Apr 9, 2019 12:09
feel free to create a wiki page and link in the thread
Apr 9, 2019 12:02
this is almost a 9 year old question, why bother?
Apr 9, 2019 12:01
anything
Apr 9, 2019 12:01
write a post on medium
Apr 9, 2019 12:01
create a wiki page if you have sense of mission
Apr 9, 2019 12:00
what kind of "salvage mission"
Apr 9, 2019 12:00
sorry, but you're scary
Apr 9, 2019 11:59
that's it
Apr 9, 2019 11:59
a lame developer fckd up a mysql schema
Apr 9, 2019 11:59
but this is not a scientific site
Apr 9, 2019 11:57
why would I bother with regex when it's unsalvageable?
Apr 9, 2019 11:57
you've changed the context of a question with 12 answers
Apr 9, 2019 11:57
no need to explain anything
Apr 9, 2019 11:56
which was a faulty approach, this is why I've cut it down and gave the answer what I gave
Apr 9, 2019 11:56
most of the answers are trying to solve the problem from OPs standpoint
Apr 9, 2019 11:55
of course they're wrong since you altered the title
Apr 9, 2019 11:54
yes, but it alters the entire discussion
Apr 9, 2019 11:54
OP wanted to fix a serialized string with regular expressions which is impossible, regardless of what part of the serialized string is damaged
Apr 9, 2019 11:53
look, I'm honestly open to constructive criticism, but I'm not really understand your motivation behind "improving an already answered" question. you even changed the title, which gives an entirely different viewpoint on the scenario
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
@mickmackusa how my example is inappropriate? what's the difference in a missing string chain/truncated serialized data? nothing, since both will return false in the end. also, what kind of researchers are you talking about? will you cast a delete vote on all answers except yours? where is your example? how is your answer is different than mine or others? chill, man
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
@mickmackusa no, you are vandalizing content, and after all adding the very same answer I've added before. what's your point?
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
@mickmackusa sorry, but what are you doing with this question? editing title/description of an already answered (and don't get me wrong, I don't care about meaningless internet points) question is plain wrong, you're faking the context. why do you feel you need to do this?
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
then you have even less chance to restore
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
hey @mickmackusa, just added some more details to my answer.
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
that's a good idea, I'll do it when I'll be at my desk. thanks
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
I don't necessarily agree. the scenario op described is a real one. given some serialized data which has been damaged, and op wanted to know if there's any way to fix it using regular expressions. I still think there's no way to do that, (at least not with regular expressions) because it'd be a guesswork
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
or just hunting for badges, right? :)
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
why do you want to do anything at all?
Apr 9, 2019 11:48
do you have a better answer?
 
Sep 24, 2018 13:41
unfortunately you cannot get it
Sep 24, 2018 13:38
-1 is a valid response
Sep 24, 2018 13:36
there must be a download_content_length somewhere
Sep 24, 2018 13:36
yes, that'll be
Sep 24, 2018 13:34
and with $ch?
Sep 24, 2018 13:32
or var_dump(curl_getinfo($ch));?
Sep 24, 2018 13:32
var_dump(curl_getinfo($mh));?
Sep 24, 2018 13:31
is this returns -1-1 too?
Sep 24, 2018 13:31
yes
Sep 24, 2018 13:28
could you please check that too?
Sep 24, 2018 13:28
sorry, I meant to write $mh in my previous comment
Sep 24, 2018 13:28
Hi
Sep 24, 2018 13:28
@Сергей could you please also check $info = curl_getinfo($mh, CURLINFO_CONTENT_LENGTH_DOWNLOAD);?
Sep 24, 2018 13:28
@Сергей see my updated answer.
Sep 24, 2018 13:28
You should use $info = curl_getinfo($ch, CURLINFO_CONTENT_LENGTH_DOWNLOAD); instead.
 
Nov 22, 2012 15:25
thanks again
Nov 22, 2012 15:25
:)
Nov 22, 2012 15:25
now i'm almost halfway :9
Nov 22, 2012 15:25
thank you for chatting with me
Nov 22, 2012 15:24
sorry, i need to go