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19:03
@Mokkun Just got home
19:30
@LightningDust yay
@LightningDust do you think I could just retrieve the checkboxes values and send them with POST like I do with textarea etc... ?
@rdlowrey We'll see what happens (re: cron), I have my own issue in a private repo to do something similar. If it's mergable without being embarrassing, I'll toss it your way ;)
@Mokkun You could
user895378
@Leigh Dude -- no pressure, no obligation. Just tossing it out there in case you were interested. I'll most likely implement it myself when I have time just because I don't want to have a dependency.
user895378
Each dependency is an additional complication.
@LightningDust I guess I'll have to put the values in an array if I want to do a foreach in list.php right?
19:39
Hi everyone. :)
What does it mean when something has "static context"?
I saw that come up on php.net in the PHP documentation but I have no idea what it means.
@LightningDust do you know how I could get the value of each checkbox considering my checkboxes look like <input type="checkbox" name="option[]" value="'.$data['id'].'"> where $data['id'] is my ticket ID and option[] is used for my script that make one checkbox check every checkboxes on the list
@SineLaboreNihil care to provide a link ?
Property overloading only works in object context. These magic methods will not be triggered in static context.
<<< this guy's OOP level is under 0
That's from the php.net site in the section on Overloading.
19:43
@HamZa 00P
I am completely new to PHP and OOP in general so I don't really understand what that means.
@Gordon heh, now I'm trying to setup an environment from scratch ...
@SineLaboreNihil how long have you been doing php ?
Since last friday. :D
@SineLaboreNihil lol please stop right now from reading that section and go learn the basics
evenin'
19:44
it's too early for you to learn oop (in php)
@tereško evening
I already understand the basics before the Classes and Objects section, but OOP is a bit harder to understand properly. :)
@SineLaboreNihil Do you know any other language or is PHP your first one ?
I have experience in JavaScript so that helped me understand the basics of PHP, but JS doesn't really provide for the level of OOP programming that PHP does.
I know JavaScript pretty well.
@SineLaboreNihil I won't say that loudly if I were you ...
19:46
Why not? :D
@rdlowrey Great, thanks!
@SineLaboreNihil How long have you been doing JS ?
For 2 years.
@JohnBlythe TBH, it's been so long that I've worked with fulltext that I've forgotten the exact details. I suggest pursuing the manual pages in which every type of fulltext search is described. In particular, you're looking for how it does wildcards and stemming. Because these options vary by implementation, I can't simply give you the information directly.
@SineLaboreNihil don't worry. you'll start to get an idea what OOP is about in 3 to 5 years
19:48
heh
Haha, cool, so it's right around the corner! :D
lol
Ok, so can anyone explain to me what static context really means? :)
@SineLaboreNihil yes, it means you are not in an object context but in a class context. Have a look at kore-nordmann.de/blog/0103_static_considered_harmful.html
Oh, ok. Thanks. :) So when I declare a property to be static it means that I want to access the Class context directly, and hence why I can use the scope resolution operator to access it without instantiating the class where the property or a method was declared as static?
19:52
here is a hint: it's not "object oriented" if you use static class elements
it's just a different way to have global scope
@Mokkun Start with $(':checkbox').each(function(){ ... });`
I get that, you're not instantiating the classes anymore and you're not creating new objects, hence it's similar to working in a global context then. Am I right here?
@tereško Just as I thought. :) Thanks a lot! :)
yes and no
@tereško Oh? Can you please explain to me?
static structures (function variables) are not in the global context ( I assume you mean like window in JS ), but they can be accessed/changed globally by any other structure
you end up hving a code that is tied to the name of the class
19:58
@rdlowrey I found myself needing to be able to define different injection settings in Auryn depending on the class construction hierarchy - so I did this github.com/Danack/Auryn/compare/… . If that description makes no sense, the tests may (aka it's Friday). Any thoughts? Other than 'Danack shouldn't name parameters on a Friday'.
@tereško I get that, but in the case of static you're not creating an instance of the class, hence you're accessing a variable or a method which is basically used as a blueprint for creating instances of that class. It's kind of like accessing the global scope of an object. Lol I don't know if I phrased that right. :D
@SineLaboreNihil You need to mentally partition static methods and properties from the non-static.
Static ones belong to the class and only the class.
Non-static ones belong to instances and only instances.
in case of statics , the class acts as namespace
user895378
@Danack sorry for super-ping I've been a bit behind on the Auryn stuff lately because I've been really busy with other things. I'll review your changes later tonight. With any luck I'll be able to address that as well as some of the Auryn things we talked about in the next couple of days (right in the middle of some stuff this second or I'd check it out now).
So for example: public static $variable; would belong only to a class and I could access it using the (::). So that would be a static property. A non static property would be public $variable and that would only be accessible through an object. Right?
20:02
@SineLaboreNihil Through an instance of the object
Isn't an instance of a class an object?
@rdlowrey Cool - the main problem I saw was that the code I wrote was pretty incompatible with the concept of sharing instances - which is probably not too bad a limitation; Either share a class or don't rather than trying to make something complicated.
@LightningDust $(':checkbox').each(function(){ ... });` give me all the checkboxes, how to retrieve only the checked ones?
append :checked
@Mokkun I'm a little preoccupied, that will run a function on each checkbox
20:04
@Jeremy If an instance of a class is an object, what would be an instance of an object?
@SineLaboreNihil Sorry, I meant "of the class"
@Jeremy Ok, thanks. :)
@LightningDust what do you mean?
I was really struggling to understand why object oriented programming would be used at all, but I guess the main point is that you can take a piece of code, wrap it inside a class and then use it as many times as you want by creating instances of that class (objects). That way you wouldn't have to change variable or function names every time you want to use the same piece of code in a slightly different way and you wouldn't have to repeat yourself by having to type that code all over again.
@SineLaboreNihil Not really
For starters, you can refer to "Objects" as new types of variables.
For example
$time = new DateTime('now');
20:12
@MadaraUchiha Ok, but that object stored inside $time variable is an instance of the DateTime class which contains a piece of code that you can now use many times in many different variables without having to type it all over again.
And it can have many different values based on what you pass to its __constructor() method.
@SineLaboreNihil Ah, but the nice thing is that you have an Object
Which means that you can use object methods to alter the state of this object.
$time1 = new DateTime('now');
$time2 = new DateTime('now');

$time1->modify("+1 day");
@LightningDust what would be the right syntaxe in javascript for a for loop like that:
for ($(this).is(':checked') == 'true'){...}
@MadaraUchiha But, if you didn't have a class DateTime you would basically have to type that piece of code all over again just to create a slightly different block of code. Now it's neatly stored inside a class which you can instantiate to what's known as an object. At least that's how I understand it.
@SineLaboreNihil An object can be used to represent "difficult" elements of a program.
Say you run a library.
How do you represent a "Book"? or a "Shelf"? or an "Author" or "User"?
@MadaraUchiha I completely agree with you. I don't think that my understanding of why oop should be used differs that much from your explanation. :)
20:16
@SineLaboreNihil You're thinking implementation.
Think concepts.
That's why you use OOP, to help with conceptuals. The implementation benefit is an after-effect.
@MadaraUchiha Exactly, and if you didn't have OOP, every time you have to represent a book you would basically have to write all that code all over again for every different book. With OOP and classes it's easier to just reuse that code and instantiate objects of classes for slightly different properties and methods each book might have.
After all, in the bottom line, it's all turned to opcodes eventually, be it procedural or OO.
@SineLaboreNihil Yes.
So where are you having problems?
@MadaraUchiha I am thinking of a concept of representing things in code as they are in real life, but for a total beginner to OOP and PHP like me, I also had to find a purpose to using classes and objects instead of just doing procedural programming like I'm used to. :)
@SineLaboreNihil Are you using PDO?
@MadaraUchiha I am completely new to OOP so I was just trying to understand the underlying concept of OOP as best as I could. :)
20:20
It's a good introduction to practical OOP.
@MadaraUchiha I have no idea what PDO is. lol :D
@SineLaboreNihil How do you access the database?
37 mins ago, by SineLaboreNihil
Since last friday. :D
@HamZa Hahaha, exactly! :D
@SineLaboreNihil Seriously, you should be learning the basics and practicing. Forget about OOP for now
20:22
@HamZa I think I'm understanding OOP and PHP pretty well for someone who's been learning it for only a week. :D lol
...
@SineLaboreNihil Yes, you are.
But that doesn't mean you shouldn't learn the basics.
@HamZa Well, the basics, like control flow, data types, functions etc. are pretty clear to me and are very similar to the same areas in JavaScript, since they both share a C syntax.
@HamZa I retrieve all my checkboxes with $(':checkbox').each(function(){ }
now inside how do I retrieve all the checked checkboxes?
Where PHP and JavaScript differ a lot in their core is the OOP part of the language.
That's why I need a lot of help with understanding that.
20:25
@Mokkun I think there is something like is checked
@HamZa thanks I think $(':checkbox:checked').each(function(){ works :D
@Mokkun What is "checkbox" a class ?
@HamZa nope it's the type
@Mokkun yeah that's the right syntax
@Mokkun I hope you realise that you're in the PHP chatroom lol
@Mokkun You're confused. You're looking for the JavaScript room.
20:27
Especially since there are some jQuery haters here :)
well it's ok
Why do people hate jQuery? I think it's cool. :)
beecoz naked so swag
@SineLaboreNihil It's terribly slow ? It makes you dumb by not knowing the basics ?
@HamZa please dont get mad at me, but i'd like to ask u a few qustions regarding php and readfile() for base 256, base 10 format, can i?
20:29
@NokImchen Get Mad!
Don't make lemonade!
I think jquery can be usefull if you don't have much javascript to do and don't want to mess with it
@MadaraUchiha loool
@HamZa Oh, you definitely shouldn't learn any library without knowing the language it was written in. As for the speed, I think it's pretty good, compared to the alternative of writing the client side code yourself and having to tweak and optimize its performance.
so, i cant ask? :(
@NokImchen not sure if I can help ...
20:30
@NokImchen Don't ask to ask, just ask.
@HamZa ah, i'm sure u can cos its all about php and nothing to do with compression. But first i'll google cos i dont wanna give trouble to any1 :)
@NokImchen Like if I knew everything about PHP lol
@MadaraUchiha do you have a separate VM as a webserver ?
@HamZa No
I'm on a dual boot Windows-Ubuntu
@MadaraUchiha ok ...
I develop (and run) in Ubuntu, and play in Windows :D
20:38
Yesterday I removed windows and installed ubuntu
Messing around ...
Now stuck with Virtual box, it doesn't detect network adapters (sigh)
@HamZa actually, i knw its a simple thing for you cos i think u have formal education on PHP. All i wanted was to fread a file not in base 256 encoding but i wanted it in base 10 encoding. I can do that by iterating every character and doing a base_convert() but its time consuming. I have googled and unpack() seems to be good, but not yet sure. Stlil googling..
@NokImchen I didn't have a formal education :p
@HamZa oh, u didnt do any computer course on PHP?
Thanks everyone for all your help. :) Have a great weekend! :)
@NokImchen nope, this year I had it at school. But it was terrible, I had to correct some issues xD
20:41
@HamZa oh, i never took any course too. And never had a PC in my school.
@NokImchen Well I learned php by myself. School is to get a diploma :)
@HamZa ah! same here :)
Yes but, @NokImchen Hamza reads books - like you should amazon.co.uk/Data-Compression-Book-Mark-Nelson/dp/1558514341 .
Just recently :)
Is there a common practice about what to do with Iterator::key when the Traversable doesn't really have keys? (for example, when you're implementing a set of some sort)
20:49
@Danack will u please help me in one thing, just one. To read a file directly in base 10 encoding. not sure whether my question is right/wrng
@NokImchen No I won't answer - you need to learn to take advice, more than you need to learn an answer to a specific question. You are wasting your time if you refuse to learn about a subject before trying to do it from scratch yourself.
^ that
@Danack i knw, it seems to be impossible. But i knw its possible. I'll do it and show u all...very very soon :)
@NokImchen I did do a course on web development. It basically went like: "Go and learn html/js/php, here's a two large assignments to make a website, and we expect you to make them both before the semester ends. We'll do a whole lot of background (though only for half the semester, the other half will be without lectures so you have more time for the assignments) but learning the languages is your own responsibility.
@Jasper is that course "hbo" ?
20:56
@Jasper oh, and where r u from? do teachers in developed countries like US/UK dont teach students properly?
@NokImchen every country has it's problems. Good education is a widely unknown problem
@HamZa The course was at university. It was basically the only non-theoretical course there was (ave maybe the one about programming at the very beginning)
@Jasper I see
@HamZa hmmm.... i knw nothing about my field too cos i'm like the little finger among the 5. Some students need special care :| i think
@NokImchen You do have special care: SO and especially SO's chatroom. But you need to take advice.
20:59
@NokImchen The Netherlands. I wouldn't say it was bad teaching, though. It was just a course that had a different approach and expected you to study a lot for yourself (which can be expected from university students). It was rather tough because of the size of the assignments, but that's my only complaint about the course.
guys, i'm out of the discussion, have to code the "impossible" :|
@HamZa very true. I took advice of guys here .i.e to think in binary format and not decimal. Yes, and now i've finished 99.9% of the "impossible" algo. Just a bit pending.
@Jasper hmmm....good u did it :)
i have come to the conclusion that SO is pointless
every question i have asked, i have found the answer to via either just keeping on trying trial and error, or googling and finding the documentation for that particular thing
@Jasper Parse error: syntax error, unexpected $end
@bizzehdee that means you're not a helpvampire :p
and i have managed to read the documentation and come up with a working solution while people on SO answer with answers that have fuck all to do with the actual question that was asked
21:05
@Jeremy Luckily natural language isn't parsed by the php compiler and humans can understand a sentence even if you forgot to close your quotes.
@Jeremy I'd gladly have edited it for you. If only you had been quicker...
@Jasper Unfortunately humans can't detect errors as fast as compilers can :(
@Jeremy Ah, but you had 2 minutes (well, let's say oen and a half, since I still needed to make the edit too). There was absolutely no reason not to detect it in that time.
i wonder how long this comment will take to be flagged: stackoverflow.com/a/18155633/2089006
21:09
@bizzehdee I rarely ask question these days myself, but I'd say that's a good thing. As @HamZa puts it, it means you're not a help vampire (not the fact itself, but the reason you aren't asking questions). Also, I rather often end up on SO after googling something, but then the answer is already there.
what pisses me off the most is.. if you google what you were going to put as your question title, you find the answer
not only do you find your answer, you find that someone else has already written the code in the language you are looking for
Yeah, but that only works if you're capable of summarizing your problem into a question title.
You have to know what the actual scope of the problem is before you can begin to solve it.
which as a software developer, you should
if you dont know the scope of the problem, your question is "something has broke, why is it broke" and you are not going to get an answer for that question
4/5ths of the questions in are "halp my code are br0ken plx trouble shot," and it really gets my goat.
the other 1/5th is "please do my homework for me"
21:12
lol
Feels like it sometimes...
spent the day at work today learning lesscss
rather than doing what i was getting paid to do
because i couldnt be bothered doing it
so now
zombie killing time
In a way, it's a tribute to SO's formula how it seems to have all the answers already :P
@Jeremy regex ones, probably.
@Charles alrighty. i appreciate it!
21:20
@bizzehdee Who does that anyways? :D
21:34
@Jeremy Dammit! )
@Bracketworks Haha
@bizzehdee Forget Less, Sass is better.
21:50
or you could .. *gasp* .. write native CSS
Writing native CSS is like writing a web-app in assembly; tedious, error prone, and really, I haven't found any disadvantages to a pre-processor.
finally got centos running in a VM in ubuntu
@Bracketworks so .. your excuse is "I suck at it, therefore - it must be bad"
@tereško Quite the opposite; I'm rather well versed in CSS. I got sick of playing copy-pasta.
that's .. emm ... oxymoron
22:03
lol; I suppose; what I mean is, CSS preprocessors (IMO at least) are best at keeping CSS DRY.
you cannot honestly expect me to "Aha, you are completely right .. now I will go and change my life" .. can you
@Bracketworks , what you essentially are defending there is stagnation in your own growth
@tereško I hardly see how.
i just got sick of writing column code myself, was going to write a C# app that output some css for me based on a desired overall width and a number of columns i want, but decided to use less as an exercise in learning less.
you removed the pressure which signified how and where you can improve
learning programming is very much a case of "no pain, no gain"
when you see that your own practices are hurting you, you strive to improve
22:06
@tereško I see what you're saying.
and now i will go back to hurting on SC2 ladder
I don't disagree (entirely) however IMO CSS preprocessors are better than native once you understand native. Just as with most anything; in absence of the fundamentals you're fucked.
Aaaand I'm done until Monday. Guh'bye!
22:22
"a system configured with two Intel Xeon E5 2600 processors on Intel's S2600CO family of motherboards can populate all 24 memory slots with a 32GB LRDIMM, allowing a maximum capacity of 768GB." farking hell, that's a lot of ram.
@tereško installed nginx :D
22:45
SO should have an auto accept after X (say, 14) days of the highest upvoted answer on questions that have not yet had an answer accepted, weighted by the asker's upvote
Hm... not sure about doing it completely automatically, but yes, the accepting system defenitely could use some work
you may add an additional condition: if the user didn't show up in say 14 days
or a new "accept vote" queue lol
@Danack We routinely ship servers with 1-2 TB of memory. Expensive as hell, but there's a market...
Hm.. how about: if a user hasn't shown up for some amount of time (e.g. 14 days) any user with a certain rep level can change the accepted answer (e.g. accept an answer if none was chosen, change which answer is accepted if the context has changed)
@Charles That's pretty insane. I hadn't been keeping track of what standard-ish servers could be included inside the box, I thought 128GB would be a lot, but sheesh.
22:51
@Danack How about a 5U machine with 160 cores (8x10-core hyperthreading procs) and 2 TB of memory? Only $77k! A 2U with 80 cores and 1 TB is about $40k...
@Charles My dad was at university in the 1970's. They spend $10k on a 32kB memory module.
i can remember 32kb of data...
just read binary from a screen and just remember it...
@Danack =oO my cat has more memory than that
Screens? Teleprint all the things!
We can eight thousand times the data on a chip the size of your thumbnail than you could on a full-height rotational drive from the mid-80s. The march of progress. The stuff we'll be working and playing with 25 years from now is gonna blow our minds.
I mean seriously, I have a personal supercomputer in my pocket that's attached to a global communication network. I can go down to the beach and have a face-to-face video chat with my friends on the other side of the world. This is the freaking future.
22:55
it will literally blow your mind, because in 25 years, computers will likely be more powerful than your brain, and consider your brain and thought processes a virus
@Charles 2TB of ram already blows my mind.
@Danack Applications that require 2 TB of memory blow my mind.
Or are Java ;)
apps that require 2tb or more are not really a single app, they are a set of apps used for modeling information, such as weather patterns
closest any "single" app will come to that is a database engine
23:00
I'm just still not quite coming to grips with the density, that's all. I mean, you used to need a full rack to get that amount of memory.
only 10 years ago, you could hardly fit 10gb on a 3.5inch hdd, 3tb 3.5's are available now and you can get 2tb 2.5's
hang on, didnt know this. you can now buy commercial 4tb 3.5" drives
@Charles it's not that amazing really. Just store stuff you'd normally on the hdd in RAM for speed (e.g. database) and have a large application. 2 TB is still a lot, but it's not like it's really the app that needs the RAM...
23:17
@bizzehdee Enterprise ones also. We sell these disk shelf units that are 4U tall and store 60 drives. You could in theory stick 10 of those in a rack. 10 * 60 * 4 = 2.4 petabytes per rack.
In reality they're so heavy and so darn expensive that I don't think we've gone much over 1 PB. Still, that number is freaking scary.
user895378
Can someone please provide me with some backup regarding this moron. Thanks.
user895378
@Charles Much appreciated. And now you just got a gold badge :)
@rdlowrey Gee, thanks!
23:36
@rdlowrey I flagged it. I believe that's the best course of action, leave a single comment, don't discuss and flag.
posted on August 09, 2013 by blog.phpdeveloper.org

Well, the official announcements are making the rounds now, but the next Day Camp 4 Developers,(Master Series) will be coming up in October (the 18th) and will feature several security related talks. I’ll be one of the four folks presenting at this event and will be giving a talk about two-factor authentication. Here’s the summary: Two-factor authentication has gotten a lot of attention lately


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