Hello AFKVille, question. When a user submits from a POST form in HTML, does it get the 'name' of the textbox from the name tag or the id tag? For example $_POST['username'] . Which attribute would it get the username from?
Well @ShyamK focussing on the from field mostly works :) Which is in the header
If you press the arrow in the reply button you can use show original to see the real message with the headers. Sometimes your server sends something with in the from field. And the Authentication-Results can be helpfull to.
ya apparently when you send a mail from localhost it sends really less stuff(headers). But I was checking the headers sent by Gmail, and damn, that is a lot
OK, so I've created an adjacent page in tumblr for my blog (in customize -> Pages -> add page), but It seems that I can't use any varibles to get my posts such as in
{block:Post}
{block:Audio}
<div class="audio">
{AudioPlayerBlack}
</div>
{/block:Audio}
{...
@GiovanniDiToro This is in the JS room too... what is it?
@Sem ya... it is a mess... I changed the from address and then gmail automatically assumed that it was from the other person.. added his image and all... Shouldn't there be more stringent checks?
@ShyamK Well you have the from field for display and another one that apache uses to send. Which you should be able to edit on your server itself. Not in PHP.
@Sem was using Python :) but ya... secretty stuff about my system was also being sent in the email... stuff that I thought that I had changed... better find out how to change that
@Sem I wanted to suggest even a basic amount of research would give him a more complete foundation than anyone here could write in a couple of lines of chat
@Charles I have to physically restrain myself daily from responding with "Lester, this is INTERNALS, your tears are not welcome here" type mails. I think he accounts for more than 90% of my daily sighing now.
@Gordon looking at the activity on both accounts, he also upvoted himself
@salathe yes. I thought about explaining it, but I think fixing syntax errors is in most cases too localized and the OP has made a new account after the Qs on his previous account all got dv'ed and closed, so I figured I wont.
@Sem hmm. not that much. you just have to look at the algorithms used to crack a password. you can derive their cost and then base the time it will take to create a certain output for a certain input based on average cpu power
Thank god they aren't silently uploading our keystrokes somewhere and building a database of it. That way, I guess it'd take lot less time to crack your password :D me paranoid me didn't test my real password \m/
@Gordon I probably got the users backwards, and thought the old one was active after the new one posted the question. (coupled with: why would anyone upvote this = jump to conclusion)
@Sem No network activity when it calculates, so looks fine.
I discovered this the other day, very helpful: chrome://net-internals/#events
I've noticed that being startlingly common in major frameworks. This is going to be a problem very soon. Just think of how many webshops are running on OpenCart and how many hosting services blindly update to the most recent version for the sake of being up to date. Then consider that procedural MySQL is getting kicked out come PHP6.
Come to think of it, the release date hadn't been moved to december 12th by any chance, right?
Whoops, still getting used to the Stack syntax. @salathe Last time I checked the planned updates in PHP6, all mysql_ functions were getting stripped to enforce OO syntax and for security purposes
@salathe, I picked it up in PHP related news. After some googling I found the original message from one of the core developers to the PHP mailing that sparked the debate, news.php.net/php.internals/53799
Personally I'm all in favor of phasing it out and molding the language to a more sophisticated form. It's not a bad idea to set a threshold.
PHP as it is is too "easy" and it reflects in a lot of professional use, mostly due to the lack of adequate formal training, clients' frequent inability to gauge skillsets properly and the high accessibility of the language.
I actually got to see the sourcecode for the website that the Sony leak came from about two years back. I was surprised it took them that long to dump Sony NL's database using facile SQL injection.
@DaveRandom I'm saying it's okay to impose restrictions if it enforces good form and better security. Or else we need some centralized, authoritative institutions. PHP is a wild west, and how many "programmers" have you seen advertising their skills who started their career buying a "PHP for dummies" book six weeks ago or who just discovered Wordpress generators?
A huge segment of the small business market is undermined by people who claim to provide PHP services and in fact just run some CMS installation and leave it at that.
I'm not saying it needs to be as stringent as regulating tab usage in Python, but for example the introduction of namespaces is a good one.
I'd also like to see explicit variable declaration make an entrance at some point.
@Sommer But the problem is backwards compatibility. If you start imposing more restrictions on the way the language works, entire codebases will have to be examined to ensure they are compatible before server admins are able to upgrade. What you are really talking about is an entire new language.
I don't disagree with you over the issue of the market being flooded by idiots and people who think that just because they made a site for their granny they can do anything, but the situation would be made worse by introducing drastic changes in the language, not better
What needs to be done is to make prospective clients aware of the number of idiots in the marketplace, but this would probably have the side effect of sending them down non-PHP avenues to get their products built.
@salathe There are various blog posts who phrase it as killing off Mysql. The actual plan and how to go about it has been up for debate for a while. I think I recall seeing removal on a changeset, but I might be remembering wrong or I might've interpreted "deprecated" as such.
@DaveRandom And those would be put through the gaunlet by such a move. There would be a lot of problems, but short-lived ones that in the end benefit everybody. And could be very lucrative for us.
@Sommer I think you're just confused about what is being "removed" or "deprecated". We're only talking about the ext/mysql stuff (the mysql_*) functions. Other extensions are preferred now, and will be preferred for a long time, even with a procedural interface (MySQLi).
Indeed, please define the term "procedural MySQL". I guess what you really mean is "procedural functions to allow access to libmysql", which would still exist if ext/mysql were removed.
C'mon guys, we're all hating mysql_* and we want it to be gone. But it won't in short term because of backwards compatibility. We also want everyone to write applications so logically structured that documentation isn't needed etc. etc. No need to argue about that :)
@Sommer The comment was unclear, it either said the line of code returned the username (which it didn't) or that the method returned the username (well, duh). Either way, it's a bad comment.
@salanthe Well, since you're pressing on the issue of semantics, let me point out that you inferred the comment referring to the line vs. the method whereas it specified neither :P
@Sem i'm all for self-documenting code, but you have to take into account that even if you name your methods properly, you will need documentation to convey information about the system as a whole. i agree about comments to be superfluous most of the time though.
Perhaps you're being a little narrow in what you consider as "documentation"? What kind of documentation do you feel that "good code" should eradicate?
@Sem a problem with self documenting code is that many developers simply suck at naming or expressing the code's intent in code. I've worked with developers claiming they'd use self documenting code but it only made sense to them because they failed to convey the implicit knowledge they had in their heads about the context
@Gordon Back to the first comment where I said it's what everyone would like to see. But is extremely hard if not the most hard thing in programming IMO :)