I checked out the book from mister rethans and mister gutmans and mister bakken, mh, its seems easier to simply say how the book is named :)) To check out, what exactly it means, to create static and public and so on methods. Yeah, I can easely call them static, as you prefered. But now there came up a new question in me. Is there a perforamce issue about using public privat static and so on methods. Will my application even start to run faster? And another question I would like to ask is, that one of my classes as prescribed is allready 400 KB in size, does it slow down the sys- tem more to load that class, into memcached, or additionally eaccelerator than splitting the class in a hole bunch of smaller classes, which are getting loaded, as needed too. Thanks you! Am Freitag, den 27.07.2007, 14:38 -0400 schrieb Nathan Nobbe: > judging by the method invocation you have shown > > site::memcache($pointername, $dataset); > > that indicates site is a class and memecahce is a method defined in site, > which is being invoked statically in this case. > and in the definition of memecache you showed, the definition does not have > the static keyword, therefore you > should not be invoking it from a static context. > from the documentation on the static keyword > Calling non-static methods statically generates an E_STRICT level warning. > > its not a solution to your problem but it is a point on proper style. > > -nathan > > On 7/27/07, Sascha Braun - CEO @ Braun Networks <sascha@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > > > Hi dear Sancar, > > > > you seem really the best man in place as what I see in the mailing > > list :)) Thats really lovely I would like to say. > > > > Now lets come to the solution I need: > > > > public function memcache($pointer, $data="", $compress="", $timeout="0") > > // store or load data from the memcache > > { > > if (MEMCACHE_SUPPORT == 'true') { > > $memcached_port = $_SESSION['memcache_port']; > > if (empty($memcached_port)) { $memcached_port = '99999'; } > > $memcache = memcache_connect('localhost', $memcached_port); > > if ($memcache) { > > $memcache_pointer = PROJECT.$pointer; > > $cache = $memcache -> get($memcache_pointer); > > if (!$cache) { > > $memcache->set($memcache_pointer,$data); > > $cache = $memcache -> get($memcache_pointer); > > } > > return $cache; > > } > > } > > } > > > > This is the Funktion I use to load and write data to the memcache > > a write or restore looks like this here site::memcache('pointer',$data); > > > > This is working in many cases pretty fine. > > > > Now I have a codepart, where the 'pointer' is getting created dynamical- > > ly. Which means I do fx. a $content_id.'_'.$translation instead of wri- > > ting a simple 'pointer' as first parameter to the above function. > > > > When I now call my XML Parser, to store data in memcache, and try to > > recall, the data short after, it says: > > > > File not found: This file somewhere in the suburbs. > > > > But when I try to output the XML Object before the data is written to > > the cache, everything goes terribly fine. > > > > Now I figured out, that when I use static naming for the memcache data > > pointer 'pointer' everything goes fine. > > > > When I use the memcache directly, which means, I call the > > $memcache->set() and $memcache->get() function from where I store data > > everything goes fine again, even with dynamically created, variables. > > > > But as soon as I use my function layer, call a to > > site::memcache($pointername,$dataset); only returnes bullshit. > > > > Mh, this makes me a little bit sad. > > > > Maybe somebody or even you, can help me :)) > > > > Best Regards, and a baba Respect from Germany, Dear Sancar! > > > > Sascha > > > > -- > > PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) > > To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php > > > > -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php