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00:00
well .. i managed to spend all the CVs but not DVs
haha
Yes, in your case it's DVs only
i meant del-votes
Ah
There's that :)
I wonder why there's no ArrayAccessAggregate interface, like IteratorAggregate.
Hmm, actually, that wouldn't be good lol
Night all, cheers for the anime recommends @tereško
00:57
$config[Options::BACKOFF] = new BackoffPlugin(
                new TruncatedBackoffStrategy(3,
                    new HttpBackoffStrategy(null,
                        new SocketTimeoutChecker(
                            new CurlBackoffStrategy(null,
                                new ExpiredCredentialsChecker($exceptionParser,
                                    new ExponentialBackoffStrategy()
                                )
                            )
                        )
                    )
^^ That's deep ;-)
 
2 hours later…
02:53
@Jack very strategic
Extremely :)
Oh, it seems that Storm doesn't understand $app['template']('survey/preparations') lol
@Jack I'm guessing... Rest Service Crawler? It appears that it's doing something cool but it's going over my head.
$app['template'] = $app->protect(function($path) use ($app) {
    return new PHPTAL(sprintf('%s/templates/%s.html', PROJECT_BASE, $path));
});
It's a PHPTAL wrapper :)
I was wondering about the Strategy Inception BackoffPlugin code
Oh sorry lol
It's a plugin for a REST client :)
Particularly, Amazon REST client.
03:21
You have to forgive my ignorance but is the S3 service just a cdn?
@Jack that vaguely looks like monad
have you been playing with those things ?
@tereško I'm using it as part of my site, I haven't had the time to actually look inside; it's a good improvement over the older SDK for sure, though.
@Orangepill No, it's an object store :) CloudFront is the CDN service.
well .. since you seem capable of doing some JS, you can look at this : youtube.com/watch?v=b0EF0VTs9Dc
Their clients are based on Guzzle btw.
Thanks, I'll have a look see.
> In 1985, lower case wasn't invented yet.
I love crockford
03:27
+1
Haha, stupid Math.random(); each time you call it you get a different value :)

Haskell Programmer

Zalora Southeast Asia

Zalora uses Haskell extensively in an increasing number of areas from recommendation engines to in-house web reporting…

Posted on Careers 2.0 on September 2, 2013

I read that as ... someone implemented this in Haskell and we're kind of screwed now, because he left ;-)
that seem pretty accurate
03:48
Cool, ES6 has support for ...args; argument unpacking anyone? :)
@Jack I just got to the same part of the talk and was going to say the same thing.... that is the proposed syntax in nikic's rfc right
Yeah it sure seems like it.
I have the feeling that I will have to rewatch this video with a beer in hand ;-)
Wut no beer?
It's in the fridge heh
Promises now make sense to me.
04:00
They're pretty awesome.
Yeah.... it's basically a formalized pub/sub where the promise itself behaves as the topic ...
Seems like a fair comparison; btw, you could check out this pubsub library =D
"promises" like what?
Unfortunately, no docs =(
@zerkms For asynch operation.
Damn, why didn't I know about Monads before?
Just a buzz-word name for anonymous functions
04:06
@zerkms It comes with some axioms though :)
It's like saying Java is just a buzz-word for doing stuff with objects.
04:19
@Jack so back to S3... would that be a good solution for serializing session state between workers on a distributed system?
any shared storage
redis
@Orangepill Perhaps DynamoDB would be better for that.
I believe they have recently introduced Redis too.
or set up your balancer to balance consistently and use local session storages
@Jack so where does S3 shine over the other solutions?
@Orangepill (Fucking) Durability.
@Orangepill Also, S3 works with objects as binaries.
And lastly, it's not that fast.
Dynamo runs off SDD for reliable response times and you decide how performant it should be.
Though, nothing goes faster than local storage of course =D
As zerkms pointed out as well.
04:23
"performant" is another buzz-word :-)
since it should be "how scalable"
Not really, you decide how many requests per second you need.
@Jack but once you hit a certain threshhold the local storage option goes off the table right...
btw, "performant" is highlighted by chrome - is it a real word? I use it often following my intuition, but couldn't find if it's correct
"you decide how many requests per second you need." --- and that's scalability
increased performance - is when a single request performed faster
Fair enough :)
scalability - is when you can get more requests without significant downgrade
04:25
@Orangepill What do you mean threshold?
@Jack requests per second
/me is still ill so being pretty nasty. You're all warned
@Orangepill Then you just need more workers, no?
@Jack But then the storage wouldn't be "local" right.
it won't be - and you don't want it to be
04:28
On most larger hosting platforms that probably isn't the case anyway, true local storage is only enough of an image to get the machine to boot
@Orangepill It depends; a balancer can be "taught" to keep sessions to one server.
If sessions are either short or not very important or you can recreate them, local is fine.
@JAck My understanding on how larger system are architected is flawed then.... I should probably do more research.
@Orangepill It's not, but you have the option to weigh durability, etc. with cost and complexity.
If money is not an issue, then by all means invest in the "good stuff" :)
@Jack Unfortunately I lack the knowledge to both quantify the requirements and weigh them against a solution.
If you don't know what the requirements are, you're already one step too far :)
That rhymed unintentionally :)
04:35
@Jack but that's notoriously hard to nail down on a new development.
It's also notoriously not done well.
I think that's the difference between a solution provider and a developer..... a solution provider has to make up the requirements too based on a fractured and uninformed definition of the problem from the client.
They work at different levels, for sure. A solutions provider doesn't have to think about what framework should be used for instance :)
@Jack I'm usually wearing both hats :)
The requirements between the two overlaps, but there's still enough on either side.
04:41
The biggest problem there is with an unconstrained problem I tend to over engineer a solution.
It's not just you :)
I know... it's how developer's brains are wired
There's this JavaScript project I'm doing and I have literally spent a few days just thinking about it, because I didn't want a dirty solution and get it over with lol
It's almost complete now btw.
Hi all
Guys I am trying to create a fees control table in mysql but where am confused a child has to pay each month the school fees and the system should show that he has paid let us say Jan paid , Feb , paid , June paid and so on . so should I have to create 12 fields for all those months in the table ?
> a child has to pay each month
WAT
04:52
fees
Surely you meant their parent(s) have to pay :)
yes thanks for corection
Making a child pay sounds so ... dark.
Okay
so should I have to create all those 12 fields in the table ?
How about the next year?
04:56
Same thing
and that the thing I never even thought about thanks
please advice
It's reasonable to argue that a year will never have more than twelve months (is it really).
yes it is
Surely I don't have to tell you what the alternative of 12 fields is?
yes thanks a lot I got the answer am gonna create 12 fields
Go forth and awesome! (yes, it's now a verb, too)
05:05
another thing I have 5 tables . I wanted to create one control table which will have a primary key which will be a foreign key in all the remaining table so that I can trace all data using that key : is that fine or its a bad way of doing it ?
-1
Q: mysqli Inserting multiple rows into a table in a foreach loop

Solomon ClossonOk, something is wrong here with my code: $sections = array('Latest News', 'Commentary', 'Impact', 'Opportunities', 'Policy', 'Events', 'People', 'Market', 'Careers'); foreach($sections as $key => $value) { $stmt = mysqli_prepare($db, "INSERT INTO cdfi_sections VALUES (?, ?)"); mysqli_s...

please god move all the dumbs out of the profession
am I asking top much?
Didn't you know that SO is the world's most scalable debugging service?
@zerkms but if there's no dirt in the profession how are the diamonds to stand out?
@Jack please my question up
I think coal and diamonds are a better comparison.
@humphrey Foreign keys aren't bad.
05:09
@Jack I though I could make a debugger plugin for Komodo that would just wrap the selected code in broken english and post to SO.... then replace with the highest upvoted answer.
5
@Orangepill I'd buy that for a dollar!
@Jack Based on some of the questions I see I think someone already beat me to it
I suppose you should ask them to be sure.
> Hey, what plugin are you using to generate this question?
okay jack I really a depreciated your help
I really appreciate, you mean :P?
05:14
Because of no comment of downvoter, I am getting sense that this is right. — Mr_Green 3 mins ago
Strict warning: JACKS_HELP has be DEPRECATED
I deprecate my help too :)
Ah damn it, too late =(
@zerkms every PHP error should automatically link to lmgtfy.com searching for the error. Then again, it still might not be enough for people to try debugging.
I think I'm going to have that on my tombstone... just the word DEPRECATED
@crypticツ Then the error description would just change.
05:16
@crypticツ yep, because some people are just dummies
> My code is giving this error lmtfy.com... what's wrong?
@Jack lol, yeah I can see how they will think that's the error =oP
Look at the whois info on php.xxx
Registrant ID:CR142727685
Registrant Name:joseph kony
Registrant Organization:
Registrant Street1:if you're reading this your
Registrant Street2:children have already been kidnapped
Registrant Street3:
Registrant City:uganda
Registrant State/Province:New York
Registrant Postal Code:11372
Registrant Country:US
Registrant Phone:+1.7188880000
Registrant Phone Ext.:
Registrant FAX:
Registrant FAX Ext.:
Sponsoring Registrar:GoDaddy.com, Inc.; seems like they're doing a really great job in moderating fake registration details.
Stupidity: the universal constant.
It's not constant.... it expands over time
05:23
@NikiC excellent ... will that come out in 5.4 too ??
morning all
Morning
morning
May I ask what IDE you use for PHP and why?
"why"?
use notepad.exe
why - we don't care what you're using
I mean "why are you using this particluar one?". which advantages does it provide against other IDEs?
I use komodo edit because it's free and it doesn't suck
I've played with many others but they don't fulfill both of those requirements :)
05:31
I morally object to the use of IDE's ... it is wrong ...
phpstorm
just because it suits my requirements best
Hehe orangepill. I changed from notepad to phpstorm some weeks ago, but sometimes it's a bit slow cause of the JVM :/ but it's far more helpfull in it's options than eclipse I think.
@zerkms amen!
It's also faster than Eclipse.
yep, what I don't like in java-based IDEs is that I cannot allocate as much memory as I wanted
I think you can tweak the JVM settings, no?
05:34
yes. I tried to give it 5GB but then it crashes :/
@Jack more or less
I gave it a try... I didn't hate it.
yes but not as far as I want
The integration with Github is noice too.
And linking database with code, beautiful.
komodo runs on the mozilla framework.... but it lacks source control integration (Available in the pay version though)
05:35
Storm is paid as well, though :)
I prefer git.exe/tortoisegit + hg.exe/tortoisehg rather than builtin facilities
... but it's extra cheap
Sublime Text was looking promising but for some reason it just went ape-shit on my box.
It's worth it.
I like the merging editor of phpstorm. Much more useful than of other tools like in netbeans, tortoise git, etc.
@JoeWatkins exactly, I stick to good old paper and pencil. Can code anywhere at anytime, does not require updates, and you're not limited to what features you can add.
05:36
I've seen somebody use ST2 and I was like "does he actually have to type all that shit?"
@crypticツ pull requests with mail
@crypticツ Code on paper always compiles, too.
or with fax!
PR's over Fax would be awesome!
Please wait while I fax my repo!
@crypticツ is there a linter plugin...
05:38
I believe storm donate licenses to pecl devs ...
which is pretty cool of them ...
(what are pecl devs?)
still I find an ide for PHP to be unecessary
@Orangepill yes, it's part of the Time and Patience package.
does it support rcf 1149 based transfers?
@JoeWatkins How so?
05:39
@Jack he provokes
Damn
I just had to stick out my tongue.
how is it unecessary ??
Oh, you mean for pecl?
@JoeWatkins it is
no I mean for PHP ..
05:40
IDEs are not necessary
Lol, okay, then you're right.
as well as programming isn't necessary as well
you may be a delivery boy
not necessary and not useful are two different things
but they make your life easier and coding faster in my opinion
@Orangepill don't!
05:41
I don't even know why my boss pays me.
@bish don't v2!
@Jack you should be grateful to be a part of the team!
@zerkms I am the team.
so you talk to yourself if you holding a teammeeting? :)
@Jack you a lone gunman too?
Yes, we have a great time too.
@bish Not just to myself; in a couple of years I've created multiple personas to have discussions with.
05:44
faster ?? no they do not; I do not require a local debugger (there is 0 point in debugging locally, I cannot replicate infrastructure), I do not require any build tools, I do not require linking to the manual, I do not require any of the stuff that an IDE comes with and if anything it slows down deployment and development and encourages you to be lazy ...
We can now fill a board room :)
@jack That can be quite helpful I think :D
DON'T FEED THE TROLL
@Jack @Orangepill are we three lone rangers ?? should we get t-shirts made ...
@JoeWatkins I'll check with my team first :)
05:45
@joewatkins True...
@Jack @Joewatkins We can start a support group
Only if it involves basement fights.
Java on the other hand is a different matter, that I do use an ide for, because it does help me to replicate part of the infrastructure required to debug, it abstracts the toolchain required to build wherever I am, it provides real tangible benefit ...
First rule of code club.... don't talk about code club
2
if you had asked 20 years ago what IDE to use to write bash scripts you would have been laughed out of dodge ...
Yes, in my opinion an IDE helps you to be faster on some work like refactoring and helps you to find typos. even if notepad++ has got syntax highlighting I sometimes had to fight typos, which I don't have with phpstorm now.
05:49
The answer is vim of course.
s/IDE/syntax highlighting code editor the at informs me when I am doing something syntatically stupid/g
@JoeWatkins if you had asked 200 years ago what IDE to use to write bash scripts you would have been burned at the stake ...
4
@bish You don't understand, @JoeWatkins is like Chuck Norris and Chuck Norris doesn't need an IDE to develop PHP, he makes the code write itself.
@Jack he uses a magnetized needle and opened HDD
PHP needs some sort of argument hints with internal functions though because the parameter order in the the array functions is retarded
05:51
that's not very Chuck ... actually I use my fists to beat the bits directly into the silicon on ssd's ...
@Orangepill So you layer it :)
@Jack and make my own meta language to write php in .... no thank you.
That ... would be taking it a little far.
@zerkms php is so php'isysh :)))
I come to the conclusion that there are aspects of IDE you can argument about and some you only have personal preferences. just like music, food, ...
05:57
I wonder if that guy managed to find some porns for his websit yesterday ...
@bish just try phpstorm, there is a free edition
I like komodo because it bitches at me when it should and doesn't when it shouldn't. I dont' really care about the lack of version control support at this point because I'm still learning so I want to do it via command line.
bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=65674 this has been affecting PHP for years ... what a silly mistake ...
@zerkms i do have phpstorm with an private license
@bish so use it
05:58
I do, but I'm always open for better tools
@bish what os are you on?
win7
personal preferences? O_O

If the task is to support multithreading async operations, you gonna do it with IDE only on personal preferences? I thought, that good IDE as Visual Studio helps to look deeply in different ways in development...

Without IDE many development possibilities aren't available, if you gonna work correctly.

But I forgot... it's a php, not C++ or C#, so maybe for many php-developers such words as IDE, debugger, program anylyzer for threading/memory corruptions etc - are empty words
@bish Sublime might be one to look at, especially if you do a fair bit of front end development.... but warning there are more key combinations than in photoshop... might be a little bit of a high barrier for entry.
More key combinations than WordPerfect?
06:10
It's close
@bish is netbeans an option
@GeloVolro No. I mean something like this: if a drummer can play extremly fast than he might be a good drummer - but that does not automatically leads to that everyone likes his music
So if an IDE helps you to do some tasks faster then this would be helpful, but doesn't mean that everyone likes it - like Joe Watkins how doesn't like IDEs (for PHP)
@bish He's not saying he doesn't like them, he says that they're unnecessary.
IMO the features of an IDE that I find most useful for php development are context aware syntax highlighting, context aware type hinting, and a high level view of the project directory structure, pretty much all of the big ones do those things adequately, if you have other specific requirements I would focus on those.
Refactoring tools, such as Extract Method, Field, Push / Pull Member, etc.
2
06:18
@jack what are those?
Doing that shit by hand is possible, but I don't like getting dirty fingers.
my first thought when someone says re-factoring tools are helpful is the need to refactor seems to me to be a symptom of bad planning, like I said, encourage you to be lazy ...
@JoeWatkins does it mean that Martin Fowler cannot design and plan?
and what's you second thought? also, stop being le troll :)
@Jack I was just going to through the php storm refactoring tools....I didn't know that was a thing, I always did it the meat head way :)
06:25
I'm not being a troll, I'm sharing opinion, being a troll is something kids do, I am not a kid ...
It seems that you're intentionally trying to steer this into a "no, you're lazy" kind of fight.
Refactoring is not necessary if enough planning is done beforehand and requirement remain constant. Unfortunately no one made reality implement that interface
"fighting" on the internet, another childish activity ...
@JoeWatkins could you be so kind and answer my question then?
@zerkms thought that was a joke, Martin Fowler is a well known soap character here ...
06:29
@JoeWatkins it wasn't. So?
Soap is awesome.... unless you are talking about the XML messaging format
I use soap everyday, even my wife loves it.
Good for washing
sometimes re-factoring is necessary, you take over someone elses code or whatever but to say that re-factoring code is a normal part of development is plain wrong, it is not, planning so that you do not have to re-factor should be what you are aiming for ...
"but to say that re-factoring code is a normal part of development is plain wrong" --- a lot of well known (including Fowler) state the opposite
06:30
@JoeWatkins That's always the goal but rarely the reality
and, uhm, requirements just change
ok so our opinions differ ...
you shouldn't need to refactor code for university assignments
after that...
@JoeWatkins so you never split your methods into smaller ones as you code?
no and if you do, then you are sitting there writing huge methods breaking your own rules safe in the knowledge you can refactor afterward, when what you should have done is write the code nicely in the first place ...
06:34
"no"
I see a big liar over there
Just give it up @zerkms :)
There's no reasoning with the unreasonable.
Our opinions here are largely going to be based on our experiences here. I work close to the front implementing solutions to ill defined problems, so refactoring is commonplace. If someone works primarily on the tooling portion of a system then his experiences are going to paint a very different picture.
@JoeWatkins do you realize that renaming a method is also a refactoring?
@zerkms When you write perfect code, you don't need refactoring; at least, that's what my "talk to boss" persona always says.
But code is perfect in that it completely realizes the solution for a given problem space. Refactoring is still needed if the problem changes.
06:43
I think I know why we have such different opinions ... you have spent 9 years working on teams, an obvious product of that is a range of opinion, of course you will see a need to refactor where the original author may not have ... but I have spent the same amount of time working on my own, so the need to refactor hardly comes up, it wouldn't would it, I wrote the code and I'm the one using it, so even if someone else looking at it would see a need to refactor it, I don't ...
So, least in my experience, there is an expiration date on "perfect" code
It's a style of working too; some prefer to get something working quickly and then refactor the design ... surely there's a name for that ;-)
It's just a guess, but surely it's the case that re-factoring usually occurs on other peoples code ?
@JoeWatkins I wonder why you make a bugs aftet all of that
the assumption that I'm lying because I said something you disagree with is pretty offensive ... by the way ...
06:47
And requirements to software change. One day you've had 1 user, than 1 billion came
@JoeWatkins it's not possible that you never renamed any of your functions
Most of my refactoring is the result of either A) not understanding the requirements up front (which firmly falls in the definition of poor design) B) having to reimplement the solution because of requirement changes or C) having to reimplement the solution because I was retarded or hung over the first time I wrote it.
yes, of course I have renamed functions, I'm not talking about that kind of re-factoring, obviously ...
"I'm not talking about that kind of re-factoring, obviously"
"that kind"?
what is "kind"
@JoeWatkins In principle I agree with you, but I have come to the conclusion that being imperfect people we create imperfect code quite naturally, and perfect code quite difficultly if possible at all. Therefore, I draw the conclusion that refactoring would benefit many, if not all, projects.
You said without references to any kinds
that refactoring is a reason of laziness or whatever
06:49
moving methods about, changing interfaces, re-design in other words ...
refactoring is not always a redesign
And that the need to refactor does not signify a bad programmer; rather, refactoring signifies that a programmer is learning and improving.
if you was talking about redesign
no, not always ...
so... why did you use not appropriate term then?
if you meant "redesign" - why did you say "refactoring"?
the fact that they both start with "re" doesn't mean they mean the same things
06:51
refactoring can accumulate to become redesign ...
can
but not always
if you meant "redesign" - you could have specified it
well, I think we're done here
you just expressed your thoughts wrong
it's before 8am on a sunday fucking morning, I'm allowed ...
sure
anyway
even redesign is an acceptable move
examples: twitter, facebook
they redesign subsystems often, because they pioneer the industry and they just cannot know the requirements for the software in next year
at that scale development is quite different, it's ongoing isn't it ... at the scale I work at, on my own, I'm given pretty good predictions and write software that will tolerate reasonable fluctuations in the markets I'm experienced in, so the same thing is not required of platforms I write, maybe at some point re-design would be necessary ... but it would be such a redesign that it wouldn't be any kind of re-factoring of old code, or even re-using ideas
, at that point something completely new would be required ...
"at that scale development is quite different"
oh.......
there are so many "buts" when talking to you
It is "obvious" that when you have a tiny system with all the requirements frozen before development - then you could design it once
but it's never an option
requirements do change
either functional or performance
07:01
@zerkms agree. and that must not be the fault of the software developer, often it's the principal or the customers (regarding to the software)
another reason our opinions might differ, I guess you spend the majority of the time working in PHP ?
@JoeWatkins what would it change? I have several years of .net experience as well
ok but mostly you deploy PHP ?
for me I spent most of the time working on gupta
@JoeWatkins perhaps
and I don't see how PHP would help you arguing
07:04
we're not arguing are we, I thought we were having a conversation ...
anyway, mostly I deploy java
so?
so that's going to influence what I think, php and java react very differently to change ...
so java allows you to write ideal code from the scratch?
can't see the yet what deployment has to do with it. for deployment / continious integration there are useful tools like jenkins. and most of them can be used with many languages
The bugfixes make code worse over the time
to keep its quality you need to refactor
07:06
whats independed of the language
After you fix some bug you may have found that the fix could be done in some generic way that could trigger some redesign steps
and that's perfectly fine - you're doing your code better
no no, I'm just saying, an increase in traffic for PHP might be a reason to re-factor or re-design some code, the same increase if the software is written in java would not necessarily lead you to take any action at all, or even notice ...
who cares what's the name of the process - refactoring, redesign, re-blabla, ?
"would not necessarily lead you to take any action at all" --- it's not true and you know it.
if you write a crap - it will perform crappy
if you write a good code - it will perform nicely
it is true, I said not necessarily ...
regardless of platform
"I said not necessarily" --- it should be referred to both parts of sentence then
what I see is that you're saying that in php it would lead to redesign, while in java - it wouldn't
07:11
not wouldn't, it might ...
and it might not
I don't see a point
CSS, Y U NO support width: 100% - 5px ;-)
08:13
sigh, room is dead.
@MadaraUchiha no really, just most people are just lurking...like me O_O
08:30
hi
08:50
@MadaraUchiha Support from IE9 onwards ... nice!
I was out having a beer.
Man, I love calc() :)
09:43
hello guys

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