Alright, so I've got a function which uses money_format to output the locale-formatted version of a given amount. Another dev has gone in and wiped out the part about using the currency symbol entity for a few reasons. First, he's stored the country in the config and prefers to use that over storing, say, the locale. Secondly, he says it ensures the right entity is output for the currency symbol, since it's hardcoded while money_format outputs a unicode escape sequence
Am I going crazy or is that a worse way to approach that?
Like, he removed it from the money_format format string and is just concatting a currency symbol defined in the system config to the beginning of the formatted string.
I wrote that function quite a while ago. I think i'm just salty that he's changed my code without prompt and because I think he's made it worse than it already was, but I feel kind of bias when making that judgement
@PeeHaa i'm trying to explain myself that i've spent months developing that testing framework, and it probably doesn't have a purpose :B it's a pretty big one to swallow...
the problem is, it doesn't give me confidence in code when i write new code. if i want to spot errors in code that i know is well engineered then it's fine. but it's not good for code that is still in the works
@PeeHaa, it wasn't made by me,i just came by to clean it ... the solution is to add multiple fields and no longer let the user do whatever he want,then solve the already registered users with a script that extract that substring to insert the reference where it need to be
btw, I also write such test (internally called "migration tests"), when I don't care if the result is correct, but it is critical for responses stay the same (even if they are wrong) ... but those tests get deleted after migration/refactoring is done
> Laravel, on the other hand, uses traits and magic methods on a regular basis. Thanks to that the code is not only much shorter and without many repetitions, but it’s also easier to understand and change the behaviour of applications.
@pmmaga some of the Laravel proponents have been saying recently that refactoring the code to make it testable, makes it too difficult to read, as you're then having to use dependency injection, rather than hard-coded static methods....
@Trowski When I started reading that sentence I totally expected it to go the other way, you know. Waiting for the "And that quickly becomes messy!" that never happened.
And... I had a doubt as well... So, integration of f(x) is supposed to be the are under the curve of the graph of f(x)... If I consider f(x) = tan(x). Shouldn't it not work, since afaik the graph of tan is discontinuous, as it gets undefined at certain angles like pi/2
@SaitamaSama yeah, I was the same way when I took calc 1. I actually enjoyed solving derivatives. Then we were introduced to integrals and how they're the opposite of derivatives. Then they throw more complex stuff on top of it...and keep going... X_X
@TheCodesee Don't ask to ask. Ask a specific question with an EXTERNAL link to you code and provide some domain knowledge. (Tell us what you're doing.)
@SaitamaSama First of all, you have to distinguish (definite) integrals, which integrate a function from x=a to x=b, and indefinite integrals, which are anti-derivatives, in that the derivative of the indefinite integral is the original function. Both types of integrals are related by the "fundamental theorem of calculus"
I hope it's clear that if you integrate tan(x) only from -pi/4 to pi/4, where no discontinuities exist, then the integral exists and will be -ln|cos (-pi/4)| + ln|cos pi/4|
Basically you could choose any two points a,b and perform the definite integral, as long as a > -pi/2 and b < pi/2 (or any other range that doesn't hit singularities)
If you set one of the bounds to pi/2 (or (n+1/2)*pi in general) then the integral is undefined
So the -ln|cos x| works as long you stay within the domain where the integral is defined. You'll also note that if you stick x=pi/2 into that formula you'll get -ln(0), which is also undefined
At least, that's the basic notion. There are extensions of the basic Riemann integral which allow integrating over different kinds of singularities. Some keywords for that are "improper integrals" and "(Cauchy) principal values"
@NikiC Basically if you read from the original zval during the call it's an inout parameter for you get the original value, not a potentially updated one.
I'm honestly surprised that is the semantics Swift chose given it's a compiled language but in any case that's how it is.
It's basically implemented as sugar for multiple return values, and as an optimization sometimes it's directly passing a pointer.
I think I'm personally fine with only permitting out/inout to things on the stack. Things like $x[0] and $obj->property I don't really see the point of inout'ing.
Well, I guess properties which are arrays...
I don't know, maybe we are looking at this the wrong way. Maybe we can just optimize references for common cases if we have an explicit call-site &?
Related: doesn't sort essentially make a copy due to the refcount increment on the parameter then copy-on-write triggers when you swap the first thing? If so I wonder why bother with references at all... just return the copy.
I guess the "use array as a stack functions" would be annoying to use that way.
What if inout works by move-in, move-out? Basically we set the zval to IS_UNDEF or IS_NULL and then the called function has ownership and we move/copy it back out? This avoids the refcount. Would have to think of other side effects...
One tutor complains here (the answer is deleted now)
How to solve exception in thread "main", java.lang.ArithmeticException: / by zero?
This post contains solution code to one or more of our homework assignments here at University of [redacted]. It is indexed by Google, which enables student...
daily reminder on why phpstorm is awesome: if you run tests you can't edit the php files while phpunit is using them, right? phpstorm runs the tests from a copy of the directory, so you can continue working while tests are still running :P
@Wes if I remember correctly, it saves to temporary files, then moves those files into the folder. It fucks up if you have custom permissions set up in Windows :/
because the copied files don't have the same permissions. I had to turn that feature off.
@ircmaxell if i run phpunit and i edit a file i can't save it (note: phpstorm and many other editors save automatically these days)
more precisely it saves on focus loss and periodically
if the file is blocked against writes because phpunit, i'm going to get errors in phpstorm when it tries to save the file, but it doesn't do that if i run phpunit through phpstorm
> our bytecode optimizer can detect when locals are dead and convert a CGetL (push a reference to a local to the stack) into a PushL (teleport the local to the stack) > because of references and destructors we don't get to do that very often which is one of the reasons we plan to kill both of them > as for passing values contained inside arrays via inout, we don't currently do anything but I'm planning to add some special bytecoes that preform this optimization when it's known to be safe
Search for "what's the simplest way to find elem.getImmediateChildrenElementsByTagName? -site:w3schools.com" (https://www.google.com/search?q=what%27s+the+simplest+way+to+find+elem.getImmediateChildrenElementsByTagName%3F+-site%3Aw3schools.com&lr=lang_en) • .children() | jQuery API Documentation - The .children() method differs from .find() in that .children() only travels a single level down th… (https://api.jquery.com/children/) • Node.childNodes - Web APIs | MDN - 14 jul. 2017 - Simple usage. // parg is an object reference to a <p> element // First check that th… (https://developer.mozil…