Interesting. Well, I don't support supporting browsers that don't support standards, but if SO wants to support it then I guess that's fine @rene. — Tiny Giantyesterday
@alone Using super to call the parent is important for multiple inheritance to ensure that the whole chain works properly:
class A:
def __init__ (self):
print('A')
super().__init__()
class B:
def __init__ (self):
print('B')
super().__init__()
class C:
def __init__ (self):
print('C')
class BA(B, A):
pass
BA() # prints B, A
class CA(C, A):
pass
CA() # prints just C
:35709701 Now without scroll bars to make it easier for you :P
Yeah, removed some whitespace in between the classes :P
@BhargavRao Couldn’t you just edit the message as a mod..?
@alone Please understand that we are not going to send you an email with the answer. If you want our help, you should stick around, or come back later when you have the time to actually stick around.
“PHP 7 was released over one year ago - is PHP finally a viable alternative for writing large web applications?” https://medium.com/@anttihaapala/php-7-was-released-over-one-year-ago-is-php-finally-a-viable-alternative-for-writing-large-web-cb87d8f272#.u84zbycuq
It’s generally possible to write good applications with it though. Yes, it may require more discipline than other languages but that’s just the cruft that PHP has been carrying for years.
I meant that other languages, well designed ones, make it harder to build stuff very badly. In PHP it’s dead simple to produce working garbage. So in order to end up with a properly designed application in PHP, it requires more discipline and developer guidelines than it does in other languages where a lot of good practices are already built into the language.
But there are examples of complex applications written in PHP that are really well designed and work well due to the developer team’s disciplines and the project’s general structure.
MediaWiki is one of my favorite examples. I do know that codebase pretty well, and it’s generally very well done.
but the argument goes like: "one should use php because it is easier to find programmers who know php" (and these are more disciplined how?) "because the documentation is super" (and the interactive documentation examples are just promoting bad practices) or "there is so much code to reuse" (and most of it is shit)
@AnttiHaapala The problem is mostly that PHP is so old and the better stuff (the OOP parts, and the new APIs) are still too new so there are far too many examples with the old stuff which still works and looks so much easier. So there’s a huge difference between PHP developer and PHP developer.
In PHP 7 the equivalent code doesn't print anything. It throws "Catchable fatal error: Object of class stdClass could not be converted to string in" - on line 1
that is why the No. there is. I am not even going to debate it in my blog, I could write an essay on that but I'd not get any good comments, only arguments about how this is the right thing to do.
stdClass is PHP's generic empty class, kind of like Object in Java or object in Python (Edit: but not actually used as universal base class; thanks @Ciaran for pointing this out).
It is useful for anonymous objects, dynamic properties, etc.
See Dynamic Properties in PHP and StdClass for example.
Actually I tried creating empty stdClass and compared the speed to empty class.
class emp{}
then proceeded creating 1000 stdClasses and emps... empty classes were done in around 1100 microseconds while stdClasses took over 1700 microseconds. So I guess its better to create your own dummy class...
WAT :D
apparently the difference is caused by the difference in name length. if you call the class "averylongclassnamefornoapparentreason", it will take a lot longer to create. so go figure. — SageMar 23 '13 at 15:06
Betteridge's law of headlines is one name for an adage that states: "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no." It is named after Ian Betteridge, a British technology journalist, although the principle is much older. As with similar "laws" (e.g., Murphy's law), it is intended as a humorous adage rather than always being literally true.
== History ==
The maxim has been cited by other names since as early as 1991, when a published compilation of Murphy's Law variants called it "Davis's law", a name that also crops up online, without any explanation of who Davis was...
Yup, super.__getattr__ exists, so if you pass in self and a string, then you can uses that method to provide attribute access to your self.__dict__ mapping. That's a nice coincidence but not what you want to do.
Doesn't fasta wrap lines, so this would be incorrect anyway; and what do you expect the bash, awk and python tags to achieve here? — Antti Haapala10 secs ago
@marxin I think there's one input that's huge and expensive, and some other parameters that have to be set
Isabel probably wants to map a partial, in effect at least
I did something like this in the past and there was something about a simple lambda not working in python 3, and I had to define an auxiliary class to handle the parameters
I've narrowed down your question somewhat. Don't spam multiple tags for multiple tech stacks please. Ask a separate question for a Python solution (and include your own attempt for that). — Martijn Pieters ♦2 days ago
I removed the Python tags from those posts, off to check what else is going on.
stackoverflow.com/q/42220336/344286 anyone wanna reopen that? I mean it's not a great question, but it's not really unclear, unless you've literally never used Python.
the OP actually has input and expected output
maybe should be closed as dupe or MCVE, but it's not unclear
Because if they do it on Monday, it ruins the rest of the week if something goes on. At least with Friday, people can deploy and just say screw it, that's for Monday to deal with