@Leri Didn't know about that. But I even used HipHop for a last resort. I got 110 req/sec at best, and that's the JIT approach, which I think is better than using apcu.
@Leri Consider the scenario where you have to pull items from the database and show them in a ordered div/input/or both list. That's what a FOR LOOP is for, there's no way around it and till today many apps employ datasets (working with the database, manipulate its results etc..).
you have to have data for an usable application.
But well I'm not saying Php is totally useless. It shines in some aspects and sucks in others.
@nick Don't use frameworks just because. If more of your functionality lies on the frontend, then you may want to use an MV* framework on the frontend and a super light MVP framework on the backend. However, the decision is a subjective one. If you are comfortable writing your own miniature framework, then go right ahead. Else use one of the existing ones.
@Leri Didn't know about that. But I even used HipHop for a last resort. I got 110 req/sec at best, and that's the JIT approach, which I think is better than using apcu.
@JoeWatkins I think you got it very wrong. What HipHop does is converting Php code into high level bytecode, which is then translated into machine code by the JIT compiler at runtime.
@needaname please. We all here respect @JoeWatkins because of his significant participation & contribution to PHP & it's community. So unless you'll proof & show something, it's near useless to argue with he. And - from me personally - there are few guys who can say "@JoeWatkins, Dude" . Please, respect others
@JoeWatkins find your todo in irc, it's what I haven't yet done. And find a good (=user-friendly) way to make opline-by-opline breaks and steps (instead of line-by-line).
I removed it temporarily… I want a method (like set) to restore current behavior
well I didn't read it properly ... I think I've said before that I we don't need to chase after how gdb works, and I remember saying don't remove the way things currently work, and it looks like you've done it anyway ...
no it isn't, what we have now is confused, step does not step one line, step enables stepping or disables it and you still have to continue, so it's not like gdb and not like what we had ...
It comes down to unnecessary static coupling. Composition means you can't break things. Objects should communicate with one another, not know about and modify one another.
user895378
But I'm out of town until tomorrow ... Typing on the tablet is kinda slow :)
I'm going to post something that is hopefully a little more useful than those posts above. There are several best practices that can be employed here to make your life easier when coding; after you've wrapped your head around them of course.
First and foremost, this looks like your attempt a...
so develop the idea @bwoebi, don't just ignore what I say and do whatever and expect it not to piss me off ... now I've had to spend my time doing the thing you said you had already done rather than on things that are still waiting to be done ...
I'm aware it exists, have never used it, or been advised to use it, or read a blog post about using it ... I don't think it's used ... the point was I don't know why you are focused on gdb, we are not writing gdb ...
I have to go out a couple of hours @bwoebi, taking everyone home ... be back in a while ...
Let's say two requests come in and both need to access the session at some point , asp.net defaults to (for god knows why) locking the session until a request is complete, and then giving it to the other request. Lucky for you, you can do read only mode and other helpful stuff to solve it.
@salathe probably just blacklist things with drupal or wordpress . You can watch mvc but you'll just end up being pissed on a lot of people using it for asp.net-mvc not knowing what it means.
I wonder if @tereško automated replacing questions tagged with both [tag:asp.net mvc] and mvc with just [tag:asp.net mvc] yet?
@MikeM. The point is that your "captcha" poses no problem (repeat: not even the least bit of a problem) to a bot. As such including it serves no purpose and only inconveniences the user.
@MikeM. please, pay attention. When you ask users to enter 22 random symbols, they will not get border. They will get annoyed, frustrated and (by the time they reach 8 symbol) angry. Essentially, you will get more "guesses" from bots then from real users.
You "random string of X symbols" is not human readable. It is machine generated and best understood by other machines. Did this nugget penetrate your cerebral cortex?
also, do you really REALLY think that all the forms for which you have saved passwords contain only fields that are called "username" and "password", instead of "nome" and "passvorte"?!
I am looking for a browser extension (preferably Chrome) that can hide all the activities (namely questions, answers and comments) of a given user on Stack Exchange, just like when blocking someone on Facebook will hide most of his activities.
@SecondRikudo would you parse the document and look for all the fields, that have names "username" and "password" .. or would you, when a form with type="password" element is submitted, store the name of the fields and their respective values for the whole form?
my gaming options are currently limited to only weekends and , unlike this week, I usually have only a 3 year old netbook for it ... it kinda sucks ... I probably will get a real PC before end of June
I'm going to post something that is hopefully a little more useful than those posts above. There are several best practices that can be employed here to make your life easier when coding; after you've wrapped your head around them of course.
First and foremost, this looks like your attempt a...
I know, I am ashamed. Honestly, I thought it was some guy from the JS room who felt bad for choosing such a rubbish room to hang in and wanted to chill with the cool kids