was very professional in my response and my words were carefully choesn. I'm sorry that you feel it is "a back-handed compliment". It is unbiased and it speaks the truth.
If I really wanted to insult you I would not have been so subtle about it.
@ircmaxell Correction: It quotes all but chosen words in the original message. As those were the words I wanted to address. I completely acknowledges your brilliance and talent as I've seen you raise very fair points in the past. I was only making some suggestions as to your approach. I apologize if that was too harsh for you, but now you can see how it must have felt for the person you were harsh on.
See you are as guilty as sin in everything you are accusing me of doing. Yet here we are. This is normal human behavior. We are all guilty of something. Let that not be our focus ;)
but I at least have the justification that I did it so that I could point out the lunacy in what's going on and try to move past it. I had a purpose in it.
All I can say, is while many may have felt that I was out of line, or whatever. But I have gotten just as much (if not more) feedback that this needed to be said. And thanking me for saying it. So whatever....
I have a thick skin. I can take it. If I lost a few people, then that's too bad... But better to lose the respect of someone for standing up for what you believe in, then to retain it while not...
I'm thinking about creating a performance testing framework for PHP. I'd like it to be able to measure memory usage as well, but the only good way I can think to see how much memory something really used is to temporarily disable garbage collection.
gc_disable documentation implies it only disables the circular reference counting mechanism, not garbage collection in general.
> [Stas'] vision is stale and cancerous for the PHP community. The directive is and always has been along those lines, "real programmers don't use PHP". For some reason the core team has pushed that. There are a lot of us who use PHP full time who would also love for some real, cohesive decisions to be made in favour of bringing vision to PHP. Sadly the internals list is always just a shitstorm.
i'm a bit confused because i feel my question is vague but basically i want to make sure not to crash the service
i'm required to write a small portal with 3 levels rights, about 2,000 users and maybe 8 to 10k restricted access document. it run on apache and i'm using php
i wrote everything and i'm questioning myself about the better way to ensure there is enough resource per user.
@Charles @SAHIL @Happyninja When I insert a number in database whose type is float, it inserts in a wrong way. Like if I insert 1234, it inserts same 1234 but while displaying it on page by retrieving from database it shows 0.1
@Charles sigh I'm perusing internals... it seems the core and community of PHP are fast unraveling. Surely any discussion is constructive in some way, but it's just not funny anymore.
@NullPointer It is not much helpful. In that they say to use decimal instead of float. But I shouldn't change the already designed and running database.
I am working on mobile app which has a mysql backend. Mysql is already desined database and currently running for the PC site too. So, I am developing separate front-end on mobile, but using the same database and writing my own php code to update the same database. My problem is that database has...
@NullPointer it is really nice, sweet photo in the back
question for you guys though. fopen('php://temp') - is that cleared at the end of script execution, or do I have to rewind and erase when I'm done with it?
It is impossible to memorize or learn an entire reference. How can anyone memorize this php.net/manual/en/funcref.php
How can someone learn an entire manual. It is impossible that someone can have a memory like that. To know over a 1,000+ methods, parameters, classes, variables, error exceptions.
OOP , functional , procedural. And the syntax of a language is easy to pick up. And most of all the things in a programming languages reference. Like data types , even though php doesn't need a data type declared before a variable , it just needs a " $ " to know it is a variable. if statements , while loops , for loops , switches. operators , operands , functions like you said can be done in C with parameters , classes and scope , etc ..
It's just where I get stuck on is the Function reference and trying to memorize for example everything in the APC functions in PHP. I feel like I will never be able to program without a reference at hand
@NullPointer One more question. I am working on registration part too. If I need to test on my localhost for sending the confirmation email in php code, do I need any extra things except mail() function.
Most likely not. Since local host is on your own server and doesn't have access smpt so another perosn can send you mail to your server. I'm not sure I've never done that before.
I have 3 tables, if user clicks on submit button, I need to split that entered information and insert respective details into 3 tables. I am doing with 3 insert statements separately. Is it okay if I do like this. But I suspect it's entirely wrong way. @NullPointer @user1867842
Like while submitting he has to enter his own details, his product details and his region. I need to insert them in 3 different tables with primary and fks connection. I am managing this by mysql_insert_id();
@NullPointer @user1867842 I am sure if you look at my code, you would be definitely feel disgusting. ;)
I have a connection for that 3 tables which is primary key and foreign keys. While inserting data in first table I am getting the primary key of the row by mysql_insert_id() and storing this value in the other tables as foreign key.
I was going to say try this query - > SELECT ar_id , max(ar_ar) FROM uir_ar WHERE ar_id = '$_POST[]' and max(ar_ar) = $_GET[] ... but it might be the missing " ; "@Stripps
Greetings! I need help with one simple task. There is website which has download button, when I click other script starts the download. How can I manage to get the downloaded file content in PHP? Or how can I force to download that file to particular directory from PHP?