> I'm not a real programmer. I throw together things until it works then I move on. The real programmers will say "Yeah it works but you're leaking memory everywhere. Perhaps we should fix that." I’ll just restart Apache every 10 requests.
> We have things like protected properties. We have abstract methods. We have all this stuff that your computer science teacher told you you shouldn't be using. I don't care about this crap at all.
> I don't know how to stop it, there was never any intent to write a programming language [...] I have absolutely no idea how to write a programming language, I just kept adding the next logical step on the way.
> PHP is about as exciting as your toothbrush. You use it every day, it does the job, it is a simple tool, so what? Who would want to read about toothbrushes?
> I'm not a real programmer. I throw together things until it works then I move on. The real programmers will say "Yeah it works but you're leaking memory everywhere. Perhaps we should fix that." I’ll just restart Apache every 10 requests.
Meh, the quote links got me reading some Linus Torvalds.
> Tech Talk: Linus Torvalds on git, Google, 26 January 2007. If you have ever done any security work – and it did not involve the concept of "network of trust" – it wasn't security work, it was – masturbation. I don't know what you were doing. But trust me, it's the only way you can do security, it's the only way you can do development.
user5722584
i need some help anyone here willing to help wordpress?
I trust people here to give their honest opinion and to tell me when my RFC is wrong or bad. And I'll argue with you guys for a while just to try to dig deeper.
But when I'm wrong I think I generally realize it and correct it.
He has some wisdom on a few things but the way he acts is childish and drives away contributors - he is a shining example of why people don't like open-source
If I answer a question, and then edit the answer, does the person who asked the question get a notification? (I assume so, but I've never actually asked a question, so I don't have firsthand experience.)
calling it a day. TIL there are subtle aspects about lsp that i could only vaguely grasp so far and that led me to the conclusion that inheritance is utterly pointless. now i interprehet LSP as "don't use inheritance" :P
If I have 8 different domain object classes and all of them have setParameters(array $params) method, then it is better to extract that 8-times repeated method to a shared superclass
Honestly, I'd probably go the inheritance route, until inheritance stops working for one reason or another, and only then go traits.
(e.g. I have two classes that need shared functionality, but legitimately can't extend a parent class, and putting the shared code in a service class doesn't make sense)
Though you could always define an interface, have a trait that provides an implementation, and then have the class that uses the trait marked as implementing the interface
It seems as though traits themselves can't implement interfaces.
@tereško say you have an immutable object constructed with zero parameters which has a method always returning the boolean true. when you extend that class, lsp says we are fine enough if the return type matches (both boolean in child and super classes). the input (the constructor) is the same (both 0 params), why would the output of that method in a child class return something different (false)?
if you extend this example to everything you will realize that inheritance has very little use. if you extend a class A with B, B must not mutate the state at all because it'd break A
for each tag in that list of tags, in random order, if the contents of the page being output match the tag, add before the tag the contents of whatever jwf-updates returns, with parameters consisting of the data at the top
in other words, it's injecting content from that remote site, probably javascript, into the page
so, this is very nasty, and you should burn your server with fire and set up a new one that hasn't been hacked.
krakjoe@fiji:/usr/src/concurrent/examples$ php thread.php
Waiting 2 seconds to send start data...
$this: Icicle\Concurrent\Sync\ChannelledStream
Demonstrating how alive the parent is for the 1th time.
Demonstrating how alive the parent is for the 2th time.
Received the following from parent: Start data
Sleeping for 3 seconds...
Demonstrating how alive the parent is for the 3th time.
Demonstrating how alive the parent is for the 4th time.
Demonstrating how alive the parent is for the 5th time.
Sleeping for 2 seconds...
I've always felt that wont-fix is underused anyway ...
at some point I guess I'll have to review it ... I dunno anything about it internally, but I know it's not ... nice ... if you'd have said you needed it, I would have looked at it ...
@JoeWatkins Sure, if you're feeling masochistic some time take a look at it. I'm not worried about it for now. With that sorted, I have Icicle's concurrent package fully updated for PHP 7.
@JoeWatkins Removed the call to Thread::kill() when killing a thread context. Now the kill() method only stops the event loop in the thread, which will cause the thread to gracefully shutdown.
@Gordon What about mopeds? Twist-and-go, like riding a bicycle. They don't go very fast, but just about make it up a mountain in Majorca. Need to watch the fuel gauge though, I had to turn around half way up and refuel lol
https://freshdesk.com/api#pagination They have pagination, but neither they do return the number of records/pages, nor do they return the next and previous page links in the response. Can it characterize it as a bad API design?