awesome. I'll have a read now. I've been looking at different tutorials and I keep finding mysql -> mysqli versions. I guess I should learn the difference xD I'm a complete beginner
@DaveRandom No, my problem is only when people come in and are trying to spout rubbish without listening. Those who evangelise a given framework without accepting it's weaknesses (because they're too naive to think their are any) and who have been 'bought' by the marketing
Btw, "as easy as possible" literally means a few classes already existing that you tie together, like with Ratchet, and say "Here's my event handler, use it" and that's it. They only need to implement a few methods themselves and expand out from there
@Tiffany Actually it's the model and view that communicate in some instances, and the controller is for 'putting', but we don't do this in PHP (which is why MVC doesn't exist in php)
@PeeHaa Is not. Shove stuff off into a queue for horizontal scaling
Anonymous
3:05 PM
@PeeHaa for something like this github.com/DaveRandom/Jeeves/blob/master/src/System/…, success is determined by a private property being updated, so what would be the correct way of determining success out of scope? I presume that was the reason for oldskools logging test
@Jimbo The way how the codebase is written, the controller gets content from the view (in this case from a form). I'm more curious if it's the right way to do it, or if I need to look at rewriting this at some point.
MVC gets morphed into all different sorts of things but Controllers asking Views for data is not one I've seen because it violates the idea of data ownership, which the View never has.
@PeeHaa The goal is to allow us to write synchronous code that gets executed when we ask for it in a websocket context without having to worry about yield + asynchronous stuff, blocking or anything like that
@Trowski I talked to Benjamin Gruenbaum and asked how he would implement promises now with generators / async + await, and he said exactly how we currently do.
@Trowski We just need to talk. Or let others talk about Amp.
@bwoebi @kelunik Fair enough. We'll have to have some key points right up front then. Hopefully I can get some time to help with documentation very soon.
For fun I quick used some of Icicle's code to implement thenables on top of Amp's promises. Was really easy, maybe I'll offer it as a separate lib under my own name in case people want it.
If i'm trying establishing connections on multiple web pages, is there a more efficient way of storing username/password details for my sql connection rather than writting it out on every needed page?
@Trowski Also, A+ is not how people understand promises. Most people just know that they need to use then() and that's about it. People regularly are astonished about how they can get race conditions with async code etc. They do not really realize that things are really out-of order and won't be really sequentially.
@Trowski A+ is largely detailing semantics, which nobody cares about until they conflict with their own code. I'm pretty sure if we say "amp is like react, just no then(), but when() and you need to pass the promise itself around instead of the return value of when()", you pretty much already cover the people knowing A+
@PeeHaa The goal is to allow us to write synchronous code that gets executed when we ask for it in a websocket context without having to worry about yield + asynchronous stuff, blocking or anything like that
@LeviMorrison SPA has it's own MVC , say in JS, and then when talking to the back-end it'll typically use REST. I'd like to see the back-end updating something in a mysql DB, and instantly the front-end reflects it. Think Angular ng-bind, but not just front-end
@PeeHaa We use yield because of stuff that can block, right? So, my point is that anything that can block we just do in a worker somewhere else. Only when it's done do we pass that back into the event loop to return to the client over WS
@PeeHaa The libraries does the complete websocket communication and fetching from the queue. The actual app just has to provide a callable to execute practically.
@Vamsi yes, but another reason I've never put the time in is that I've never been confident it will be that useful. Servers will impose rate limits that will eliminate all of the benefits you get from async
@kelunik faggot and gay transitioned meaning based on contemporary usage; even if "promise" once held meaning independent of "then" that does not mean... hmm... I forgot where I was going with this ^_^
i'm stuck, and tried everything to fix this bug: Warning: mysqli_query() expects parameter 1 to be mysqli, null given in What am I doing wrong: mysqli_query($conn, $isql);
most of the time if you're using something like 3v4l you want to see the real output - meaning the source. Looking at the rendered output is not as useful.
@Tiffany I run CMS development instances that way (with SQLite as the database). It allows me to just start up a small webserver instance as needed. Haven't had a "real" webserver installed for some time.
Sure whatever works. But the only setup I need is to have PHP in the PATH environment variable. After that you open the console, got to the directory and call php -S localhost:8080. Usually I have a batch/shell script for that in the project.
lol, the developer who wrote this did it wrong. I was testing to see how the $_POST results of a multidimensional array would be from a form. It resulted in what I expected. There's a method that's supposed to "getContent" that's being used with $_POST, but it literally just gets all of the content from a file.
It is something I'll probably set up eventually because it would enable me to get rid of xampp, just not right now while I'm working on a problem already.
They wrote the method with a parameter $contact like they were going to get various details from a form. But then rewrote it to just get all of the content from a file using ob_get_contents. Course I can't judge 'em, I can't write better at this time.