When I was working in Amdocs, there was a guy who was ballsy enough to be debugging the app while a remote customer demo was going on, and changing output in realtime. :P
most of people are quite comfortable with that education system .. they only want to add more standardized tests (the ones with "ckeck the right answer")
Additionally, downvoters, what more can be said given the complete lack of information around what the OP is trying to do? He has an algorithm problem. You don't solve an algorithm problem by moving to C. You solve it by refactoring the algorithm. Sure, there comes a time where porting to C or other runtimes is an option, but that's not the first step (as it will not give you orders of magnitude gains). So unless the OP posts an actual algorithm, this answer is the best way to help him. It is the only answer that can possible give the order-of-magnitude changes he's after. — ircmaxell5 secs ago
@ircmaxell don't think this is useful. why is catch (Exception $e) too much? don't think that catching an exception has a) any measurable performance impact (think throwing is much more expensive) and b) the advantage to see what we catch: An Exception or something new that doesn't yet exist and won't extend Exception class? Nothing against shortening the syntax, but this makes PHP unnecessarily less verbose (Verbosity can increase readability and helps newbies understanding what's going on).
Hahaha...I've seen guys who claim to know a language upon completing just a simple addition program. You ask such guys a question like do you know "xyz" and they would say, "Absolutely!"
since CSS3 is still a draft, it would be highly inadvisable to use it in production code .. you can use some aspects of it, which are implemented by IE8+, but that's about it
I wonder how much time it would take for HTML5 and CSS3 to become a standard..so that I don't have to worry about cross browser compatibility that much :)
@tereško According to spec <center> tag is removed, google uses it any ways, so according to spec, many are still in drafts but are available to dev any ways, best example is text selection color
@asprin HTML5 is still lagging, audio, video etc is still buggy, but when it comes to semantic tags like header footer, dev have started using them as search engines are changing algorithms ...
I'm not even sure you *can* test LSP as it's only a formal way to do subtyping. Apart from that, it is OK in my eyes that you have that abstract testcase for those types to extend from.
@hakre Fair enough, testing for LSP may be a bit too vague.You were saying that you think there shouldn't be dependencies between the abstract base class and the child class, right? Or were you just summarizing the answer there?
congratulations , you have successfully proven that some browsers support HTML5 spec WHICH IS STILL A FUCKING DRAFT!! It's like jumping around and showing off how nice code you can write in EcmaScript7
@hakre and what does hidden mean in that context? Not obvious from looking at the tested code, not obvious from looking at the tests? Something else yet?
I'm basing the talk on an article by Andy Hunt from earlier this year, where he complains that a lot of people adopt agile practices but not the mindset which ultimately leads to people not being agile at all. they might be effective, but not agile in the sense of the first sentence in the manifesto
@Gordon I think that there are no practices. I think Agile is a business philosophy only, not a dev-team one. It flows from the business, as opposed to the way it's normally portrayed as a "IT strategy"
@ircmaxell i think there are practices that benefit the mindset. i just dont think they are exclusive to agile nor do I think it's only the ones given in the manifesto
@hakre In my case, the tests (a parent test before a child test) need to be run in a specific order because otherwise you can't specify an @depends (and not have it means "always skip this test"). That's not a bad form of needing an order, is it?
@YogeshSuthar when you adopt agile, you usually just pick something like Scrum or XP and then do what that methodology prescribes. That's okay to get things done. But it's not what Agile is about. Agile is about continuous improvement and it's about living the values in the Manifesto. The practices are secondary. They are just transient.
@hakre It has to do with how PHPUnit treats @depends, it simply says "it's the tester's responsibility that the depending test after the depended on test, we'll just run the tests in the order they are there, and when we see @depends, we'll skip the test if the dependency hasn't run successfully at that point"
@ircmaxell I won't say yes but I also won't say no. Business Agility and Strategy certainly plays a huge role in all that. I am just not sure it's the same as ASD.
It would be better if instead they retro-actively skipped a test (as skipping doesn't necessarily need to be skipping, it could be just showing the result "skipped" instead) when the depended on test fails later
That's kind of the point I am making. ASD is a lie. It half works, but only truly works as an extension of business agility. By itself it will fail far more often than not... or at least that's my assertion...
@ircmaxell successful ASD needs a certain organizational culture. If the organization is built around rigid processes, ASD will fail … unless you have adapters. So yes, ASD is nothing that works in isolation.
@hakre Ah, ok. Well, my motivation is to have better test output. If I break the function in the parent function, the child function is likely to fail as well, so through skipping I'll get output that better tells me what I need to fix. Other than that, I don't really need them to be dependent.
@Jasper ah that yes, ypu commented yesterday something in that direction. well, I would totally ignore that because the first test fails and you should see what happens by the test. you can also use the stop-on-first-failure setting.
@ircmaxell also, a often overlooked aspect of ASD is the identity part of the individual and team as a whole. I think that differentiates it somewhat from Business Agility. Agile is a value system and an agile developer will use that as a basis for decision. But more on a tactical implementation level. Not on a strategic level, e.g. overall company objectives. Both are important though. And I think Business Agility is more like an emergent quality while Agility in the ASD context is a mindset.
@shivdhwajpndey please dont spam the room and dont ping random people. thanks
@hakre But the first test to fail is actually the child one, which is the wrong one. Well, it depends on filenames I suppose, since I believe separate files are run in alphabetical order, but inside the ChildTest the inherited tests are run after the newly defined tests
@hakre That's true. However, it still feels like I could improve my output upon a failure if I could do mark that dependency. Would you agree that things would be (if ever so slightly) better if one could mark such dependencies?
@Gordon I'll make this assertion: A waterfall dev team coupled with an Agile business will be more productive and function better than an Agile dev team coupled with a waterfall business...