« first day (1543 days earlier)      last day (3632 days later) » 

00:00
Speaking of destructuring, I'd like it if list() worked for string allowed explicit keys, e.g. list("foo" => $foo, "bar" => $bar) = $arr;
@LeviMorrison In the previous discussion the preference was to not enforce LSP on parameter names. Because it's too much BC and most methods will not be invoked using NPs. So you'd get a runtime error, which is okay with me.
@NikiC This sounds likely to cause weird bugs
@AndreaFaulds How?
@NikiC parent::__construct(...$args);
How does that cause bugs?
Also, why the fuck would you do that
00:02
lol
@NikiC Good question. Ask everyone who already does it. :p
@NikiC Parent has different arg names.
@AndreaFaulds I don't follow your argument. Didn't you just five minutes ago argue how we don't want to subsidize bad APIs?
@NikiC This isn't bad APIs, it's horrible code. But yeah, fair point.
Still, it would cause problems.
But so would enforcing (BC)... oh well.
Can someone take over removing PHP 4 constructors for me?
I've just been so busy for so long I just don't think I have the time to get it done before March.
@AndreaFaulds that's just positional expansion, ... shouldn't expand to named paramters
00:06
@ircmaxell I think it makes sense to make ... capture and expand named params as well, PHP arrays would perfectly fit function arguments if named parameters were added
@LeviMorrison What's the blocker? The E_NOTICE stuff?
@AndreaFaulds and thereby destroying BC as well
That and just doing the RFC related work.
@ircmaxell huh?
(Cleaning up language, pushing it through)
@ircmaxell The ... implementation was explicitly forward-compatible to account for this possibility
00:07
@AndreaFaulds in 5.6 it doesn't expand by name
@ircmaxell So?
@ircmaxell Which is what I said.
@ircmaxell @NikiC file an HHVM bug report for this
too much work :P
maybe tomorrow
probably should also check out if they fixed the generator discrepancies...
anyway, night
00:12
@AndreaFaulds nah
good night
good night
@LeviMorrison I'll have a look and see how much is left to do.
@AndreaFaulds A patch for PHP 5.7 too (maybe, depending on that RFC or whatever)
@LeviMorrison It won't pass. :(
And why's that?
Look at the vote totals.
We could write a 5to7 tool or something, though. I already wrote that constructor finding lib ^^
00:14
Everyone who votes no to PHP 5.7 is irresponsible.
/cc NikiC
^^
I think you pushed for it too early, by the way.
You should have waited for more reasons to have 5.7.
@LeviMorrison I think everybody who votes yes to PHP 5.7 is irresponsible
As it stands... I don't see the motivation for it either.
What PHP's users needs is extended support for PHP 5.6
If we had more BC breaks that could be eased by a 5.7 then I think it would be worth it.
@LeviMorrison There will never be many
00:16
Not a 5.7 which is essentially the BC breaks of PHP 7 without the features of PHP 7 - and cuts into support time for the proper 5.6 release
The only case for 5.7 is deprecation notices
But as it stands... too few.
Even if we broke half the language, Zeev and Andi would vote No.
Why?
@AndreaFaulds who cares what they vote/say?
@ircmaxell me, because they (and others with the same feelings) are stopping 5.7 passing.
I really wanna use sanic pictures whenever "fast" and "PHP 7" are mentioned :p
00:18
Eh, I voted yes out of principle.
Realistically we don't have enough body of work to really make it worth it.
@AndreaFaulds I'd worry about @JoeWatkins and @NikiC and @salathe
Also, I am curious: why a 2/3 vote for this? (I'm in favor of 2/3 for everything, but I know you don't feel this way, so why 2/3?)
@LeviMorrison It seems right that process RFCs should be 2/3 votes, honestly.
I consider 5.7 to be a "process RFC"
That or a "language change"
I mean, sure, 50%+1 would be more favourable to my cause. But it just didn't seem right.
zeev, derek and rasmus votes "no" basically on everything
it's not really a surprise, ya know
you can look at it as "every RFC voting sessions starts with default value of -3"
@tereško I wouldn't say that's fair
00:25
@tereško Derek and Rasmus both voted yes here
They're conservative but vote for clearly good things
every rule has an exception, but that has been my general observation
Zeev and Derick voted for a ZPP BC break
Derek is very conservative in his voting, but very predicatble
conservative == predictable
00:26
Zeev, is 100% predictable, because he usually votes in his own personal interests (which are quite often fubar)
Rasmus is just conservative. But willing to change
@ircmaxell Do you call him intentionally "Derek" instead of "Derick"?
I think "derek" is his nick/username
IIRC
@tereško it's derick
hmm ... then I don't know where I have picked up that spelling
00:31
So, for removing PHP 4 constructors we need some generic way to trigger an E_NOTICE at compile-time
Any objections to adding __zend_throw_compile_time_notice?
OK, it's weird, but it's probably the best way to solve this
…I think it's any compile-time non-fatal.
(I don't think it's E_NOTICE specific)
@LeviMorrison Sure, we just need some means to trigger one
We could make it into a fun easter egg. But that's probably a bad idea.
Though __zend_summon_kraken does sound fun.
If it's an easter egg it won't be taken seriously and might be mistakenly removed
So __zend_debug_throw_compile_time_non_fatal_error would work. It's long-winded, extremely unlikely to be used by chance, and adds minimal cruft, if any.
E_DEPRECATED ?
Wouldn't even need to be in the parser, just the lexer :)
__zend_debug_throw_compile_time_non_fatal_error__
__zend_autoload_debug_throw_compile_time_non_fatal_error__
That would produce E_NOTICE: __zend_autoload_debug_throw_compile_time_non_fatal_error__
internal methods could benefit from having namespaces
00:43
@tereško Hmm?
and commas
by the look of it, it's getting to the point were you kinda need punctuation in function names
=P
This wouldn't be a function
I just being silly, don't pay attention
it's 3AM and my brain is shutting down
00:50
@LeviMorrison Turns out a lot of the broken PHP 4 constructor tests just need removing
There are a lot of tests that basically just check how PHP 4 and PHP 5 constructors interact
Or that PHP 4 constructors work at all
Such tests can be removed, so I'm removing them
OK, not a lot, but a few, certainly.
Some of these tests are fun
man::getdrunk($where)
:D
@edition Hi!
We're a friendly bunch of deranged vigilantes PHP programmers.
I am looking for a good PHP CMS, which must meet my qualifiers: control, flexibility, and efficiency.
I tried to install Drupal on Windows 7, but it complained about a missing PDO extension to PHP (which happened to be installed).
00:59
@AndreaFaulds isn't that yet possible? E_STRICT can be thrown at compile time too?
@LeviMorrison While we're at it, should we get rid of ::destructor?
@bwoebi Yes, it can. Usually is, even.
Perhaps.
@AndreaFaulds so, where's the issue?
@bwoebi We need some way to trigger an E_STRICT at compile time for certain tests
Or any error, really
And it'd be best if it doesn't rely on a specific one
Since if we remove it, well, we have to update those tests
@LeviMorrison Wait, this isn't a real thing. A test confused me.
01:01
You can register custom destructors, is all.
Alrightey, done for the day.
By the way, I'm getting through these tests with lightning speed
They're almost all simple fixes
Thanks, Andrea.
Glad to help ^^
So does that mean I have to update PHP?
01:02
@edition Are you sure PDO is enabled?
Check php.ini.
wait. I don't have a php.ini, besides the production/development examples...
Good Morning
can anyone help me in this question,
0
Q: establishing connection from include file

Chennai City GangstaThe connection file has the following code <?php return array( 'connections' => array( 'mysql' => array( 'driver' => 'mysql', 'host' => 'localhost', 'database' => 'dbname', 'username' => 'root', 'password' => 'dbp...

@edition Make one then. Copy the development one and call it php.ini
Then edit it
@AndreaFaulds sorry If I am a bit slow, since I am a novice with PHP.
Don't worry about it :)
01:07
so I just uncomment the lines?
@edition Yep.
thanks
By default we don't have everything enabled, I think that's bcause it's better for performance/memory usage not to have unused extensions loaded.
Drupal reports: "Your web server does not appear to support any common PDO database extensions. ", after enabling the 'PDO' extensions.
@edition Hmm, you might need to enable each database's own extension
01:17
@edition pdo_mysql or similar.
done that.
Try enabling mysql as well
it still reports issues with PDO and gd.
hmm, where is your php.ini file?
c:\php\php.ini
01:23
is that where the production/development sample INIs are?
Hmm
Try using phpinfo() and see where it says the INI is and if it thinks PDO etc is installed
ok
"PHP Warning: phpinfo(): It is not safe to rely on the system's timezone settings. You are required to use the date.timezone setting or the date_default_timezone_set() function. In case you used any of those methods and you are still getting this warning, you most likely misspelled the timezone identifier. We selected the timezone 'UTC' for now, but please set date.timezone to select your timezone. in C:\web\phpinfo.php on line 5"
So...chdir() - is there a way of doing a real chdir in PHP or is it always the 'virtual chdir' that is called?
i.e. is there a way to do chdir, so that when you call a C library function that looks at the file system, it sees the new directory ?
@Danack why do you need to do that?
01:32
@AndreaFaulds That bug - bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=67125 it's because the relative path for the 2nd image is failing to be found. I would tell the user to chdir() to the directory that contains the first image....but that only affects PHP code, not the underlying library code.
@Danack Ahhhh.
just fixed a load of PHP 4 constructor-using tests
01:59
@LeviMorrison I've made my own pull request which fixes most of the tests and the E_NOTICE issue (special token), and updated the RFC to link to it, as well as removed the mention E_NOTICE issue from it since it has been solved.
02:17
0
Q: mysql - inner join returning too many rows

user3692125I have 3 tables: Table X: Choice A Choice B name group Apple Water Title1 'X' Orange Milk Title2 'X' Table Y: id name 1 Title1 2 Title2 Table Z: id Y_fk group 1 1 'X' 1 2 ...

02:30
die($trolls): does not seem to work :(
02:45
@ircmaxell Ô¾_Ô¾
It's actually not a bad video at all
Hey everone!
If he'd stopped halfway through it would have been good - and used the array_map/_reduce functions. But the final code is something that is far more difficult to understand and debug than it is halfway through.
Okay, so can I return two values in a function?
@MatthewH you can return an array, or a new object that can contain lots of values.
02:50
Okay, so let me write this out real quick.
@Danack I initially thought that as I watched
but after, I am not so sure. The end result is really quite easy to understand
this will work correct?
http://hastebin.com/huxaxireqe.php
@MatthewH You almost certainly just want to do return $aData.
So no if?
Let me edit...hold on
And just try it to see if it does what you want.
02:55
wait, I can't do that because it pulls information needed from the DB, if it returns false..it will throw an error.
And I can just use it like this right?
`$rData = $GLOBALS['FalconSQL']->checkAdmin();`
Or should I do
`$rData = array($GLOBALS['FalconSQL']->checkAdmin());`
I'll just try and echo it out. :P
@ircmaxell I need to write a blog post on this......no it's not. Although it's certainly possibly to understand the code, particularly when you've been programming in that style for a while, it takes up a lot more brain power at once to comprehend what the end code is doing.
Think of your brain as a stack or cache; the code at the start and the middle of the video is very simple and each chunk can be thought about seprately. Thinking about each chunk pushes just one item into your brain stack/cache, which isn't very demanding.
The code at the end is doing far more things at once. To think about it, you need to push all of the things it's doing into your brain stack/cache at once. Even if you are able to do that (and I contend that it's not guaranteed that everyone is able to do that) because you've got to push lots pieces of information into your brains cache at once, it's far more likely that some other information is going to get pushed out.
The other thing being that it's far harder to tell what is going to happen if you press "step into" in a debugger for that end code.
/wall o' text
$user_score = $events->sum(function ($event) use ($scores) {
    return $scores->get($event['type'], 1);
});
reading from left to right "the users score is the sum of each event, where the score for an event is looked up from the scores list"
Yeah...but he didn't stop there.
$types = $events->map(function ($event) use ($scores) {
    return $scores->get($event['type'], 1);
});

$user_score = $types->sum(function ($score) {
    return $score;
});
^^ that's where he stopped
even that's not bad, if you ignore that the second closure is really the identity function and should be excluded
I get your point
and in general I think you're completely right
however, functional transforms allow you to isolate state and therefore focus on the specific transform involved. As long as the transforms are stateless, they are easier to understand than stateful procedural code
03:10
@ircmaxell sorry, I'm confused - in the video I'm seeing he changed it into a two chained functions.
in the example given, while the sum() example is clearly more elegant, the original is the code I'd use
for a number of reasons
$user_score = $events->map(function ($event) use ($scores) {
    return $scores->get($event['type'], 1);
})->sum(function ($score) {
    return $score;
});
That looks better not chained
I would prefer:
$user_score = $events->map(function ($event) use ($scores) {
    return $scores->get($event['type'], 1);
})->sum();
It's probably getting too late, but it would be nice to make the array_* function be 'cleaner' to use for PHP '7'.
Oh yeah, I'm on a roll today. Fixed a bunch of PHP4 constructor tests. Did the use/class_alias prohibition thing. Submitted a WordPress bug
03:16
nice :-)
03:26
I realise that it's unfair to compare code, using a feature that was not available to someone else but:
$extractEventType = function ($event) use ($scores) {
    return $scores[$event['type']]) ?? 1;
};

$user_scores = array_map($events, $extractEventType);

$user_score = array_sum($user_scores);
it's the same
it just has no lib dependency
looking at that collection library makes my skin crawl, but if it gets people to think and understand these transforms, then Awesome :-)
Well yeah....but when you can do it without a lib dependency, and without having to worry about whether the methods on the collection does something funky....
@AndreaFaulds You have a question to give a new answer to: stackoverflow.com/questions/7278835/…
yeah, I don't disagree
I was looking less at the implementation and more at the concept
anyway, good night
@Danack Done
0
A: C#'s null coalescing operator (??) in PHP?

Andrea FauldsSince PHP 7, there is a null coalesce operator: <?php $x = $a ?? $b; It is equivalent to isset(): <?php $x = isset($a) ? $a : $b; Until PHP 7 comes out, though, your best bet is the ?: operator which is a shortcut for the ternary operator.

gimme all the upvotes you might want to consider boosting it
Wait, someone else already answered it
hi guys
i have an issue with javascript/php
do you all know the $(this)
03:35
4
A: C#'s null coalescing operator (??) in PHP?

kojiroThe Null Coalesce Operator, (??) has been accepted and implemented in PHP 7. It differs from the short ternary operator (?:) in that ?? will suppress the E_NOTICE that would otherwise occur when attempting to access an array where it doesn't have a key. The first example in the RFC gives: $usern...

Upvote this answer ^
03:48
Jul 27 '14 at 21:28, by Danack
Hello, I have a problem, but I am too lazy to write the question out until some says that they will help me. http://sol.gfxile.net/dontask.html
04:13
morning..
What to write in .htaccess file to allow to read *css and *js. Browser gives unstyled page and This:Failed to load resource: the server responded with a status of 403 (Forbidden)
 
1 hour later…
05:26
Would it be common for localhost (WAMP) to not run scripts? I can't seem to get this to work at all :/
However...it's working in the test file and our stuff is practically the same.
Even his html won't work for the tables. :/
I just...don't know. This is truly mind boggling to me. :/
@AndreaFaulds that explains why I've got an upvote and a downvote for the 3 years old answer
upvoted :D
PS: every time you call a conditional operator "ternary" (when you are in fact addressing a particular operator not its type from the arity perspective) a kitten dies
eat it, kittens
Fixed it! :D
06:35
morning all
anyone can help about generating pdf with mpdf and bootstrap css?
08:32
good meurning all!!
Good morning!
Little late (vacation) but wish you all the best for 2015 :)
Same to you, hoping another great coding year ;-)
great is just an understatement ;)
it's going to be awesomeif I get the projects I want :P
08:52
moin
marning
user924016
09:18
yay yay ayay mornings
@JoeWatkins hey sexy :D nice avatar
hi guys
good meowning
@webarto I'm a people now, like you ...
09:37
Nice beard @JoeWatkins
@ircmaxell you should add short lambdas that'd be so much fun.
he got away with it too!
leg end
hi guys
can anyone tell me how can we add innerhtml
`<button ng-click="processForm(1,3);">View More</button>`
in `.view_comment` div using angularjs
I am using ajax call of angular where I have to do above functionality
09:53
Anyone know the fastest ALTER TABLE command I can run on a large db table to trigger 'Updated'?
(apart from drop)
@john your .view_comment should contain de innerhtml in your view, or you have to apply it by for example a model
<div class="view_comment">{{comment.description}}</div>
@ErikBaan yes but its dynamic means its button which contain function to make ajax call
when you apply a value to $scope.comment.description in the processForm method, it will update the innerhtml for view_comment
yes thats why you use a model
you bind it to the view, and update it within the processForm method
as we use this for normal operation
jQuery(".view_all_comments_profile").html('<button ng-click="processForm(1,' + response.count + ');">View More</button>')
similarly I want same in angularjs
where/how have you defined processForm at this moment ?
10:00
I have defined in one file .js which contain function controller(){
$scope.processForm = function () {}
}
you want to use the $http api to make the ajax call (see DI in angular how to obtain the object)
and you want to use a model to create interaction between view and controller
$http({
method: 'POST',
url: 'home.php",
data: "a=1",
headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}
}).success(function (response) {});
this is my ajax call
are you placing tihs ajax call in the processForm method ??
or am I missing something
yes you are right I am placing ajax call in that method
so before $scope.processForm, add $scope.comments = '';
and within the success closure for your $http call add $scope.comments = response.comments (assuming response is a json object with a comments property)
and within your view/markup use <div class="view_comment">{{comments}}</div>
so now you are using the comments model and two way binding
and every update to $scope.comments will be applied to the view automagically
10:07
morning
I asked a server to reboot at around 8.30 last night. As of now, it's still installing updates and hasn't rebooted yet :-/
eh.. circleci composer fetching so slow today..
@DaveRandom the one that's been up for 3 years?
@DaveRandom running Windows? ;-P
10:27
> DAMMIT! - Developers Against Management Meddling in Information Technology
@PaulCrovella No a different one :-P
Actually I did reboot that yesterday and it took about a minute or something
So yesterday I requested a hosting account from my university. Apparently it's a shared one but I could SSH into it. It was quite secured since I couldn't use sudo or even apt-get to install or upgrade software.
I uploaded my php API that uses NikiC's FastRoute library. I got into problems since it requires PHP 5.4 while the server has 5.3. I noticed that it has Suhosin patch. While I could just use another host that does support 5.4+ I wrote an email to a teacher (maintainer) stating that upgrading to 5.4+ would not only have performance gains but also security patches. He replied that the
The second question would be: is there an alternative?
AAB
AAB
Hello everyone
I just wanted to know which php framework is good for beginners
10:45
@HamZa: suhosin.org/stories/install.html - "Compatibility: The current Suhosin-Extension has been tested with PHP 5.4, 5.5 and 5.6"
AAB
AAB
CodeIgniter and Laravel are suggested in most sites.
IIRC Suhosin did get abandoned for a while but they recently restarted work on it, so it's back up-to-date.
@AllenJB yes, but there's no patch for 5.4+.
@AllenJB exactly
@HamZa use 5.6 with the extension. Sticking with 5.3 in the name of security is backward. Not only is 5.3 eol, but the suhosin patch for it isn't being updated either.
@PaulCrovella reasonable suggestion.
10:52
Can someone help me with deploying my laravel site?
@AAB Most people in here recommend vanilla php
@Eenvincible Unlikely. You'd have more luck in a laravel specific chat. irc perhaps.
Thanks Hamza
yeah that ^
10:55
@Eenvincible basically just ask a specific question where you're stuck. Maybe someone will take an interest into it, maybe someone has an answer. Asking a general question: "Can someone help me?" will likely not get answered
Alright; thanks;
So I have build a laravel web application but what I would like to do is deploy it using GIT so that future changes will be easily added using git commands like git push;
You mean you have to build a web application, and you are forced to use laravel? :o
I have already completed the web app and runs locally on my machine
Unless that question was a joke

« first day (1543 days earlier)      last day (3632 days later) »