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20:02
@MadaraUchiha No reason to extend them. Just inject them then have a return function through an interface.
I think it's weird that DI is neccessary to write testable code but the testing framework forces inheritance.
It's not like the testing framework forced inheritance on the tested code
@Allenph It's a matter of purity over practicality
Sure, you could have injected a $framework to the constructor of every test class
But then you'd have had $framework-> calls everywhere instead of making it look natural.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier Sure. I'm just saying it's funny it's for testing code thats... "better" than itself.
With tests, the important concept isn't extensibility, it's being clear-cut and totally obvious.
The idea is that your tests (which is different from test code, mind you) are as stupid and straightforward as possible.
Meh. I digress. But it has caused a lot of weird situations for me. Like when I wanted really similar mocks across a bunch of different tests, etc.
Maybe your point is in tests you should probably just rewrite the mock generation boilerplate?
20:10
@Allenph Against, test !== test code
You can write abstractions and everything in your test code, to make writing the tests easier.
For example, in my previous workplace, we used requirejs, an asynchronous version of Node's require
Then shouldn't the test framework be conducive to using abstractions the the same way we make our regular code conducive to using abstractions?
// You'd do something like
define(['module1', 'module2', function(module1, module2) {
  // execute here when module1 and 2 are loaded
})
Now say you wanted to test a module, and you wanted to mock a dependency module
RequireJS didn't allow this out of the box, and neither did the test framework
So I build an abstraction layer between the two that allows for it, now you'd defined your tests somewhat like
requireMockTest('mainModule', {
  module1: { method: function() { return 'fake!'; } },
}, function(mainModule) {
  describe('main module', function() {
    it('should call fake method', function() {
      assert(mainModule.callMethod(), 'fake!');
    });
  });
});
Notice how the test itself is still dead simple, but now the heavy lifting of mocking modules for RequireJS is done by external code, with its own tests.
(describe is equivalent to a test class in PHPUnit, and it is equivalent to a single method on that class, sort of)
I really hate Angular's DIC
@tereško Oh don't be like that. Angular is already very self-conscious about the size of its DIC.
2
@tereško Cough Service Locator Cough Cough
20:17
@Allenph it's not even that
it's much much worse
when you compile it, it makes copies
@MadaraUchiha I see your point...but I think that supports my point. You shouldn't have to build a decorator.
@tereško What does this even mean?
@Allenph Sometimes the functionality you need applies to a major portion of your test, and it isn't available from your test framewok
when you start digging into what happens , when you compile angular's code, you will encounter eldritch horrors, that you have never even imagines
Here's a scenario, you're stuck with code that does new MyClass everywhere
The previous developer (who was a genius, of course) developed this code over 7 days and 7 nights, and the entire company runs on it. The previous developer ended their employment under mysterious circumstances, which we will not discuss with you.
Your only option is, in almost all of your tests, to overload the autoloading system, and substitute your own fake classes in order to test anything.
How do you achieve that with PHPUnit?
This is more or less equivalent to my requirejs problem above
@MadaraUchiha you bypass the DIC and provide mock/stubs/doubles in the constructor
20:23
@MadaraUchiha Which is when you should inject another thingy into your test class.
@tereško There is no DIC, every class does new in the constructor
Or uses a singleton
I dont think this example goes back to PHPunit.
Wes
Wes
@MadaraUchiha my framework used to do exactly that
And also your real first goal should be finding that guy and burning him at the stake at the next Google webcast.
@Allenph Right, it's a layer of abstraction above PHPUnit
Which is why you can't expect PHPUnit to be able to provide it for you, even if it does have stubbing capabilities.
Wes
Wes
20:26
converted "new Foo($args)" to $mocks->newObject(Foo::CLASS, $args)
using php preprocessing
@Wes That's another way of doing it
Yeah, that's an even higher level of abstraction than my suggestion (to substitute the class using overloading)
@MadaraUchiha I dont think were talking about the same thing.
My suggestion is at the overloading level (you implement a different autoloader function, that takes mocks into account, and use that instead of the real one)
@Wes's suggestion is at pre-compilation level, you actually alter the code-under-test to include the mocks
(Which is more daring)
@Allenph That's not under question.
I'll make it simpler
I've given you the scenario @Allenph
You have an existing code, with no dependency injection, and globals everywhere
You need to add tests to it.
How do you do it? what tools or techniques would you use?
BTW, for the full answer to that, I highly recommend smile.amazon.com/Working-Effectively-Legacy-Michael-Feathers/dp/…
Wes
Wes
uopz kind of works
@MadaraUchiha Refactor as you go and add tests.
Or run end to end tests and tell them to get lost.
20:40
So there are a few techniques
One of which I already mentioned
Replace the classes you want to mock in the linker (in PHP's case, the autoloader)
the first medical question just asked .. The sad part is physicians are expensive .. bad news for our sponsor.
Wes gave another one, add pre-processing to your tests, and alter the code under test.
Another is, for example, to make a tiny refactor where the offending new gets put into a protected method, and you then create an extending class which overrides that method, and returns a mock instead.
I'm talking a out completely different stuff. Lets say your code was written by the code gods themselves...the perfect thing to test, right?
Now you have some mock that gets reused all over the place, and you have a factory method for it.
Where do you put that factory method? With the way PHPUnit ks you have to have a new class that extends TestCase then your test class extends the new class to get access to that factory method.
Which is obviously going to get crappy fast. What I'm saying is your test class should just be a normal class. One thing should "route" through the tests, and the rest (the stuff that contains the current functionality of PHPUnit) should be injected into your test class.
20:46
@Allenph No one forces you to extend TestCase
Help me out here, since I don't 100% remember the PHPUnit API
It is meant to be used that way and it's a giant pain to not do that.
How do you make a thing happen before the entire suite, and how do you make a thing happen before each test
not sure what you're asking or how it's relevant to what I'm saying.
Humor me
I vaguely remember a setUp method you can make that will make something run before each test
Is that still a thing?
Yes
setup / teardown / setupclass / teardownclass
20:49
And is there a version of setUp that runs before all the tests in the suite run?
@PeeHaa Perfect
Or something like that
Not 100% on the naming, but it is there
tried watching "Jessica Jones", it was mildly interesting for first 3 episodes
basically - meh
Yeah. There is.
You wound inject the thing that you would otherwise be setting up.
class MockFactory {
  public function createMock() {
    // ...
  }
}

class Test extends TestCase {
  private $mockFactory;
  private $mock;

  public function setUpClass() {
    $this->mockFactory = new MockFactory();
  }

  public function setUp() {
    $this->mock = $this->mockFactory->create();
  }

  // snip

}
Who told you that everything in test code needed to be tests?
No one. I put code in there that wasn't a test.
20:52
Then I don't see the problem in your scenario
You have a fairly easy way to make your abstractions however you want
Your example could be directly converted to injecting a MockFactory instance.
You have hooks into the testing framework for this exact reason
@Allenph Even better
Didn't know that was possible with PHPUnit
It's not.
That's my point.
Why would you care?
You don't need to test your tests
@PeeHaa Because it's not about testing the tests, it a about the ease of writing them and the flexibility to include other testing libraries, etc.
20:54
@Allenph DI containers is a kind of magic I'd rather to explicitly keep off my tests.
I want new operators everywhere in my tests.
@Allenph tests should be straight forward and isolated
See, that's what I was asking before.
I want things to be as straightforward as humanly possible to read the test, and understand exactly what part of the code is being tested.
If that was Madera's point.
Obviously I didnt ask it in an understandable way.
Speaking of tests :P @bwoebi you feel like looking at my failing code in 5 minutes?
20:58
@PeeHaa I'd look at it right now preferably
@Shafizadeh huh ? I don't really understand the comment there
@bwoebi k lemme quickly push
Planning to greet my bed soon
@tereško are you using virtual-machine or xampp or wamp?
@ircmaxell Sucessfully made double sided multilayered PCBs with vias at home.
Worth it? No.
Dope? Yes.
20:59
I am using an old laptop, which serves as a server, and I was using VPS before (but it was too slow to sync)
@Shafizadeh what is that xampp folder there ?
@bwoebi this test results in:
what does it contain?
> [PHP Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 65536 bytes) in D:\Web\socket-inspect\vendor\phpunit\phpunit\src\Framework\MockObject\Invocation\StaticInvocation.php on line 79]

Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 65536 bytes) in D:\Web\socket-inspect\vendor\phpunit\phpunit\src\Framework\MockObject\Invocation\StaticInvocation.php on line 79
@tereško I don't know, they are exist by default when you install the xampp
oh
you should have deleted them
21:00
There is something wonky I guess with a promise I don't resolve, but I don't see it
@Shafizadeh ok , dont just blindly delete them
first look at what they contain
for example, dat is what xampp directory contains ^
@PeeHaa you need to return null sometime too
to mark the end of the message
ah
<3
Love you bob
that looks like bullshit, I think you can delete it .... to be safe, make folder on desktop "xampp-crap" and move the strange files there
I am not sure what's inside "ltk db" ... that looks vaguely important, @Shafizadeh
21:02
That was as stupid as I hoped it would be
Thanks
@tereško that is another repo .. I keep the db (schema + data) in there
you need to learn how to make "virtual hosts" on xampp
@Shafizadeh is that the production machine? or your development environment?
there is no such a thing .. /var/www/html is the same as /htdocs .. that's it
@tereško not sure .. but that's whet I'm open the project from, and develop it
@Shafizadeh is this the server, that currently runs lamtakam.com ?
or is it your localhost
@tereško nope .. that's the localhost of my own computer .. the server (that runs lamtakam) uses Linux OS
21:07
ok, its "development" environment and not "production" environment
cool
and your data structure (your new commit) is ok for the server
then worst thing that can happen is mild annoyance instead of your webside publically blowing up
@Shafizadeh do you have access to Discord ?
@Shafizadeh I don't want to spam this chatroom with "how to configure apache"
nope, but I can install both teamviewer and anydesk
no no
@tereško ah :-)
21:08
SIGQUIT with process_control_timeout doesn't properly kill idle children – #76930
> Discord is a proprietary freeware voice-over-Internet Protocol application designed for video gaming communities
Voice? I cannot speak in English
no voice, just text
ok, lemme install it ..
I don't have a microphone anyway
@Shafizadeh there is a web version
me neither
which one is correct? (as the response of "I don't have a microphone anyway")
- me either
- me neither
2nd
just log in (you seem to have an account, since you are in Room11 backup chat server)
ok thx
installing ..
you did not need to install anything :(
I don't like web-version of thing
21:11
ah
ok, logged in ..
ok ... but that costs you megabytes
I have a free internet for 2 next day
our neighbor went to travel and 40GB of his internet bandwith has reminded :-)
noted that, his wifi password is 123456789 :P
that's sad
but you can download a lot of shit now
anyway, what's your discord username?
21:16
@PeeHaa what sockets exactly are you inspecting with your tool?
@tereško give me 1 sec
@bwoebi I think I am basically simply turning amphp/socket into a proxy with a webgui
@PeeHaa you think? :-D
@bwoebi something like this
@bwoebi yeah I needed just the server side for something, but now I have that and I was thinking it would be much more useful to be able to proxy both sides :P
haha :-D
21:18
The project is currently in a "hmm not sure what is going to be actually useful" state
foreach by reference copies last array element from second-last – #76931
@Jeeves sigh
Fucking stop that
Wes
Wes
lol
I don't even want to open the tab and close as not a bug
@PeeHaa Never a bad idea to make something first - then decide it's use-case after :P
21:26
@Jeeves Amusing
Can we just set up a filter which auto closes those bug reports
@Alesana yeah yeah I know :P
Is this a misunderstanding stemming from the $x reference having already been defined?
I don't understand why that would happen
@MadaraUchiha yes, you need to unset it
Assuming it's the same report I have seen a 100000000 times by now
It's curious that it ends up on the second to last though
Why does this happen?
21:30
It doesn't happen if you do it twice by reference, or twice not by reference, or if you do it not by reference then by reference... only if you do it by reference and then not by reference.
Which would have to mean that the array is altered when not being passed by reference, which doesn't make any sense to me o.O
@Allenph awesome
Sorry was afk
@MadaraUchiha @Alesana it keeps a reference to the last element. So the next loop keeps updating the last element in the array
@PeeHaa That much I understood
But why does it end up on the second to last?
Because that's the last iteration that sets the value
Surely we have a canon somewhere
What do you mean?
21:43
hmmmm
Wes
Wes
i miss one thing from netbeans, when you refactored wrong, it marked all files with errors in them in the project explorer window, without having to open them all or without running tests
3 messages moved to Trash
Cannonball in place! I mean... canonical 'references' was added successfully.
@PeeHaa Shouldn't $x from the second foreach loop not be the same as $x from the first foreach loop, because of the scope?
21:46
@Alesana Scope?
3 messages moved to Trash
I thought that if I do $x = 'something'; foreach($something as $x) { $x !== 'original'; } because the foreach loop has it's own scope
@PeeHaa Makes sense
The TL;DR is @Alesana because it is a reference the second loop keep updating the last item in the array
@Alesana It does not. PHP has no block scope.
21:48
@Alesana oh rite. Nope we don't do that.
In fact
foreach ($something as $x);

echo $x; // last element of $something
Ah the more I know
JS fixes that with let over var (and a complicated set of spec special cases)
i.e.
for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) {}
i; // 5
vs
for (let i = 0; i < 5; i++) {}
i; // ReferenceError, i is not defined
let is block scope, var is lexical (function) scope
Ahh that would make sense
I still need to learn ES2015
I am applying now for a position where I would be doing more JS
@Alesana Hell yes you should
It's like, JavaScript but sane
21:52
:P I might actually enjoy it then
Wait till you try TypeScript...
I want to learn coffeescript
@Alesana What frontend framework do they do?
@Alesana eeeew
@Alesana CoffeeScript died years ago
Don't bother
Oh nevermind
I recently started using CSS and HTML preprocessors I just need to find one for JS
21:54
ES2015 actually solved a lot of the problems that CS attempted to solve
I guess that will be TypeScript then :D
CS was made in a time without the class keyword, without block scope, without lambdas, etc
@Alesana TypeScript is cool, but I'd still learn the new features that JS has to offer. Learning TypeScript wouldn't help you understand Promises.
@MadaraUchiha I'm thinking back on how many times this may have caused unexplainable errors in my code haha
Real world case from my previous company
So, did you know that if you define a variable without var or let or const in JS, it, by default, becomes global?
Yeah
21:57
So we have a relatively unique system, whereas some of the code is built and packaged, but part of the code is brought over by a special build process from the database (yes.), and is added to the code after it had already been minified
The built part of the code undergoes the normal build, lint, minify, etc. and the extra code from the database (which are hooks in the function to program fulfills) gets added after
@PeeHaa I think it was Angular, I would have to look back at the conversation
The result is that you have mostly minified code, with "islands" of unminified code here in there, where it's taken from the db
@MadaraUchiha lol
Minifiers love to change local variable names to short, one letter identifiers
Exotic
22:00
Save bytes and all that
@MadaraUchiha Wouldn't it make sense to do minification after all the code is brought in from the databases?
@Alesana Sense had absolutely nothing to do with the making of that system.
Yeah good point lol
I spent over a year completely tossing it to the garbage and rewriting it sanely.
22:01
Do some of you have experience setting up php-fpm in AWS ECS?
Anyway, we had crazy unpredictable bugs with one of our customers
Since the only big part that changes meaningfully between customers is those hooks, we instantly suspected those
After about 3 hours of starting into a monster 200 line function
We found the culprit to be something along the lines of
for (i in arr) {
  // ...
}
In doing that, without a var, they were overriding the global i, which was taken because the minifier assigned a variable to it.
Oh my god that sounds like a pain in the ass
It doesn't help that the hooks are, by-design, written by the most junior team in the company
And that, not by-design, it doesn't undergo linting, code-review or proper QA.
I would most likely make a mistake like that but I would expect an error somewhere down the line before the minification process :P
@Alesana Normally, there wouldn't be a big problem
If the minification process were to happen after the hooks were added, the minifier would simply know not to use the i identifier, since it's taken at the global level, and unless it's safe to overshadow it, it shouldn't use it.
It's the combination of all of those horrible practices that caused it
22:07
Right that's why I wouldn't put too much thought into it
See the weird part though is that I somehow knew that when using for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) {} in JS, i would be accessible outside of the loop. I just thought that it wasn't that way with PHP for some reason
I don't use much JS though, mostly just for building a static website and some AJAX calls
And then of course for some parralax, lazyload, or navbar effects that I should probably just be using a premade library for :P
PHP has similar but different problems
Read: Crappy WordPress plugins
I finally convinced my work to get away from using those
Arbitrary code that runs at (hopefully not) the same namespace as everything else
@IanRodrigues you'll have much better luck if you ask a specific question, rather than a broad question (such as yours). "Don't ask to ask, just ask."
Although Wordpress IMO doesn't make it easy to use namespaces
22:14
@Alesana they support really old-ass versions of PHP...
I think they've cut off PHP 4.x?
@Tiffany And really old-ass versions of jQuery too
@Alesana That depends on the theme
Although the admin interface might be a different story.
@MadaraUchiha Is there a good boilerplate theme that you can suggest?
@Alesana I might be a PHP and jQuery specialist, but I'm not a WordPress specialist.
:P thought I would ask anyways
22:17
Apr 30 at 19:14, by Madara Uchiha
@Alesana You have code in a DB?
It's frustrating at my job because before I came there, nobody knew what they were doing at all. So I came to a bunch of horribly written most wobbly code in the world. Naturally, they're getting errors all of the time that I would go in and manage to fix. Then they realized that I could actually code, so they started to take on more complicated projects and giving them to me.
I'm definitely more on the junior side though - so just because I can do what they want doesn't mean I'm doing it right. Especially when they need it done by the next day
@Allenph Well that wasn't what the conversation was about, but in the past I did have code in a DB. I let users define JS that would be ran once their "action" was completed. It sat in a DB.
@Allenph That was a thing that have been had, yes.
Not his though, mine.
21 mins ago, by Madara Uchiha
@Alesana Sense had absolutely nothing to do with the making of that system.
@MadaraUchiha Is that what I think it is?
Most likely :D
22:23
There's plenty of good boilerplate themes out there for WP
Trying to think of the one I used to use back when I was doing agency work but uh it's been a while
@Sean I want something I can use webpack with, as well as Sass and Pug. I couldn't find any originally with Pug but I could most likely implement that without a problem
22:50
Refute the claim: You don't need secure password requirements if you have a lockout system that will lock someones account after 5 attempts, preventing brute force and dictionary attacks.
No, you refute it
You need secure password requirements if you have a lockout system that will lock someone's account after 5 attempts.
Wes
Wes
do you guys use travis or the other one these days?
Who?
@Alesana touché
Wes
Wes
22:59
scrutinizer is the nicer one, but a pain in the butt to set up
I dropped scrutinizer a long time ago

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