Jan 23, 2020 00:52
I see the problem. require_once != file_get_contents. It will not parse and include the text.
Jan 23, 2020 00:52
Is that all that's in your test.php file?
Jan 23, 2020 00:52
Where is the code for your test.php file?
Jan 23, 2020 00:52
You have to create an object, and then reference its name. For example: $test = new Test(123); $test->ticket_id.
 
Oct 10, 2016 11:51
Just run it twice with 3 people :)
Oct 10, 2016 11:50
Yep, exactly :)
Oct 10, 2016 11:48
Yeah exacrly.
Oct 10, 2016 11:42
function get_nearest_meeting( $meetings, $start, $people = 4 )
{
// Start by sorting the meetings:
function sorter($a, $b) { return strtotime($a['startTime']) - strtotime($b['startTime']); }
usort($meetings, 'sorter');

// An array of meeting IDs to ignore as we iterate:
$ignore = array();

// An array containing the return:
$return = array();

foreach( $meetings as $meeting )
{
if( $meeting['meeting_id'] == $start)
{
$earliest = strtotime( $meeting['endTime'] );
$ignore[] = $meeting['meeting_id'];
Oct 10, 2016 11:42
Okay, try this for starters:
Oct 10, 2016 11:41
Okay, so they're all nearest to 1812?
Oct 10, 2016 11:38
When you decide which meeting to select for Person 4 (i.e. ID = 1815) is that still the closest start time to the end time for the FIRST meeting?
Oct 10, 2016 11:34
Eughm
Oct 10, 2016 11:32
Like:
[
person1: [meeting],
person2: [meeting]
...
]
Oct 10, 2016 11:31
An array of dates?
Oct 10, 2016 11:31
And how should it return?
Oct 10, 2016 11:31
Okay
Oct 10, 2016 11:30
And the function should handle any number of people between 1 and 4, correct?
Oct 10, 2016 11:30
Okay, so 1812 should always be the starting point?
Oct 10, 2016 11:29
Okay, so do you still wish to add the starting meeting_id in the params?
Oct 10, 2016 11:29
(for the first iteration)
Oct 10, 2016 11:28
What defines the ID to use?
Oct 10, 2016 11:28
Okay...
Oct 10, 2016 11:27
So you essentially want to return X number of elements for the number of people specified?
Oct 10, 2016 11:27
No problem!
Oct 10, 2016 11:26
No problem, glad to help!
Oct 10, 2016 11:26
@ChrisBeckett Please see the edited answer. It should work as you expect now.
Oct 10, 2016 11:26
Okay, so you wish to find the earliest start time for meeting_id == 1812, and then find the closest next meeting whose ID != 1812?
 
Jan 11, 2014 21:28
There is no`alert()` in PHP. You're best bet is to do as you've done with echo.
Jan 11, 2014 21:28
Sorry, I'm back now.
Jan 11, 2014 21:13
No probs.
Jan 11, 2014 21:12
This > $ _POST[ 'name'];. There's superfluous space after $.
Jan 11, 2014 21:12
By the way, you have typos in that code.
Jan 11, 2014 21:12
Well, it should. Are you sure you're actually submitting the form?
Jan 11, 2014 21:12
Are you serious? Of course it doesn't work on jsFiddle... PHP code needs executing on a server, a proper server. Not jsFiddle.
 
Jan 4, 2014 14:37
Take care dude, see you around on SO in the future
Jan 4, 2014 14:37
lol
Jan 4, 2014 14:37
o.O
Jan 4, 2014 14:36
Anyway, just to clarify, your answer used the new keyword, so you're using it as a class... :P
Jan 4, 2014 14:36
Good chatting, didn't want to spam the poor guy's question.
Jan 4, 2014 14:35
Hahaha nice cop out :P
Jan 4, 2014 14:34
OK, so we're cool on that, yeah?
Jan 4, 2014 14:34
And as soon as you use new Func(), you're using Func() as a class, not a function object. For example:
Jan 4, 2014 14:33
But it doesn't mean they don't exist from an engineering point of view.
Jan 4, 2014 14:32
From a purely semantic point of view in JS anyway.
Jan 4, 2014 14:32
All good man. But as soon as you introduce the new keyword, they're no longer function objects...
Jan 4, 2014 14:30
It will when you make bold statements like: *objects are functions
functions are objects* ;)
Jan 4, 2014 14:29
;)
Jan 4, 2014 14:29
Jan 4, 2014 14:28
They're not, they're objects. Functions are functions, and objects are objects, end of story ;)
Jan 4, 2014 14:28
You just wrote: objects are functions