but the plan is: 1) split 2) pick one maintainer per lib 3) announce 2.x version LTS 4) move all libs to a free semver-based path (allows for quicker rewrites/iterations without worrying about BC too much)
@Danack so the idea is that Zend\Stdlib 2.x may work with Zend\Code 999.x
well, a tv broadcasting company in sweden went after a someone who wrote rape and death threats on the facebook wall of a female who wrote about female issues. They generally just said they didn't think it would matter
and after reading that I just felt ... and questioned ... really?
I always wondered why ppl would write rape and death threats with full name...
don't get me wrong, i'd prefer strict types. i just don't expect them to happen and i think the bulk of the arguments presented (particularly those declaring what "99%" of people will do) entirely overblown
if you spend any time answering questions on SO you are amazed at the general ignoranze of most ppl. Google is a higher barrier for most then SO it seems.
I have to support some Perl Scripts at my job, it's painful. Trying to get them re-written in C# right now, but my boss isn't biting because HE doesn't know C#. He doesn't know Perl, either though.
@JoeWatkins, I recently came up with this. Can we do something similar for php? pThreads has everything that's needed here. I don't have anything against javascript, however, I can't organize code in JavaScript as I want (my lack of experience with javascript, for sure).
The reason I don't want .net is that I am tired of being bound to that platform. Also it's pretty slow when things need to get dynamic
I want something very similar to php extensions, or V8 addons (in terms of nodejs). I.e. I want to have interface programmed in php and simply call it from callbacks in nodejs.
The reason is that nodejs handles sockets way better than php.
what you want is an addon, with the kind of functionality you find in most extensions in the addon rather than a php extension, you basically just need object_init[_ex], object handlers table knowledge, and class and function table knowledge and you can definitely make that work ...
the trickiest bit will be getting the layout correct actually ... not so easy to load php externally to php ... not least of all because most builds don't have a shared library ...
you might think about (read: be forced into) using the embed sapi actually ...
imho though, it might be better just to write a better sockets implementation for PHP ... that has to be simpler, and solve the actual problem you are having ...
a new socket extension with a nice OO api and all the bells and whistles is going to be more useful, the chances of this happening in core are quite slim, but there's nothing wrong with pecl ... everyone talks about making resources objects, but that's a massive change, breaking so many things that I don't think there will ever be a release of php where that is okay ... we can introduce new api's and deprecate the old, but delete the old ...
people are arguing today about whether to remove mysql from 7, been marked deprecated for many many years ...
tl;dr if the root problem is actually poor socket abstraction and API in php, then fix that ...
sockets are arguably easier ... there are many extensions abstracting ev loops and more modern socket handling mechanisms, however they are all guilty of being ignorant of the way php works in some situations, you are plugged into this room and can just ask all the way through development ... I'd love a new sockets library to come out of room 11 for php7 ...
yeah daniels work serves as a good starting place for reasoning about the API ...
he mentions in his documentation the only problem with scaling sockets in php as they are is that the select call is crap, everyone knows this, so in some sense the research has been done for you, create a nice OO API and avoid select and we should have something that scales further than what we have now ...
and there's time to find out what is wrong with that approach before php7 is even in wide use ...
there will be something wrong with it ... but time is something we have for the first time in several years ...
I wouldn't just copy API's verbatim from daniel, he'll have made some compromise for the way php works that you may not have to make in an extension, but definitely good starting place ...
@bwoebi ping
I'm getting stick about phpdbg documentation on twitter ... apparently we're not doing enough to "keep modern php above reproach" ...
gonna have any time over holidays or you busy ?
imo there is nothing wrong with the select call, it would scale as far as we can make use of if it were programmed better ... in C you have fd_set's and use memset/memcpy directly to fill them, this is much different to the same call in PHP, populating hash tables and deconstructing them is expensive stuff that could be avoided if you provided some better way of manipulating fd_set's correctly ... there's no denying that modern stuff has nicer api's, however
used correctly, which is in part what modern api's are actually doing, you can squeeze performance from the old stuff just as well as the new ...
good day, is it really a bad idea to serialize and store array in database. It is just info about something, nothing to relate to other fields or tables later on, at least what i know now.
@Muhammet well if you serialize it it's binary data. if it's not binary data then you wouldn't have serialized it so then this would be an argument against storing it in the database serialized.
strings ship with encoding. the database does a lot of work so that text is stored properly inside the database and transferred just right between database client and server. this at no case should happen with serialized data. hence serialized data is binary and must be stored as binary blob within the database.
user1607528
9:48 AM
thanks @hakre, i didn't know that, i thought the array is just encoded formatted as a string Edit ( I think I don't know how to differentiate string and binary date )
@Muhammet that is because your terminal as well as your webbrowser display binary data normally as text - not as a hexdump.
user1607528
@hakre got it, no way to know if you don't know from docs then)) One more question, I want to learn right way to do this : I have an app that submits songs, and in the form there are checkboxes for different `categories` `moods`. So I was thinking to store these category, mood in many-to-many relationship, but for example there will be like 20 rows for one song if 20 categories, moods checked
user1607528
should i just store them like category_ids_column -> 1,2,5,7,8,9,3
user1607528
9:58 AM
but then if i want to get songs that belong to id 9, it is not right
you want a relation here, so normalize that in the database. it allows you to search for that quickly.
an alternative is to store this in a manner you can quickly search for it: "[1][2][5][7][8][9][3]" this ensures that looking for 1 won't search for 10, too.
but what you have here is just that you can think about multiple possible ways how to solve your persistence needs. each comes with pros and cons. you could perhaps just grab a sheet of paper, put a line in the middle and list pros/cons on each side for each of these methods. additional some lecture like the SQL-Antipatterns book might open your mind for more insights and options.
user1607528
thank you @hakre, appreciate your help. I think I will create categories_songs and moods_songs tables for relation
most likely categories and moods are actually the same: a taxonomy. so you could normalize this and have one relation table that also references the taxonomy. this could be done with compound keys.
you can then add another taxonomy later on like bit depth or whatever.