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Jul 17th 2017, 17:55 |
savant |
@admad-- |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:55 |
admad |
@admad-- |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:54 |
admad |
@savant++ |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:54 |
savant |
there we go |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:53 |
savant |
@plusplus help |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:53 |
savant |
@plusplus leaderboard |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:53 |
savant |
@admad++ |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:53 |
savant |
@admad++ |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:50 |
savant |
@admad++ |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:48 |
savant |
test++ |
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Jul 17th 2017, 17:45 |
backstageel |
Hello, can someone show me a link to a tutorial on how to enable opcache on cakephp2? |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:50 |
aaronc |
jeremyharris++ |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:50 |
aaronc |
Thanks for the help. I ended up get the passed vars with $this->viewVars, then the return is an array, I used array_keys() on it to get an array of all passed variables. |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:46 |
jeremyharris |
np! |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:45 |
aaronc |
Apologies had a bunch of pr statements floating around and mixed them up. |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:44 |
jeremyharris |
when you debug it, it shows you the “items” as a help for debugging |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:43 |
jeremyharris |
no it’s not :slightly_smiling_face: it’s an internal piece of the collection. if you want to make sure it was passed, you can check that the var you passed is indeed a collection/collectioninterface |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:42 |
aaronc |
I'm attempting to check what variables were passed to the view with ->set() in the controller, so in this case, 'items' is one of them. |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:41 |
jeremyharris |
items is internal |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:41 |
aaronc |
The name of the array, so in the first example 'items'. It seems to be disappearing with a lot of accessor methods. |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:40 |
jeremyharris |
I thought that was what you were asking for :slightly_smiling_face: what is it you want? |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:39 |
aaronc |
->first returns just the part ```[id] => 1 [name] => Safari Land/Second Chance [[new]] => [[accessible]] => Array ( [*] => 1 ) etc.... ``` |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:37 |
jeremyharris |
resultsets are collections, so check out the docs on collections for more info on using them: https://book.cakephp.org/3.0/en/core-libraries/collections.html |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:36 |
jeremyharris |
you can always turn it into an array if you want, too, ->toArray |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:35 |
jeremyharris |
usually you iterate through the resultset (e.g., items). or if there is a single item, use ->first() |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:35 |
slackebot |
) |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:35 |
aaronc |
Is there a simple way to get the key of this result set object i.e. 'items'? ```Cake\ORM\ResultSet Object ( [items] => Array ( [0] => Cake\ORM\Entity Object ( [id] => 1 [name] => Safari Land/Second Chance [[new]] => [[accessible]] => Array ( [*] => 1 |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:20 |
jeremyharris |
that could just be old stuff |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:19 |
jeremyharris |
or at least, at that time they did |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:19 |
jeremyharris |
yeah they have their own test library it seems |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:18 |
phantomwatson |
Trying to point phpunit to the directory only gets me "file not found" errors. I'm stumped. And I know it has to be something really simple and dumb that I'm doing wrong |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:17 |
phantomwatson |
Yeah, I see references to php_codesniffer having a framework for running phpunit tests to confirm the standards are working as expected, but I haven't managed to find anything in the library's wiki (https://github.com/squizlabs/PHP_CodeSniffer/wiki). |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:16 |
jeremyharris |
maybe the codesniffer lib has some info on how to run those tests |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:15 |
jeremyharris |
although, it looks like those aren’t phpunit tests |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:14 |
jeremyharris |
@phantomwatson you can point to the dir perhaps? vendor/bin/phpunit CakePHP/Tests |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:13 |
stefan |
I didn't use 2.x before so I don't know how it was working. Slack was my last hope. ;) |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:12 |
jeremyharris |
I think you’re right though. I just looked through the code and can’t find detection of hasOne. Perhaps it was removed in the 3.x version of bake — I don’t use hasOne in my 3.x application |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:11 |
jeremyharris |
yes |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:11 |
stefan |
but this is very similar to `hasMany` relationship - isn't that the case? |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:11 |
phantomwatson |
Anyone know how phpunit works with testing php_codesniffer standards? I can't seem to get them to run for cakephp-codesniffer. I clone https://github.com/cakephp/cakephp-codesniffer.git, run `composer install`, then run `vendor/bin/phpunit` and it only runs the tests defined in `vendor/squizlabs/php_codesniffer`. Anyone know how I would get it to run the tests under `CakePHP/Tests`? |
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Jul 17th 2017, 16:10 |
jeremyharris |
it might suggest belongsTo first, just say “no” |