@ln-s Yes and no. On the one hand, it took a very common pattern for closures and made it simpler. On the other, it allows for a much more expression-oriented way of thinking, especially when inlining an anon function. Which of those is more valuable is a subjective question.
(I'm skimming over the original lambda thread that someone linked to, and it's fascinating to see what the discussion was. And that I was involved in it. :-) )
@ln-s Because ages ago when closures were added to PHP, they thought explicit capture was a good idea. I'm not saying they are wrong, but we can point to a large body of evidence that suggests auto-capture is better liked.
PHP supports [] already, maybe time to allow () => {}, and () => [] as well (instead of prefixing that with fn). Is not backward compatible?? maybe add feature enabler like <?php //@implicit
The probably most desired syntax for arrow functions is ($x) => $x * $y or $x => $x * $y for short. It is very concise, and used by a number of other programming languages, including JavaScript. However, using this syntax in PHP comes with some severe technical challenges. This section will discuss a number of possible syntaxes for arrow functions and what benefits and disadvantages they have.
Yeah
So why do it if fn() is going to be used instead, needs another iteration IMO
@gustavoanalytics googling "mysql_fetch_array() expects parameter 1 to be resource, boolean given", gives the result of: stackoverflow.com/questions/11674312/…
``` SET @User_id = (SELECT user_id FROM caffeine_customers_shipping_addresses WHERE id = 4650); SELECT * FROM caffeine_customers_shipping_addresses WHERE user_id=@User_id ```
@gustavoanalytics if it works on one machine, and doesn't work on another, you need to use the appropriate function to get the error, on the machine that it doesn't work on.
You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'SELECT * FROM caffeine_customers_shipping_addresses WHERE user_id=@User_id' at line 1
1) mysql_query('SET @User_id=1239213'); //Check for false, etc 2) $result = mysql_query('SELECT .... where user_id=@User_Id'); 3) Even tho you don't need point 1 at all, you can just do $result = mysql_query('SELECT .... where user_id=1234');
But couppling a functionality such as SET in PHP code will probably leave with a problem or two when trying to switch to redis or some other storage engine of your liking
Unfortunately he's arguing pro-fn(), which is probably harmful toward it passing. :-/
@NunoMaduro I think it would be good to include some tests based on Rowan's examples to confirm exactly what happens. I'm pretty sure what happens is entirely logical, but tests to confirm would be good.
you know that how clean the code looks is totally subjective, if I have to spend longer than a millisecond determining which expression are functions, it feels like loosing to me ...
you shouldn't care, because it's subjective, but you can't use apparent (to you) clarity to make the argument that some code is better ...
@Crell I've just added tests concerning the usage combined with the "match" feature. https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/6246/commits/408b1344a81d51de67618ccba334691da8492094.
The flow of the code allows a subscription to be frozen for an X amount of months. Would there be anyway to set this up without dealing with cancelling a subscription and restarting it with a future date? Right now I have it implemented with
$temppause= $stripe->subscriptions()->update($stripe_c...
@SandEep as long as you don't expect chat to be a fast track to a resolution. Your question was posted a few minutes ago, so you should wait and see if anyone answers on main. Patience.
I'm not expecting a fast track resolution, I was just checking if someone had previous experience with stripe, didn't mean it to seem like I was trying to get it fast tracked sorry ! :)
@Crell Just saw this comment "Do we have a test in your PR to verify the instant-execute multiline expression syntax?". Do you still need me to answer this?
@NunoMaduro I'm honestly a little worried about advertising fn for usage in match, in that people will say that's "close enough" if we propose proper match blocks...
Also, with fn it's impossible to capture by reference so it will behave very differently than a normal block.
This can happen very quickly. E.g. transform a switch statement to match with a block where you modify some local variable outside of the switch, and already you triggered the problem.
user14853506
9:56 PM
Hey, this is my first time here, I've been wondering, if I just set a variable in the PHP code rather then in the database, is it still secure?
@ButWhyTho1375 I strongly recommend not storing anything like a secret in code. It sounds like you're trying to do password validation. Using the php.net/manual/en/function.password-verify.php is almost certainly the right thing to use if you are.
@NunoMaduro I've only looked at the examples from the RFC now but yeah, like that one. I'm not saying the behavior is wrong necessarily, just that I don't think it's a good solution for match. Match to me is a branching control structure. You wouldn't expect if blocks to have their own scopes that capture values only by value.
@ButWhyTho1375 even so, you can redact the password in this scenario, and it wouldn't affect the question, or the ability/difficulty of answering the question
99.9999999% of the time, redact the password. There are a small handful of situations where leaving the password is necessary, but even then it should be over a secured channel, at minimum.
Even if it's something that's throwaway, it's a good habit to follow. What happens if you become used to sending a password over plaintext, and you happen to share a password that shouldn't be? onosecond