« first day (1210 days earlier)      last day (3967 days later) » 

That doesn't really help in my situation, im trying to echo atleast 100 of them on one page.
But thanks for the quick reply.
@Danack btw you should apply for a VCS account if you want one, you've made a few decent contributions, I'm sure you'd get one if you ask
@DaveRandom I will do. Though I need to check that the last submission isn't completely inaccurate.
(don't forget to mention in your request that you like kittens)
Any ideas @Danack ?
00:02
@user3199791 SELECT * FROM type LIMIT 0, 100
btw type is a terrible name for a table
@DaveRandom and how would I echo term name from the 50th id for example?
@user3199791 SELECT * FROM type WHERE id = 50
SELECT * FROM type LIMIT 0, 100
I want to echo 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,...100
@DaveRandom
Aaaaaand, it's that day of the week! youtube.com/watch?v=kfVsfOSbJY0
@DaveRandom There isn't anyone who 'likes' writing the XML for the editor that volunteers to add stuff is there? I have a load of examples for imagick that I intend to add, but it seems that I spend more time poking the xml than I do actually writing useful stuff.
00:05
@DaveRandom do you think this is possible?
I had a crazy idea to write something that would render markdown into docbook, doubt it will ever happen though (kind of a hybrid idea of the markdown idea that was floated on the list a few months back)
@user3199791 Your question is completely unclear. "how do I echo a specific term, and description." Is this the same question you're asking now?
@user3199791 It sounds like you need to learn the basics of using databases with PHP (and possibly databases in general), I suggest you start here
Than the question makes no sense - you asked how to echo a specific thing, and now you're asking to echo multiple things.
00:08
Wasn't there some talk of bringing the documentation over to Markdown?
@Danack To clear it all up: Im wanting to echo different things from 100 id's.
All on one page.
@user3199791 That doesn't really clear it up at all really.
@cspray Yes. At first I liked the idea, now I don't like the idea of storing the it in markdown in the back end but I do think a markdown-based UI has potential
@DaveRandom What exactly do you not like about storing it in MD?
I really want to start contributing to the docs but couldn't get past the XML/DocBook stuff
Like, markdown for quick-and-dirty getting-some-content-written, then tweak the XML to get it absolutely right
00:10
Yea, admittedly you probably would lose a lot of semantics by not using XML
@cspray In a nutshell, docbook carries very rigid semantics that are very flexible in terms of being able to render it however you like, and are also very useful for indexing
@cspray That's a common story. I've been rolling around the idea of a markdown -> docbook converter for those people (and vice-versa) to make editing more accessible, but still allowing people to go in an fuck about with the XML when the middleware fucks up the rendering (which it would)
And also the entity stuff for being able to do &example.produces => "The above example produces an image similar to this image"
None of this has actually left my head into an editor yet though
@Danack Yeh that is IMO the biggest problem with the way we use docbook - it's all fragments of documents which are not valid documents in their own right (which is a necessary evil) but it does make it hard to follow some of the magic that happens
@DaveRandom Actually sounds like an interesting idea. Now that my wife and I have actually moved into our new home I think I'm gonna take another look at DocBook
Plus a whole bunch of entities don't actually exist, they are magically generated by the build process
00:16
ugh, I'm no good at magic. I'm not a wizard, just a lowly PHP developer.
@cspray @Danack it might be an idea if you start with phd, I know I understood the manual in general a lot better once I'd dissected the build process a bit
btw has @Jack been in here at all today?
I want to berate him in person for suggesting news.php.net/php.internals/72342
@RonnyLinsener Updated
I'm not sure if I'm being redundant here or not. Given that on this condition I can get an empty string or NULL, should I test it ($new != "" || $new != NULL) or would the first be enough?
@DaveRandom Did you send me a connection invite through LinkedIn?
Yes, it seems to have gone mental on my Gmail address book
I only tried to add one person :-(
Ah, ok. I was just like "A guy in the UK? wtf"
00:33
Yeh, I think that every day
@DaveRandom haha, I routinely ask myself how I went from Alabama to 45 minutes from the Canadian border
@cspray Train?
No, skateboard
Actually, it was all driving.
A golf cart.
Off road, presumably
Is there any other way to drive a golf cart?
00:38
Well you could probably attach a bunch of pontoons and go up the coast
wtf, why the hell does this room always end up like this
Because we're PHP developers. There's already something wrong with us.
True story #theHammerOfLifeIsDoubleClawed
Dear Microsoft: Please either stop designing protocols based on XML, or learn how XML works before you start.
m59
m59
01:10
How should an api handle input on a PUT request? Is a missing field considered a request to "empty" that field in the database?
Or do I somehow update based on what fields are submitted?
if (!$responseNode = $xpath->query('/ad:Autodiscover/ad:Response')->item(0)) {
    THROW NEW \RUNTIMEEXCEPTION('THE SERVER SENT A RESPONSE I WAS NOT EXPECTING AND NOW I AM ANGRY!');
}

// I wrote a whole bunch of stuff that went here and it was bollocks so I deleted it. This whole class
// design is wrong, the constructor shouldn't be doing this. But fuck it, I'm going to bed.
Yay coding when drunk
02:08
@m59 that is correct. If it's to update the Resource partially, there is the PATCH verb.
m59
m59
hahahaha derrnn
well, I guess I just wrote all of this code to deal with PATCH =D
@m59 well, you will have had to write all that code to handle PATCH anyway
m59
m59
@andho this is what I came up with: codepad.viper-7.com/HiWj9C
It so happens that my front-end always sends all of the fields anyway, but this is good to know
02:36
@m59 yea looks good
m59
m59
BAWSSSSS gimme job
hehehe
 
1 hour later…
03:38
@DaveRandom Lol, I'm here now :)
03:48
Ping me when you're back.
 
1 hour later…
04:55
Derp.
Night folks.
m59
m59
night!
Is it Friday yet?
Jan 31 at 12:54, by Dan Lugg
m59
m59
almost here
I wonder how long I can keep up the Friday quoting...
Either way, night for realsies.
 
1 hour later…
06:11
What is the best method of implementing global options? I simply use a global array.
i meant default options not global.
@mAsT3RpEE the best way is to not implement them at all. Sure, you could use a Registry, but why not simply use a Config file, load that in Bootstrap and pass the values via Dependency Injection to the components that need it.
Definitely not listening to that or that will be in my head all night
I do use dependancy. but i like the option of alowing my code to use a default if null is passed. so i need a standard place to put such config. I dont think i should explain why. this is for DEFAULT config. when null is passed.
@Gordon I'm too lazy to use a registry. A global array is fine. but if there is some magical other method id like to use it.
@Gordon U always have dependancies in your code? I guess that makes things easier. less code to write. Okay ill force more dependancy injection but I'm sure sometimes you use a default. how do u normally implement it. Please do tell.
@mAsT3RpEE i dont. I do what I just told you. Use a Config and then in bootstrap I load that and pass it to the objects that need it.
06:26
How? Like this?

$Gordon_CFG = require_once('config.php');
then:

$Gordon_DB = new DatabaseConnection($Gordon_CFG);
$Gordon_DB = new DatabaseConnection($Gordon_CFG['database']['host'], …);
and I would likely not just use a require_once to include an array but some sort of object
yaml all the things :)
@Jack php has native support for yaml?
I typically have a ConfigProvider instance that takes care of loading configuration.
user652649
@Gordon did you just use the ellipsis character instead of three dots? xD
user652649
06:31
morning every1
@Wes yes, of course :)
user652649
ha xD
its mapped on alt+gr dot
T_ELLIPSIS :)
on my ubuntu
on windows it's alt+gr 0133 iirc
06:33
no numeric keypad here ;-)
user652649
…
user652649
no need to "gr", "alt" alone is enough :P
@Gordon thanks gordon
06:59
i wonder why linux don't have alt+charcode feature
07:32
morning
I just read a comment stating PHP PDO prepared statement can be fooled and are no way a protection against SQL injection. Does someone know why? The SO user who wrote have a fairly amount of reputation and since it wasn't commented or downvoted I am curious about it.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15482049/is-my-pdo-query-safe-from-sql-injection/15482140#15482140
@andho what do you mean by "linux"? Its kernel? GNU utils?
@happy you've read a stupid comment apparently
what's the best way to run the same set of tests on a group of objects in PHPUnit?
@mAsT3RpEE mark them with @group then use --group?
@happy That's correct.
@zerkms XD. I knew I had to explain myself there. Well whatever layer that handles the user input. In this case in the GUI (Gnome).
07:39
There's no reason why X shouldn't be able to handle Alt+charcode.
@Jack I tried to find well documented circumstance but couldn't find any. Are you aware of where I could find such documentation?
@Jack oh right, I missed the "you've read the correct stuff but didn't understand it" case
what circumstance?
@happy Well, as you can see in his example ... the query contains a variable for the table name.
@zerkms where PDO could suffer from SQL injection
PDO doesn't
07:40
If that variable is not properly sanitized, ... , you get the point I hope.
your code does
no library is protected by default
or vulnerable by default
pdo, mysqli and mysql_ all are similar
it's you who make it vulnerable or not
the answer gave you the reason why (a documented circumstance) and you couldn't find it?
I make stuff vulnerable by the sole act of switching on my PC.
@Jack if I remember properly prepared statement is the cure that "magically" sanitize the value. I read it in a book. Hope it wasn't a bad book :)
@happy Yeah, more or less ... but the example given in that answer states that the SQL code itself can still be vulnerable.
Just strip off the place holders from that query ... and look at what remains.
07:44
good morning
Now imagine what would happen if $table is naughty.
@Jack to be honest that answer could be better if explained how to deal with identifiers
which version of PHP specifically did child:: become available? can it be used in traits?
07:48
otherwise it causes newbies to ask weird questions
actually i think ill put that one of se
@mAsT3RpEE child::?
to access a function defined by a child and not the current class .ie child::Name() static::Name() parent::Name().
is it a valid syntax?
@mAsT3RpEE ?
07:51
@happy stackoverflow.com/a/12202218/747609 this answer should clear things up properly for you, helped me.
good mornings :)
Morning @hakra!
and good friday morning :)
@iroegbu thx
i have no idea. i am reading the documentation and its not very helpful -_-
07:53
where did you find child::?
@zerkms Yeah, it would also be good to delv the question itself :)
@mAsT3RpEE What's wrong with the docs?
btw, it's better you forget the static even exists
@PeeHaa actually a lot :-)
it doesn't explain -> at all, or does it?
assuming I'm a newbie, what to click next?
07:55
Assuming you're a noob click everything starting at the top and working your way down
:)
and there is no explanation of what -> operator does
There isn't?
In the basics chapter they already start using it
without a single word of what it is
well, I couldn't find
1. they dont explain about the child:: keyword
2. static:: self:: is not updated in traits
3. I need to know exactly which PHP version supports what. I don't want to install all of them to find out.
afaik child:: only works if there's a class called child, i.e. it's not a keyword.
07:57
@mAsT3RpEE Why would they explain a non existent keyword?
@mAsT3RpEE where the hell did you get child:: keyword?!
@PeeHaa morning! and i don't even need to click it. ;)
@reikyoushin youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ what about this link?
Morning @reikyoushin :)
wth it's even pinned. haha.
07:58
have you already learnt its id?
@zerkms It just isn't there I see
Not sure whether it is worth to add it though. Wouldn't it be clear from a noob as it is? I mean nobody is going to start with the OOP chapter right away right?
@zerkms sorry meant self, parent and static. (static = child)
@zerkms havent slept in 16 hours
@PeeHaa well, it is explained when you start learning c++
@zerkms been a while. being here everyday makes you learn some unusual stuff too..
static != child
and without doubts people who learn c++ smarter than ones who learn php
and for the record, until now i havent heard it yet.. i always close my tab when i see it hahaha
^ ^ ^ this
@zerkms Yeah the difference being c++ is an OOP language and PHP OOC :)
OOC?
08:01
it keeps the surprise factor on it.
Sorry typo
(p)oop vs (c)rap
object capabale instead of oriented
last letter is "crap" ?
morning
lol
08:01
@AlmaDo mornign
@zerkms is that the day after? :P
hi, @PeeHaa
@zerkms Yeah the average tilts towards c++, but that is what made / makes php popular and used
Well, it's still a bit confusing that there is no explanation
let's imagine a haskell adept decided to learn php!
(LMAO)
08:07
@zerkms I doubt people would have that a hard time, when looking at the first example they already should know what happens
You're seriously overestimating an average developer
anyway
@PeeHaa so does it work the same in traits? (static::)
Does the average programming use haskel?
nope
always wonder what is "kel" which that language has
08:12
@mAsT3RpEE What do you mean?
Traits are just copypasta
Aaaaaaand staph using statics
can i haz kel?
^ this
learn clojure instead
I'm learning Python presently
08:17
it is nice but it's not too different from another imperative language
with some functional flavour
and after you've learnt its syntax after several days - it's only to learn its standard library
@PeeHaa you've used too detailed description. I prefer just E_CRAP
okay then, ill stop using statics. how do you implement a Decorator without using statics to access child / decorator members.

answer that & ill never use statics ever again. (rem i'm using them as child:: replacement not to access members globally).
for decorator you don't need statics at all
you just decorate methods
/me is a captain today
$Coffee = new Beverage();

$Coffee->Decorate(new SugarCube());
$Coffee->Decorate(new Expresomix());

$Coffee->Produce();
it's not a decorator
In object-oriented programming, the decorator pattern (also known as Wrapper, an alternative naming shared with the Adapter pattern) is a design pattern that allows behavior to be added to an individual object, either statically or dynamically, without affecting the behavior of other objects from the same class. Intent The decorator pattern can be used to extend (decorate) the functionality of a certain object statically, or in some cases at run-time, independently of other instances of the same class, provided some groundwork is done at design time. This is achieved by designing a ne...
08:23
i know but this is the minimum of what i need. make your suggestions.
Well, it's not enough to understand what you mean
@mAsT3RpEE use Domain Specific Language
you don't decorate a coffee with SugarCubes
@andho DSL? o_O
Sugar cube is a class that accepts a beverage either in the constructor or later on with a setter.

Beverage is a class that can be decorated by different classes.

SugarCube should have the ability to modify or replace functions in Beverage as well as call them.

That's what i need. it has to be done in php.
"that can be decorated"
where did you find this term?
08:26
created it ^^.
how are we supposed to understand your just invented terms (which collide with well known)?
mutated should prob be the word
anyway, it's boring
/me went somewhere
Morning
@andho will do from now on sorry.
08:32
morning, @Leri
@mAsT3RpEE PHP docs is the most helpful docs I've ever read after msdn.
@mAsT3RpEE are these terms specific for coffee?
or beverages
Properly formated question: How do i implement a decorator pattern in PHP that

1. Allows me to extend the concrete decorator.
2. Allows me to call concrete component function from the concrete decorator function.
3. Allows me to call the concrete decorator function from its child function (i suppose parent:: is obvious here).
4. No use of the static:: keyword.

Requirements php 5.3+
Link to sample code / book
WTH is decorator?
is it the same as the classic "the decorator" pattern?
@zerkms i'm using the tems based on your wikipedia link diagram. Any pattern will do?
08:40
@zerkms yeah that's a bad use of the term. I didn't want to use Ubiquitous Language though.
so, there is an example implementation
Ubuquitous - this word can be used to check if you're already drunk or not
btw, I'm not
i cant paste .svg
@mAsT3RpEE What doesz statics have to do with the decaorator pattern???
Are you a laravel developer by any chance?
08:48
ahaha
Mooooooorning
pure gold
Morning @fab
@PeeHaa lol I think this is the issue:
> The decorator pattern can be used to extend (decorate) the functionality of a certain object statically
XD
"statically" meaning compile time.
@andho :-)
user924016
08:50
lol
@PeeHaa No im just an observer. maybe make a bug report to someone.
@mAsT3RpEE I guess, this'll give you basic idea.
@mAsT3RpEE why not just follow the very nice steps given in the Wikipedia article?
If I got you correctly, of course.
@Leri BTW do you have any issue with media keys working on ubuntu for volume adjustment but not in chrome?
08:52
@Fabien I use ff, so can't answer.
or wait, i got confused.
@Leri Ah fair enough
16 mins ago, by mAsT3RpEE
Properly formated question: How do i implement a decorator pattern in PHP that

1. Allows me to extend the concrete decorator.
2. Allows me to call concrete component function from the concrete decorator function.
3. Allows me to call the concrete decorator function from its child function (i suppose parent:: is obvious here).
4. No use of the static:: keyword.

Requirements php 5.3+
Link to sample code / book
^ isn't that exactly what you will get if you implement the Decorator pattern as mentioned in the article? @mAsT3RpEE
@mAsT3RpEE do you unit test your code?
hi, @Fabien
08:56
morning
@andho 1 min
@PeeHaa When working with a new concept i dont. i simply do everything wrong and find out exactly all the ways things can go wrong. Only after I've learnt all that I can do I practice good programming and start all over again. I've found this method allows me to learn new things.
@mAsT3RpEE Fixed all freaking typos: ideone.com/sTt3RY
@mAsT3RpEE Yeah my process for new things is pretty much the same :)
08:59
I usually spend A LOT of time by reading then do everything right from the first time

« first day (1210 days earlier)      last day (3967 days later) »