start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
Index: sapi/cli/config.w32 | |
=================================================================== | |
--- sapi/cli/config.w32 (revision 308839) | |
+++ sapi/cli/config.w32 (working copy) | |
@@ -6,7 +6,8 @@ | |
ARG_ENABLE('cli-win32', 'Build console-less CLI version of PHP', 'no'); | |
if (PHP_CLI == "yes") { | |
- SAPI('cli', 'php_cli.c', 'php.exe'); | |
+ SAPI('cli', 'php_cli.c php_http_parser.c php_cli_server.c', 'php.exe'); |
<?php | |
use Doctrine\ORM\Query\SqlWalker; | |
/** | |
* Quick hack to allow adding a USE INDEX on the query | |
*/ | |
class UseIndexWalker extends SqlWalker | |
{ | |
const HINT_USE_INDEX = 'UseIndexWalker.UseIndex'; |
license: gpl-3.0 |
<?php | |
class TxController extends Controller | |
{ | |
public function context($id) | |
{ | |
return new TxProxy($this->get($id), $this->get('doctrine.orm.default_entity_manager')); | |
} | |
} |
{ | |
"require": { | |
"react/socket": "0.2.*" | |
} | |
} |
Couldn't find the text of this for a while...
function findKey(obj, value){ | |
var key; | |
_.each(_.keys(obj), function(k){ | |
var v = obj[k]; | |
if (v === value){ | |
key = k; | |
} | |
}); |
This is just a small post in response to [this tweet][tweet] by Julien Pauli (who by the way is the release manager for PHP 5.5). In the tweet he claims that objects use more memory than arrays in PHP. Even though it can be like that, it's not true in most cases. (Note: This only applies to PHP 5.4 or newer.)
The reason why it's easy to assume that objects are larger than arrays is because objects can be seen as an array of properties and a bit of additional information (like the class it belongs to). And as array + additional info > array
it obviously follows that objects are larger. The thing is that in most cases PHP can optimize the array
part of it away. So how does that work?
The key here is that objects usually have a predefined set of keys, whereas arrays don't:
Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000