@NikiC No, the stats PeeHaa linked to. Then he mentions he gets the numbers from langpop. I proceed to paste the screenshot of that same site showing that PHP and C++ are probably within a 2% margin at the very very top end of the popularity spectrum. Q.E.D.
As I said, it's the same order of magnitude (that's why they are close in the log chart), but they are not really close. In a non-log chart PHP would be very far away from C++ ;)
@NikiC Good point. Hardly of big influence though. Also, now that I've given the axis a first look (hehe) are they counting questions asked on SO?! What a figure :)
@sehe In any case, nothing to get defensive over ;) I don't think the data is really meaningful and in any case it's not a comparison that makes any sense ;9
First, an important note on file uploads in general: The type and name keys are unsafe to use. This is because they are defined by the client, and they are a potential mechanism for injecting malicious code into your site. Consider what would happen if I set the file name to ../../../../../index....
after some confusion in the comments to
Is it safe to have 1 letter class names in PHP, e.g A, B, C
I thought I make into a question. According to the PHP manual, a valid class name should match against [a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x7f-\xff]*. But apparently, this is not enforced, nor does i...
This question starts to mention class names in the title, but then goes on to an example that includes exotic names for methods, constants, variables, and fields. There are actually different rules for these. Let's start with the case insensitive ones.
Case-insensitive identifiers (class and fun...
@webarto Nothing then. The only reason it would get screwed is if you deleted localhost from the hosts file, or I suppose if your HDD was dying and really slow to access
@webarto Wait, I know what the problem is. Either enable MySQL to run on IPv6 (you probably want ::ffff:127.0.0.1 as the bind address, possibly :: if you allow connections from remote machines) or disable IPv6 on that Windows instance if you are not using it. I recommend option 1.
Yay multiping
When you query localhost, it goes IPv6 first and then falls back to IPv4. But MySQL is only listening on IPv4 loopback, so you have to wait 1 timeout cycle before the fallback kicks in.
OK people so ive just come from Javascript room, basically i really needed to use websockets (socket.io) and ive tried to understand how to use node.js but if i use it it officially has completely F**cked my project up so i have been told about Ratchet (socketo.me), so with this do i use wamp, ratchet & socet.io for cross browser websockets or is there more to it?
@webarto You can get rid of all the localhost stuff from the hosts file. Turns out Win7 has built the resolution of the localhost into the name resolver since Win7 (never discovered this until today), so putting entries for it in the hosts file will only confuse it
I checked with a developer on the Windows team, and the actual answer is much more innocuous than the other answers to this post :)
At some point in the future, as the world transitions from IPV4 to IPV6, IPV4 will be eventually be disabled/uninstalled by companies that want to simplfy network m...
@DaveRandom I removed entries and removed bind-address, and it's slow by default when localhost. Just saying. I just used IP, and that's it. /cc @NullPointer :P
If you are having this problem and using a version of Windows from before Windows 7, this is not the answer to your problem.
Why is this happening?
The cause of this problem is IPv4 vs IPv6.
When you use a host name instead of an IP address, the MySQL client first runs an AAAA (IPv6) host look...
I need some clarification, when i was answering this question http://stackoverflow.com/a/15436169/1401975 i got it to work, but i was wondering how to escape the characters from the results. I checked out: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3512471/non-capturing-group basicaly i have: preg_match_all('/(?:#)[0-9][0-9](?:#)/', '#32##54##33#', $arr); print_r($arr)
This sounds like a perfect case of map-reduce.
Map step: turn each age into one of the 4 ranges.
Reduce step: turn the range into a result array of ranges.
Let's try it out:
$map = function($age) {
if ($age <= 18) {
return '<= 18';
} elseif ($age <= 26) {
ret...
@NullPointer thx, i got it now, i had to enclose [0-9][0-9] in parenthesis: preg_match_all('/(?:#)[0-9][0-9](?:#)/', '#32##54##33#', $arr); ->>> preg_match_all('/(?:#)([0-9][0-9])(?:#)/', '#32##54##33#', $arr);
@NullPointer Okay so, a 'first' is the top, then you have a two one (2:1) [upper second class honours], then two two (2:2) [lower second class honours], then a third
@crl I can see your code now, socket_read() is a blocking function, you need to base your loop on socket_select() in order to be able to break out of it when there is no data left to read on the connection, or set the socket to non-blocking mode, probably not recommended for what you are doing.
@iroegbu Well, that depends. What is the data being stored in the column? Why do you have this mix of strings and numerics in one column, and what is the purpose of this query?
@ircmaxell yes, because it was quite similar to the highest voted. its funny that yours got upvotes when the array_walk doesnt btw. its basically the same thing
Hey @webarto, I haven't done any unit testing before but I took a look at "Codeception" you forked on Github - and it looks really cool / interesting / simple! What do you think of it?
@iroegbu OK, well since you seem to be looking for integers and MySQL will automatically convert ints and strings in comparisons WHERE foo != CAST(foo AS SIGNED) might be a little better, but probably not in any meaningful way unless the table is huge, and if it's a temp fix it probably doesn't matter. It might be worth just doing a quick benchmark of the execution time though, since it would only take a few minutes.
@Jimbo Hey, I use PHPUnit for unit testing, and Codeception for acceptance test, it's good for me because I can easily modify the code to get what I precisely want, and it uses Symfony components etc. I don't use PHAR, I extracted it, so I can modify the code. I used PHP webserver for acceptance tests so e.g. Travis CI integration is really simple and fast.
I have tried other acceptance software for PHP so I can't say anything more.
@iroegbu I have to say though, it sounds like marital status should be an int column and an FK to a marital statuses table, it would make it nice and easy/quick when indexed