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user895378
15:00
I haven't read that one either. Need to acquire.
@Mike Yes, storing each IP against the file hash might be the only options
Its just the downloads at the moment are quite SQL intensive already
query wise
@HarryBeasant i personally would store the IP addresses of the downloaders and count them store them in a table in your database.. and when you offer referral payouts just clear the table out.
@rdlowrey lol, i'm only a template hacker. I got annoyed by the template commands and decided to just copy recursive. That worked pretty good though, there is only one file with references to the template directory. Since then I have changed colours, defaulted to display protected and private, with names only in the sidebar. Are you using something else?
file hash is another method, but depending on the situation IIRC a db query will be faster than a file system manipulation. Then again i could be totally wrong about this one.
Sem
Sem
15:02
Ok guys, i'm off :)
why are the downloads "SQL Intensive"
later @Sem
user895378
@Paul Not at the moment. I briefly toyed with the idea of rolling my own simple documentation generator ... Reflection makes it very straight-forward. But I decided I didn't have time for that right now and my code documentation is authoritative. Eventually, though, I'll need to start using something again, and phpDocumentor2 seems the logical choice
yep, powered by NikiC's parser.
I get a notification everytime someone does @Mike* in any chatroom.. guess it's time to change my name
user895378
I'm not convinced that type of documentation is really necessary though ... the code documentation should be good enough for anyone.
user895378
15:05
API doc generators? SOURCE CODE: One doc to rule them all, one doc to find them. One doc to bring them all, and in the debugging bind them.
@rdlowrey Yes! Your IDE should have everything you need for simple reference documentation including PHP and include path
user895378
@MikeB Oh, and regarding the Col. Shrapnel question from yesterday: I was just kidding :)
@MikeB same here.. people think i am you and pick it lol
can someone help me with this? i have a mysql database that says its missing an index but i cant fix it
even though @MikeB is clearly not the same as @Mike lol
15:06
its so pretty though, its actually good for writing unit tests against. (I know its out of order for some). But it doesn't expose the internals, so you can test against your documented interface.
@Mike, ah so you're the culprit :p
user895378
@Paul I'm confused where the testing relates to the docs?
@rdlowrey Fair enough
@rdlowrey By testing the documented functionality I should be testing what should be there, rather than cheating and testing what I actually implemented.
This one starts to get funny: stackoverflow.com/q/10998331/367456
user895378
15:12
@Paul Oh I see. My version of that would be: "Every concrete class should implement an interface and unit-tests should run against the functionality defined by the interfaces"
Hi @MikeB, @Paul, @rdlowrey and the whole rest of the gang.
user895378
hola
hello hakre
@hakre hakre! How do you pronounce your name?
I've always said 'Hacker' in my head
so, what's going on?
15:14
hii @hakre
@rdlowrey Yes, I didn't think of using my interfaces. That would be nearly identical, but it wouldn't work for protected methods?
@MikeB just hakre, why? ^^
Just curious
user895378
@Paul Well, I've learned the hard way that it's almost always better to not test non-public methods directly and cover them using the tests of public methods. This is because non-public methods are implementation details. They're subject to change without affecting the public-facing interface of your class. I've wasted a lot of time re-writing tests for non-public methods over and over when implementations changed.
@rdlowrey :-D
15:18
I know some of those words XD
user895378
Just because you can test protected or private methods doesn't mean you should. My unit-testing experience has been improved greatly by not worrying over direct tests for non-public implementation details.
user895378
@ircmaxell Go Kings Go!
@rdlowrey Absolutely. It's a waste of resources if one does that. And probably a misunderstanding what a unit is.
hmm, yes, interesting and fair point. Do you still aim for 100% coverage?
user895378
@hakre Yep. So true. It's a good lesson to learn.
user895378
15:19
@Paul I do ... but it's not the most important goal.
yes, agreed
@hakre I'm actually finding it kind of frustrating.
@Paul You can mark the parts with comments that are not covered for a reason, e.g. exception throwing edge-cases you have in the code for multi-level-strictness. E.g. only because your test-suite can't trigger that exception, it must not mean that on some platform with some PHP version this would not be possible ^^
@rdlowrey
We unit-test everything here.. basically cast our classes in cement so when anything changes a test fails. It's pretty annoying
user895378
15:22
Personally, it's extremely rare for me to find a situation where I can't get to 100% coverage and I don't ever test non-publics directly
We're basically asserting a checksum value on a file ><
@MikeB which is not the same as testing. If your tests test for bugs that exist, you're doing something wrong...
user895378
@MikeB lol well that seems like saying, "Hey, eating carrots is good for me. I should eat 10,000 carrots a day" ... then you die from vitamin A poisoning.
yes, I'll stick to public tests, I'm definitely convinced that is the logical thing to test. Thanks @rdlowrey
user895378
15:25
@Paul No problem. I started on the other side of the tracks and the shift away from testing implementation details has made a huge difference in the quality of my tests and my process in general. You won't regret it.
I know, I'm exaggerating a bit but we mock EVERYTHING in a method and in a very pure sense of the term unit-test it.. It definitely feels better to cover protected/private methods by testing a public method that invokes the inaccessible methods
Too pure imho
But we get 100% coverage ^^ (I know that's a misleading stat)
@MikeB It's not only misleading, it even prevents you to detect dead code.
So don't do superfluous things. That starts to byte yourself after some time. Believe me ^^
At least for the "I test my private functions" stuff, this is really bad. You should not need to test those.
@hakre You mean directly?
user895378
@MikeB You should direct your co-workers to this conversation and open a dialogue on how the radicalization of testing can take a very useful practice and make it harmful.
15:31
@MikeB Yes, don't test them by using reflection and make them accessible.
@rdlowrey Apparently :)
While we are on testing, does anyone test TypeHints (I'm thinking its massive overkill / bordering on counter productive)? like testing the following signature enforces an Array and a DependencyObjectIface: public function methodToTest(Array $arr, DependencyObjectIface $dep)
user895378
@Paul No, I never test typehints. PHP does that for you.
@Paul I concur with rdlowrey
user895378
Don't take the TDD gospel and turn it into a deranged, over-the-top fundamentalism.
15:35
"‎Mike you use so much white space in your code it's racist."
13
what the hell is DependencyObjectIface
I'm happy agreeing with that. Although I am testing InvalidArgumentExceptions that I throw manually for incorrect scalar parameters.
user895378
Just like you can waste a lot of time trying to make code perfect (a goal you can never reach), fanatical testing of unnecessary elements will kill your productivity.
that sounds extremely fishy
user895378
@Paul That's fine then.
15:36
@tereško some new apple i product?
@tereško its only a placeholder for that example.
user895378
If your code manually throws an exception, you should test that the exception is thrown under the expected conditions.
@LeviMorrison digging up a skeleton here. did you ever find a suitable program?
@rdlowrey I'd coin it the other way round: If you write tests first, you don't do any non-necessary tests at all, and you normally don't reach 100% code coverage as well, which is great, because it shows you where you can improve your code (not your tests).
@hakre stackoverflow.com/questions/10998331/… I think i solved it...guess i should have had another look at my environment. when I executed the script in a browser it works! Examining the run CLI in eclipse (DEBUG option) it was set to PHP 5.2..
15:39
@CarrieKendall there isn't any .. at least, wasn't , when 2 years ago i had similar urge
user895378
@hakre Very good point. I'm guilty of not writing all my tests before my code ... but I'm at a happy medium
@tereško what UML software do you use?
now .. none , but i used Visual Paradigm
they have free "community edition" hidden in the site
yeah, i was reading about that on some SO post a few months ago
user895378
yuml.me is worth checking out
15:45
i think i'll stick with ArgoUML :'[
that one looks scary
as in "the Saw" scary , not "Alfred Hitchcock" scary
compared to my opinion, i think that's a compliment.
@rdlowrey Try that once with a piece of code. It's an experience on it's own.
user895378
@hakre I've been trying to move in that direction ... but admittedly, full adoption has been slow :)
So for Netbeans you have to install XAMPP alongside it, it doesn't have an AMP plugin?
@Event_Horizon Which o/s do you have?
@rdlowrey You're using an ancient mysql default comment ;)
multiping!!!
user895378
@PeeHaa Lol we need a "please stop using the deprecated mysql_* copy/paste" comment
user895378
16:00
super-multi-ping!
user895378
my default comment about mysql_* is deprecated.
@CarrieKendall I didn't find one, but I didn't look too hard.
user895378
and it's bookmarked
@Paul Windows
16:03
@PeeHaa Lies, it was slow before I touched it!
@PeeHaa Don't believe him!
0
Q: where mysql_real_escape_string() is needed

Web Wormis mysql_real_escape_string() with sprintf is need only at login page or at every mysql_query after loging in....for preventing from sql injection...

user895378
@hakre what does the mean? Review __something__?
16:10
@salathe It is true right? ;)
@rdlowrey reopen?
Please downvote all answers not mentioning the use of PDO or MySQLi
15
@rdlowrey Reopen
user895378
aha
user895378
I wouldn't know about that since I'm < 10k rep
user895378
oh wait, nevermind, I'm thinking of delete votes
16:12
@Event_Horizon My only experience was with linux it works with the standalone software there easily.
user895378
@PeeHaa Oh no! I think the global meme has hijacked your keyboard and is creating tag names in an infinite loop!
:P
Man thats a casual/lazy person if they asked here before using google.
user895378
@RepWhoringPeeHaa lol at new user euthanization through sympathy downvotes
16:16
@rdlowrey , you do not need 10k to vote for reopening
@rdlowrey re-open pls ;)
user895378
@tereško Yeah I realized that right after I said it ... and then cast the reopen vote
It's open with ^ that vote.
@rdlowrey You only need to try it once, start with something small.
@ircmaxell, you'll appreciate this one. f-secure.com/weblog/archives/00002384.html
I'm gonna lobby for a GPU in my next set of web nodes.
16:21
lol
user895378
I've been seeing a lot of this justification for mysql_* since the recent wave of "DO NOT USE mysql_*":
user895378
@rdlowrey I'm not writing new code, I'm fixing ancient legacy code. But I'm sure PHP newbies would appreciate your help. — Chris G. 8 mins ago
@Charles: that guy has no idea how GPUs work, and is plain wrong
user895378
"Oh no, I totally know what I'm doing but I just asked a question that demonstrates a complete lack of understanding of this code."
@rdlowrey Then getting rid of mysql_ functions should be your top priority.
16:23
for running a single hash, a GPU is going to be just about as fast as a CPU
user895378
@LeviMorrison My thoughts exactly
where GPUs really gain, is in hashing a crap load of things at the same time
@ircmaxell Or maybe slower considering the overhead.
so if I'm trying to brute force your password db, who cares if one hash takes 1ms. I can do 10k of them at once in parellel! So the thousands per second becomes billions per second again
tune the algo to take around 1/2 of a second, and just use the CPU
@ircmaxell Blinding flash of the obvious. Ow.
Man, I need my coffee.
16:25
@rdlowrey , that was reason why "new code" was mentioned in that piece
user895378
It's a well-thought out inclusion, I would say. You countered the only real argument before it could be made.
i have had to work with systems that date back to php4 days .. a month ago
user895378
I'm sorry.
there is nothing you can do about them
user895378
how long has it been since 5.0 was released?
user895378
16:27
~ forever ?
and nobody will pay for refitting the DB code .. time is money, and clients/bosses do not see the point
lol is this line too much ? $this->setControllerPath($this->validateRoute($request->getRequestPath()));
And some understand the importance of improving your codebase.
@tereško Or at least many don't. If you can privately show them a simple security flaw then maybe you could persuade them.
$this->setControllerPath(
    $this->validateRoute($request->getRequestPath())
);
@Nick That single line of code embodies everything I hate about modern frameworks.
user895378
I suspect that if developers used scare tactics it would help get approval for fixing insecure legacy DB code. .ie. "Hey, I know you don't want us spending time on this but you do realize our current codebase is an invitation just begging to be hacked, right?"
16:30
@Charles Lol care to elaborate ?
@Nick , you might re-think the structure .. it feels clumsy
@tereško Yeah, which is why I'm asking. How should I approach this ?
also , two of methods are accessing $this
@Charles Im going to blog post later on why
user895378
If nothing else, for the sake of anyone who ever has to read your code (even you), please break that line into three. Squeezing it onto one line only makes it harder to understand what's happening.
16:32
but i am not sure what you should change, because i cannot decipher what it is supposed to do
user895378
The only thing you gain from shoehorning it all onto the same line is the smug satisfaction of knowing, "Ha! I did all that work in one line." This doesn't justify the readability loss IMHO.
@Nick tl;dr: They violate the policy of doing the simplest thing that could possibly work. Procedural controllers fo' life, yo.
@ircmaxell I eagerly await your roasting.
@Charles , the $this there is definitely NOT controller
it might be some Dispatcher .. or something
@tereško Yeah, but it's dealing with routing, and chances are that it's a FrontController in progress. Not that there's anything wrong with FrontController.
@ircmaxell word :)
16:36
@tereško Well I'm just trying to figure out what's the best approach to validate the route and then dispatching it. I'm validating my routes by checking if the requested route exist within the Controller folder. But It seems almost like I'm rushing the process of dispatching the call
@Nick , well , what @Charles meant to say is that you code would qualify you to be a core developer for most of popular php frameworks
Heh,.
Haha alright so I'm guessing a FrontController isn't the ideal way to go ?
anyone know the link to the gist for "Stop using msql_*"
@Nick , ok .. how to put this. Dispatcher is basically a different name for FrontController
it should be responsible for picking the controller , and if the controller does not exists , picking a fallback controller
Dispatcher/FrontController is NOT responsible for routing
@tereško right makes sense, so keep routing away from the dispatcher
thank you :)
@tereško @Charles, Thanks
user895378
@tereško That's a really good description. Easier to understand than saying, "Don't violate SRP"
16:42
define SRP
never good with acronyms
user895378
In object-oriented programming, the single responsibility principle states that every class should have a single responsibility, and that responsibility should be entirely encapsulated by the class. All its services should be narrowly aligned with that responsibility. The term was introduced by Robert C. Martin in an article by the same name as part of his Principles of Object Oriented Design, made popular by his book Agile Software Development, Principles, Patterns, and Practices. Martin described it as being based on the principle of cohesion, as described by Tom DeMarco in his book...
oh, right
single responsibility principle
woop MSDN win 7 torrent just capped at 13mb/s at home =D
16:47
torr should be done by the time i get off work ha
user895378
nice, 13mb/s is legit
also very expensive
bonded network
James Bonded Network
Na, that'd be 7mb/s
i have two 55mbps cable networks at home, that load balance
lol @ 7mb/s
16:49
At work, I support 50 users on an 8/1 ADSL connection.
It's ... fun.
i dont call that fun
i call that SLOOOOOW
It became surprisingly tolerable once we told people to stop using youtube as a music streaming service.
get a decent dd-wrt router = sexy load bal
lol
We're in the process of getting a Metro Ethernet line, 15/15. Not the fastest, but it's better than our other options in the area. Which are none.
lol my works speedtest caps at 98mb/s DS and 25mb/s US.. then downstream drops to half that lol
16:53
I hate your connection so much.
I could get 100 down here... but I'm not gonna pay for that.
thankfully im not self employed and my work has 3500~ employees... and the govt fundage to backup a line this hefty to be able to pull these speeds off @ our lunch hour. lol
when everyones using youtube to stream music ;)
i guess we own our own netblock
goodnight all
night @Paul
17:02
night @Paul
browsers tabs: An ADD person's own hell
i try to keep them under 40
x2 to that one @CarrieKendall
user895378
@Paul later
17:16
@CarrieKendall IMAP ,Teg Nugent and NRA...
closely related ^^
17:40
oh man i love it... was just configuring a new server here at work -- (win server 2003) and it hi-jacked the entire network in both buildings causing no one to be able to connect... LOVE IT!
@CharlesSprayberry I know that at first you want to say we should use all static or non-static. An all static framework :O
17:58
@MikeB uhhhmmm haven't you checked out cake?
@PeeHaa It's been a while :p
I got a huge kick out of the whole Nate Abele/Lithium debacle though :D
The cake is a li3!
@MikeB :-)
The thing I most-remember hating Cake for was the bucket-o-params technique they used.. every method definition was public function doStuff(array $ambiguousOptions)
And their documentation about the default options was horrible
is there anyway that var_dump(mysql_fetch_assoc($query)) may return bool(false) instead of the array? Why?
18:14
@rogcg Returns an associative array of strings that corresponds to the fetched row, or FALSE if there are no more rows. php.net/mysql_fetch_assoc
@MikeB weird. when I make the same query with same value in workbench it returns the rows, but in php it returns bool(false)
Are you using the same database and credentials?
yes
How are you constructing the query in PHP? Are you printing the query to the screen and copying/pasting it into Workbench?
Please don't use mysql_* functions for new code. They are no longer maintained and the community has begun the deprecation process. See the red box? Instead you should learn about prepared statements and use either PDO or MySQLi. If you can't decide which, this article will help you. If you care to learn, here is good PDO tutorial.
@rogcg
@NikiC: thanks for the feedback!
@ircmaxell I was sorry to see NJ lose like that last night.. Bernier threw the game :(
well, yes
but it was deeper than that
there were a lot more reasons they lost
Sure, but going down 0-3 in the first period b/c of a dumb move deflates the excitement
including very inconsistent calls by the refs (on both sides, LA's advantage was that they were better on the PP).
but in the end, it was their play that couldn't fire enough to take it
when they were on their game, they were almost unbeatable. Unfortunately, they weren't on their game enough...
Lots of credit to the Kings though for sticking through it
And lots of laughs towards LA fans in attendance. That was the lamest ending to a game by fans that I've ever seen...
18:24
@ircmaxell haha yeah, the 'Marty' chants were pretty classy too. I thought they were playing in NY for a while
It's such a disrespect. I can't stand that. No other team does that, or has it done to them...
@Truth This is really confusing as so many tutorial sites like W3Schools still use mysql_* functions.
user895378
@ircmaxell Yeah, that's for sure. The crowd had a real, "Yay! We won! Is that good? I don't really understand how hockey works as I'm only here because it's popular in the current LA scene" feel to it.
user895378
@Bonzo Do yourself a favor and tell google to always hide w3schools search results.
@rdlowrey yeah, game 5 ended with a final 2 minute standing ovation and Devils fans going nuts. Game 6 ended far more tame, even though they won the cup at home
@rdlowrey How can I do that without an extension?
@rdlowrey How do you hide results from someone.
18:28
@Truth Ha, funny site. They do have a point though and everyone says to use it. I prefer to use the original site like php.net for support as they know what they are talking about.
user895378
There it is
user895378
was searching for a link
@Truth I'm using mysql_ functions because It's an old system and very complex. And I'm working on a maintanaince. That's why it is using it. It's not me. I didnt created it, I'm just fixing some errors.
@Bonzo Who says to use it?
@rdlowrey Friends, several websites, google occasionaly.
18:29
Someone should make a mysql_pdo extension/translator like git-svn :p
user895378
It's not even hard to do is the crazy part. Someone can switch to procedural mysqli_* with very little hassle.
@MikeB translated cr@p is still cr@p
absolutely.. git-svn gave me nightmares
@rdlowrey large hassle, as parameter orders change...
@PeeHaa Thank you, doh! Should have seen the button.
user895378
18:31
My point is that getting yourself SQL injected is a much bigger hassle than fixing unsafe legacy mysql_* code.
@rdlowrey translating from mysql_ to mysqli_ or PDO isn't going to a dam thing about fixing your code
user895378
@ircmaxell I agree. I'm saying fix it, don't just add an "i" to the end of your mysql function calls.
ah ok
@hakre can you upload github.com/downloads/PeeHaa/cv-pls/cv-pls.0.17.0.crx to heroku for the auto update test?
user895378
18:33
Just decrying the excuse that I see all over the place lately where people say, "It's legacy code, I don't have to worry about it ... clearly I wouldn't do it this way but I can't change it now"
Doesn't strip_slashes work to stop SQL injections??
user895378
oh dear
@Bonzo stripslashes?
Woops
18:34
holy cr*p, this trainer is so full of sh*t, it's painful to sit here
trainer?
@ircmaxell Not done yet looking through it. Just had dinner :/
ircmaxell in training? My feet are cold...
@ircmaxell What are we learning about today?
18:36
sup @PeeHaa
hiya @Mike
any of you use any of Amazon's AWS ?
lol
im curious to try out their app thingie
where you can deploy apps or w/e
ive used their RDS service and it seems snappier the fck =P snappier than my VPS
@PeeHaa Drupal...
18:38
@ircmaxell hehe lol
drupal has a training class? Srsly?
5 days worth. Yesterday, Today, Thursday, Monday and Wednesday of next week
it didnt seem like that great of a product when i tried it 2 years ago..
Does anyone have an example of a search by a joined table on yii?I am having a hard time finding one
it's got some really nice parts
but some really fubar
18:39
interesting, ill add that to the list to check out
and the teacher is rather... well... my prior comment stands
i got yelled at by an IBM training rep the other day... i was browsing facebook in his training course for MAXIMO 7.2
told him i knew the shit and my boss is paying me to be here.. lol
@ircmaxell Do you think the ceiling integer division using floats is okay performance wise? I.e. is it irrelevant when seen with the rest of the code?
context? What are you referring to?
hey if i had a theory question in regards to programming, and what the best way to do something is which stackexchange site should i use?
SO is for specific code help, but what else is there? Since this isnt a code question.
user895378
@Mike probably programmers.stackexchange
Even the mods are repwhoring now stackoverflow.com/a/11002808/508666
user895378
@Mike Or here in chat
18:42
ok thanks @rdlowrey
@ircmaxell yes. And the line below it
ill throw it on programmers and provide a link, so you guys can get a few rep pts
i have some diagrams and such
@NikiC They are not in a loop, and the rest of it will dominate, so I don't think it'll be too bad
lol "Build status failing" on the php-src/master repo lol
18:44
@ircmaxell Yeah probably. Was just thinking whether it might be better to use -1/+1 integer division instead
@Mike that's not funny.
@salathe really? I see two "lol"s
@stevether Yes? No? I don't know! Don't make me decide! *runs out of the room with flailing arms*
yeah, perhaps... But I'm not confident in the values (I don't know the semantics well enough). Would need a bunch more testing
@ircmaxell The j=1 here is intentional, right? github.com/php/php-src/pull/105/files#L1R690
user895378
18:48
@salathe lol that is funny
anytime i need a laugh i refer back to -> i.imgur.com/tAac0.png
Anyone can give a help to this ? stackoverflow.com/q/11002912/1440762
@NikiC Yes, do you think a comment is warrented?
@ircmaxell maybe
ok, adding it
18:54
its j=1 because you are already doing one iteration before that, right?
@NikiC it's the algorithm...
find it now
user895378
@salathe I don't have anything specific in mind, but I was wondering if general quality improvements are acceptable for patches at edit.php.net. For example, since basically all the Reflection stuff in the manual is undocumented, could someone like me start submitting patches to rectify that situation? Or is that kind of thing kept in-house?
@rdlowrey Yes. No.
user895378
cool.
18:58
All improvements are welcome, and we don't restrict who can work on what.
@rdlowrey You'd we very welcome to work on Reflection!

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