@PeeHaa I've been working on it on and off for ages, had a big push over the last couple of days because I've been doing a bunch of email stuff at work and a lot of it was very relevant. It actually, so far as I can tell, works in every way apart from downloading attachments. I was trying to keep it under the radar because it's pretty sloppy in terms of docblocks and tests etc
@PeeHaa im really new to php like really is there anything you think that i should look into i mean im so new i barely know how arrays work, never the less they have always been capable of doing what ive needed them to do, sorry if i sound weird but i am actually really excited about php as its so powerful, what was it like for you when you first started?
I was planning to ask for code-review-pls in the next couple of days
The goal atm is to just replicate the old front end with a less nightmarish codebase, then tweak the templates to bring them more into line with the upcoming new php.net
@ConnorMiles What have worked for me was to just start a project I thought would be useful, nice or whatever. Basically just start making stuff and #fail to get better
@Lusitanian I suggest you skip the MIME stuff at the moment, it is a total f*cking nightmare. The objective is to avoid sucking the whole thing into memory, which makes it way more difficult. Also that part is very much not finished.
@PeeHaa im in the middle of one now, ive got the hang of php really quick i manage to do everything ive needed to do, its just there is too much to not know
@ConnorMiles First step is getting the hang of it. The next couple of years you will actually learn it. And the rest of your life after that you will learn to actually code.
I thought I knew everything that was to know about static classes until I switch to java and learned that just about everything that cannot be done with a static class in C#, can be done in Java.
So if I were to say "a static class is a class that cannot be instantiated and that cannot have inst...
@ShaquinTrifonoff nice. godaddy does 99 cent coms but i refuse to buy anything from that horrible, awful, terrible, awful, bad, disgusting, nauseating, vomit-inducing company
then @crypticツ could become a man and everyone else in here would a woman, and anyone new coming in would be more confused than the muffin man in a cake factory
wow did i just say "muffin man in a cake factory"? i should get off the internet.
@crypticツ lol, it's okay, in real life i get asked if i'm 13 every day and i get funny looks while driving all the time, so i'm used to questions like that
fail "We'd like to let you know that this site uses cookies and JavaScript. Without them you may find this site does not work properly and many features may be unavailable. Information on cookies and Active Scripting and how to enable them can be found here." link is a JS link...
The situation is that I'm rewriting a templating engine I did ages ago. It compiles my own language to php. It currently uses sort of an abstract syntax tree, but so badly that it needs to be completely redone either way. Should I turn the source into an abstract syntax tree and then turn that into php code, or should I turn the source into php on the fly? (The last one can be done because the syntax of the two is similar enough)
@jasper so why exactly do you use your own syntax? why not have them type it out with PHP variables. much quicker than translating from your language to PHP
@jasper so instead of <title><!PageTitle!></title> (or whatever your syntax is), the create would simply put <title>$pageTitle</title>
@jasper this method is widely accepted as a much better and significantly more efficient way of templating than having your own language/syntax/token
@jasper this reduces the load you would put on the system from strreplace or substrings or any string manipulation functions, because as we all know, string manipulation methods are very system intensive (relatively)
@Sugitime More like smarty, it's written in php, lives on the server and can do just-in-time compiling, but other than that, sort of yes (without anything wysiwyg of course)
# try to match session cookie in order to authenticate user
preg_match('#' . $this->cookie . '=([\w]+)#is', $data, $matches);
$this->connectionId = empty($matches[1])? 0: $matches[1];
@webarto Well no it wouldn't be parsed, PHP is not running under a webserver sapi, it doesn't understand that the data on the socket is HTTP. But I am not even seeing the cookie coming in in the handshake.
@webarto There's a more RESTful way to do it I think, still fleshing out the details in my head. I'm going to throw all the stuff I've done this evening away, I've written some truly hateful code this evening and my eyes are going funny, I'm softcore and I need to bail. I'll get something usable ready by the end of tomorrow.
@jasper if your deadset in doing it that way, then thats your decision. Its just more inefficient and not the best way to template. Also, why would someone spend time learning your syntax when they can just learn PHP? I dont have a great answer to your question because there are no well known solutions to this issue because no one does it because its not the best way to do it. It sounds alot like I'm ripping on you, which I dont mean to.
@jasper I'd start to look around at doing templating differently. there are much better ways to do it than the way you are using.
@DaveRandom No hurry mate, just trying to help if I can, and I don't think I can (in a proper way), I just think you need some rest and you'll figure it out :)
@webarto All of this work will hopefully be a bit of a waste of time in the end (for reasons I am not currently at liberty to discuss) but I want to make it workzzz
@Sugitime yeah, I'm just using compiling as the name for what the translation from my language to php. See it as the str_replace(-ish) solution you were thinking of, but instead of doing str_replace('variablename', $content, $template), it does str_replace('variablename', '<?php echo $content ?>', $template) ?> (just examples, not actually using str_replace) and saves that to a file. There is an extra cost, but only the first time a template is loaded after it was modified.
@jasper firstly, you cant just use 'compiling' in some arbitrary fashion that is outside the normal understanding of the community. Throws people off. Its like saying "ya well thats why i'm going to wallapolooza it, so I dont run into those issue". It just wont make sense to people, or worse, they will get the wrong idea, like I did.
A compiler is a computer program (or set of programs) that transforms source code written in a programming language (the source language) into another computer language (the target language, often having a binary form known as object code). The most common reason for wanting to transform source code is to create an executable program.
The name "compiler" is primarily used for programs that translate source code from a high-level programming language to a lower level language (e.g., assembly language or machine code). If the compiled program can run on a computer whose CPU or operating...
@jasper secondly, look up modern templating engines. No one uses str_replace anymore. and as PHP is interpreted each time, unless your using a specialized caching system, your gonna have a bad time.
@jasper I think your project would benefit greatly from looking into some examples of what template engines like CakePHP or Ignitor or some other frameworks have done. They are pretty decent, and looking at their implementation, I think you will see the benefit almost immediately.
class Template
{
private $vars = array();
public function __get($name)
{
return $this->vars[$name];
}
public function __set($name, $value)
{
$this->vars[$name] = $value;
}
public function render($view_template_file)
{
extract($this->vars, EXTR_SKIP);
ob_start();
include $view_template_file;
return ob_get_clean();
}
}
@Sugitime Cya. I hope you didn't feel offended by the way I was reacting to you. If you did, I'm sorry, I was just a bit upset over you saying I was wrong in what I was saying because you hadn't heard the word used like that before.
@webarto no need? This chat really doesn't run to well on my phone through the browser, or are you saying something else?