Rasmus Lerdorf wrote:
Jochem Maas wrote:
I understand the point you made below - you have made this argument
before
and I, for one, accepted it as valid when I first read the discussion
on internals - which is why I avoided ranting about that (and changes
like it)
But you didn't avoid it,
hi Rasmus,
I understand the point you made below - you have made this argument before
and I, for one, accepted it as valid when I first read the discussion
on internals - which is why I avoided ranting about that (and changes like it)
But I am wondering what if any your views might be on the
Jochem Maas wrote:
I understand the point you made below - you have made this argument before
and I, for one, accepted it as valid when I first read the discussion
on internals - which is why I avoided ranting about that (and changes
like it)
But you didn't avoid it, you used it as an example
I get this sometimes, it often means I have overlooked something:
Fatal error: Access to undeclared static property:
AreaAgendaItem::$extraFields
EVERYWHERE in php an unset var causes an E_NOTICE, but if you dare to use OO
then
all of a sudden the OO nuthouse runs out to put a
At 4:01 PM +0200 6/1/06, Jochem Maas wrote:
I get this sometimes, it often means I have overlooked something:
Fatal error: Access to undeclared static property:
AreaAgendaItem::$extraFields
EVERYWHERE in php an unset var causes an E_NOTICE, but if you dare to use OO
then
all of a
Jochem Maas wrote:
I get this sometimes, it often means I have overlooked something:
Fatal error: Access to undeclared static property:
AreaAgendaItem::$extraFields
EVERYWHERE in php an unset var causes an E_NOTICE, but if you dare to
use OO then
all of a sudden the OO nuthouse runs out
John Nichel wrote:
Do what I do, and don't do OO. ;)
In other words, do what works, realizing that 99 percent of the time
that you're doing indivdual sites, and ignore dogma? Hmm, what a concept!
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John Meyer wrote:
John Nichel wrote:
Do what I do, and don't do OO. ;)
In other words, do what works, realizing that 99 percent of the time
that you're doing indivdual sites, and ignore dogma? Hmm, what a concept!
Actually, the company I work for operates multiple sites which all
On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 15:01, John Meyer wrote:
John Nichel wrote:
Do what I do, and don't do OO. ;)
In other words, do what works, realizing that 99 percent of the time
that you're doing indivdual sites, and ignore dogma? Hmm, what a concept!
Other than basic inheritance and the
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 15:01, John Meyer wrote:
John Nichel wrote:
Do what I do, and don't do OO. ;)
there an 'oo baby' joke in there somewhere :-)
In other words, do what works, realizing that 99 percent of the time
that you're doing indivdual sites, and
On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 17:43, Jochem Maas wrote:
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 15:01, John Meyer wrote:
John Nichel wrote:
Do what I do, and don't do OO. ;)
there an 'oo baby' joke in there somewhere :-)
In other words, do what works, realizing that 99 percent
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 17:43, Jochem Maas wrote:
...
Other than basic inheritance and the namespace features provided by
classes, I don't see much else that is critically useful. There's was a
strange push for all kinds of advanced OO features in PHP5 and somehow
On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 19:14, Jochem Maas wrote:
Robert Cummings wrote:
Ahh yes, I do like the elegance of prototypes too. They're a different
kind of beast, but a very flexible one.
the more I get in it the pretty it gets - javascript doesn't just give you a
revolver to shoot yourself
Robert Cummings wrote:
Well there was a segfault, but that's fixed now, now the warning is
thrown because of some purist attitude that says it's incorrect to pass
a literal to a reference expecting parameter... I can see how that's an
issue in C with pointers, or in a strongly type language
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 19:14, Jochem Maas wrote:
Robert Cummings wrote:
Ahh yes, I do like the elegance of prototypes too. They're a different
kind of beast, but a very flexible one.
the more I get in it the pretty it gets - javascript doesn't just give you a
revolver
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