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06:03
@ircmaxell Thus the suckitude note!
06:20
hey... first time here, so I'm building this social network and was looking at centralizing all status operations (like updating one's status in particular) we have 3 files throughout the site, one is used in updating via text, on the main site, and another taking in ajax from a browser extension.

The best way I see to centralize these operations is taking the core status update code, putting it in a single file, and then including that file and calling updateStatus($theUsersStatusUpdate)
Would anyone out there agree or have a better idea?
hi all
just a small question about innerhtml
innerHTML
?
06:26
...
i have written a javascript function that uses innerHTML to load the video content (<object></object>) into a div
but the problem is that, when i click on an element, the function is fired.. and for a moment, the div disappears
hmm, maybe flash being crappy? not sure bout this one
and then, after a second, the div is loaded with the <object> content
and the video unit appears-
?
this looks a bit awkward, as the total design is moved away when the div disappears
yes
the video appears as usual
06:28
do you have the page avail?
could consider wrapping in another div with some rigid positioning, absolute or maybe even fixed... :/
oh... ok
i will try that...
just a min
...do you have the URL for the page?
yes... do you want to see it
just a min... first i will try to use that wrapping concept
06:32
k
ya that url would be nice, have more ideas
ok...
you can click on the top right video thumbnail link
This must be the most useless code ever:
http://codepad.viper-7.com/lZAc0t
Wish there was an easy solution other than an passing a function callback to an iterator and setting the parameter type.
@DevinGRhode did u see the link ?
just barely loaded
06:42
But it's really really ugly. I mean, we have the foreach statement, which I use at least 2 times per day. It's clean, simple, easy to use.
@ChristianSciberras i see the code is so simply written
@Gordon / @ircmaxell What do you think about foreach($arr as Type $value) / foreach($arr as $key => Type $value)
@dskanth just put a black div with a perpetual loading gif (like facebook) and layer it underneath the video object
@dskanth It's function MyClass that is completely useless. A waste of opcodes. :P
@ChristianSciberras don't mean to be a dick but wth
#jk
06:45
@DevinGRhode I don't get you. :P
You don't see what it does?
not really, but I don't see the end goal
@DevinGRhode i could not understand you well...
do u mean that i have to put a black div above the video <object> ?
z-index it underneath it...
@DevinGRhode You familiar with IDE autocompletion/documentation?
06:47
When you use docblock, the IDE suggests stuff when you use it.
/**
 * Does something.
 */
function test(){}
When you type "tes" and hit ctrl+space (or wait some time), you get a list of things matching "tes", including function test.
Box on the left shows list of matching elements, box on the right shows help on that particular element.
If you have something like:

class SomeType {
  function test2(){
  }
}

/**
 * @return SomeType
 */
function test(){}

test()->test2();
If you just type test()-> the IDE automatically suggests methods/properties for class SomeType (eg; test2())
This can be done because the IDE parses the @return in the docblock, where we told it the function return type is of type SomeType.
@dskanth to have the poorest formatting eva...
<object style="position: absolute; z-index:20">...
<div style="position:relative; z-index:18; background-color:black; width:YourVidFrameWidth; height:YourVidFrameWidth; left:YourVidFrameWidthIThink; top:VidHeightIThink"><p style="height:100%; text-align;"><img src="loading.gif" /></p></div>

something like that
oops text-align:center; and margin-top:HalfVidFrameHeight; to center the loading gif
@ChristianSciberras I'm a notepad++ guy lol
@DevinGRhode It should support this thing. PNotepad does, for example.
@DevinGRhode Thanks
i will try that way
@dskanth hey at least I made some progress on a programming project today even if it wasn't one of my own lol
@DevinGRhode Good work... :)
06:58
@Gordon I know, I know. I should lead people to references instead of explaining myself. ;) Good morning to you too :)
autocompletion distracts from the problem.
@KamilTomšík Uh huh?
instead of writing what you want, you're distracted by "hm.... let's see what I can do with this one..."
@KamilTomšík It provides inline documentation.
which can be wrong :)
07:06
If you can't cope with that kind of distraction, you're really not fit for this job :)
oh really?
@KamilTomšík Stop looking at things in an ST way. :)
Not everyone can code blindly.
@KamilTomšík I agree with the "hm.... let's see what I can do with this one..." LOL!
And even less can remember whole frameworks off by heart.
Everyone should be able to code blindly, or do a few more google searches on what they are trying to write.
07:08
it's hard, I did a lot of J2EE programming (and man, I can tell you that you don't know what framework is :-D) just in gvim, and I was more productive than guys sitting next to me with full blown netbeans
And a google search isn't a distraction??
sure it is
yeah I suppose it is
like the bold-
No one forces you to use autocompletion.
But I'd rather take less then a second to see what a function returns than trace back into the function code (or Google it).
@KamilTomšík thoughts on googling?
07:11
and what about:
1. writing what you want
2. check if it works
3. if not, then you can find out why and make it working :)
How do you write what you want when you don't know how it should look like?
if you can express it in english, why it's so hard to do it in code?
For example, if you wanted to do run some mysql in wordpress, you'd end up doing mysql(i), ignoring the fact that wordpress has $wpdb
well, I'd probably end up with some data-mapper :-D
create user called "Christian Sciberras" // wonder why this doesn't work. error error error.
07:14
it could work, but it's not complete
@KamilTomšík And you call that productive? Recreating the the whole car?
you're telling someone to create user called christian sciberras
who's that guy?
@KamilTomšík Good catch. But it still doesn't change the fact that 0 documentation won't help you.
@ChristianSciberras why not? for what do you need documentation?
And if you go google "wordpress create user", it takes longer than trying out "crea.." and then "wp_cre..".
You just can't work blindly. A while ago, I figured out a bug in my software. A load() was giving weird results because in fact it's return wasn't boolean, but a count of how many items were loaded. Without documentation, I wouldn't have figured it out.
07:18
okay, now we're too much out of context - I am one of those who don't like writing documentation nor reading it - that's why I don't do it... but my point was - autocompletion distracts developer - because instead of expressing what he wants, he will immediately try to express it in fw code.
And you call that "in context"?
@ChristianSciberras without return, you wouldn't have this problem :-P
@KamilTomšík You really shouldn't advise people badly just because you don't give a f about what they use :-)
anyone have php problems?
Not keeping any documentation in PHP is (very) bad advice in my opinion, as is cooking up soup code.
@DevinGRhode Huh?
07:22
uh... actual projects with actual problems, not arbitrary talk about autocompletion and our differing preferences for writing code
@DevinGRhode I hate people that passed through an experience and try to kill it for others. I mentioned autocompletion in an optimistic way, it's up to you to decide for/against it.
But from my perspective, Google is not a substitute, which isn't to say not to use Google.
In all my years of software dev (countable on one hand, really), I switched editors 4 times, each for good reason. The first editor was PNotepad. The rest include Delphi, Netbeans and now Zend Studio.
@ChristianSciberras I feel Zend Studio is best for php dev.
googling is no better than autocompletion (from distraction and speed point of view)
@KamilTomšík Oh really?
Let me count it for you, ok?
yeah, I was proposing something else
07:32
@KamilTomšík autocompletion <1s. google >5s
yes, I agree
@dskanth IMHO Netbeans had some great shortcuts. The find bar is unbeatable. And I also use "go to line" a lot. ZS is great at debugging. Unbeatable, probably. But I really dislike the "find" dialog.
@KamilTomšík Let's leave this to personal preference and allow a little respect at that.
@ChristianSciberras accept with u
@KamilTomšík If I really had to come up with such lame arguments, I'd say computers are a distraction and you should write the program on paper and key it in directly in binary.
But I kind of limit my troll-o-meter in the PHP room, unlike others..
well, think what you want - I am right about "I wonder, what can I do with this one", and I've seen it so many times... :-/
07:38
I never said you're not. I'm just saying that that distraction is allowable in my opinion. There's no alternative. Even as you said writing the code down, it still requires that you check in on the documentation.
If I had to merge both ideas, I'd write everything down and straighten it out afterwords with autocompletion. But of course, there must be some form of quirk in this argument, as always in my arguments, no?
no you only don't have option in php - and that made me thinking, it shouldn't be so hard - in st this is common - write what you want, try it, if it will die, debugger will pop out - but what's important - you can see current stack trace - with available methods - fixing your code is much easier then. and you'll see the whole context, not only method and its signature
then you'll fix the code, hit ctrl-s and it will continue with execution, like if nothing ever hapenned...
@KamilTomšík Well, that's how I work with it. The difference is that before I get down with the debugger, I double check method signatures.
I usually get this done on the second time. But with proper planning and checking (with autocompletion) I sometimes get this right the first time as well.
We're talking about well over 200 lines of code. Working the first time.
I can write 200 lines of working code too, the problem is - I don't want to. with this approach your mind is limited to think in context of your libraries.
So you were saying to write down the code, and now you're saying it's limited to the context of your libs? Isn't that conflicting?
no, your approach is limited
when you write what you want, you're not limited by anything, you're thinking in high-level context
"just get this done" - then you can think about how
07:47
I write what I want and then connect it to the real system.
They're two different processes.
The second process involves autocompletion, the first doesn't.
Sometimes I even write it inside comments as pseudocode. Then systematically replace each part with working code.
well :) I guess I'm just too much affected... I don't see the point of autocompletion and I never valued it enough (actually I did, but it was when I was doing delphi)
You did Delphi?
Well, I might be affected by coming from Delphi. Dunno.
sure I did, I've started with basic, then pascal, then delphi
Ah, the coincidence.
Wouldn't be QBasic by any chance?
07:53
And I presume TurboPascal?
Same here mate.
of course
And this was, how much years ago?
one thing which I valued a lot on delphi was with object {do commands} syntax
oh... let me think
~= 12 years
maybe 11
2003-2005 makes it some 5/8?
07:56
Back then I remember downloading my copy of Delphi 7 Personal
On dialup.
Was overjoyed to see the installer running without a hitch.
I still have it on a CD somewhere.
I remember delphi 6
was the first "personal" version
but I can tell it was not programming in the right sense
Well, I only have experience with Delphi 7+
But a friend of mine once gave me the pro version of BCB
It was v5 I think
yeah, I had a book about that one
or have... I don't know where it is :-D
delphi was mostly "snippet" programming - google for snippet, paste few components, wire them up, spend some time with debugging and here we go... native gui app, which sucks as much as it can :-D
I remember that almost every program (and no, that time I was not payed for that) I've written in delphi had some easter egg...
Well, I loved the codebase.
I mean, it was structurally sound.
Even the class hierarchy. Predictable, clean and no-nonsense.
well :-D I'm glad that time is over
08:06
Well, only thing I'm glad of is getting rid of qbasic and tp :P
Horrid horrid ui.
And qbasic...pure brain damage.
But Delphi, still miss it.
I don't - when somebody says delphi I think about:
1. great gui builder - really
2. a lot of extends - not so good
3. autocompletion paradise - and that's something I'd like to rather never experience
A while ago, I wrote a small app for managing the OS hosts file for the company I work with. It was based on FPC/lazarus, hence I got it to work on different platforms.
2. A lot of extends?
3. Yeah, got weary of core attributes showing up everywhere. Worse is the fact that they were useless most of the time.
don't remember TComponent? how many children did it take to TPanel?
I wasn't really bothered with that, personally.
3. no I was talking about - not thinking, but rather wondering what's in there... that's exactly that kind of distraction I was talking about
and I guess you're not even today :)
08:10
@KamilTomšík Yup :)
Reminds me. A good place for autocompletion was COM programming.
and that's that difference between us - I dislike extends even on single level.
Remember how typecasting properly got you the right definitions?
well, eclipse does this too
and if not, idea does.
No, no. I meant. COM objects came bare. You had to typecast them to make anything good out of them. Without typecasting, it worked as well, but you would be coding blindly - literally.
@KamilTomšík What's the point of a class hierarchy without that? The next two similar things are interfaces (which you seemed to say they're lazy) and traits, which really aren't a big deal - it's just extending on steroids.
well, that's the point - few years ago I've picked duck typing camp, and that's it... I'm blind.
and honestly, it was never problem for me.
it forces me to writing more understandable api - when you don't care about input arguments it has to be factored in different way - which is imho better one.
08:21
> it forces me to writing more understandable api
I'm all for it, but I get there from a different route.
even more usable, with duck-typing you just have to get used to fact you can receive anything, it's additional burden for you but it will make your api rock.
So is it "bad" to mix duck typing with interfaces? I think it would be more usable.
yeah, it is, they don't play nicely
That sucks. I like the concept, but not enough.
duck typing comes hand in hand with double dispatch.
08:31
@KamilTomšík pfff ;)
what can you do with argument, if you don't know its type?
you can just call some method, which you expect there (contract for that argument) and pass necessary things.
@Gordon morning :)
gimme example of interface based code (simple one) and I'll show you
@KamilTomšík I know what you're going about. I'm just not convinced on safety.
@ChristianSciberras I have an argument for you :)
I see, I ditched programming in C/C++ because I got fed up blowing my feet in loops.
@ChristianSciberras if safety is such issue - why are you throwing exceptions?
08:35
In the hope that someone catches them.
because when you throw exception you hope that somebody will catch it - because he should
and the very same thing works for duck-typed double dispatch - you expect method, you don't care about type of object, as long as it can do what you need.
The problem is that PHP isn't as sound when it comes to calling methods of non-objects, and it somehow gets worse calling non-existent methods.
yes, you have a point there.
Wait, so you do method_exists() (or similar) prior to call?
primitives make this harder
nooooo
no method_exists, forget about that
just call method, that's it
if it will die (method does not exist), it's not worse than passing invalid type.
I still don't get why PHP doesn't just raise an appropriate exception. And in case of primitives, raise an error (which we can catch, turn into an ErrorException and throw it back).
compatibility?
PHP dying silently for compatibility reasons? LOL
It's like saying "we left memory leaks in Windows XP so that DOSAPPX could work".
Well, not really an out-of-this-world scenario that one...
@ChristianSciberras because exceptions are newer than undefined methods
08:43
@Gordon Still, it's a bug. What are the repercussions if an exception was indeed thrown?
no its not.
Exceptions are part of the OOP Toolkit.
If you want your class to throw an exception, define it in the __call handler
class Foo
{
    public function __call($method, $args) {
        throw new BadMethodCallException(sprintf('Method %s does not exist', $method));
    }
}
$obj = new Foo;
$obj->bar();
@Gordon I totally forgot about that. Cool. :)
08:59
You can also do
register_shutdown_function(function () {
    $error = error_get_last();
    if (strpos($error['message'], 'Call to undefined function') === 0) {
        throw new BadFunctionCallException('boo');
    }
});
which would make foo() throw a BadFunctionCallException but it cannot be catched
A FatalError is what it says.. fatal.. if you want to argue about bugs then argue whether an undefined function call really is fatal but dont argue about php raising error instead of exceptions when php is multi paradigm.
and if you really want exceptions instead of the various error levels, you can still do
set_error_handler(function($type, $message) {
    switch($type) {
        case E_NOTICE:
            throw new Exception($message, E_NOTICE);
    }
});
echo $a['foo'];
Sometimes I wish I could have set_fatal_error_handler() though
@rickchristie that would be register_shutdown_function
but you cannot continue script execution with that
it only allows you to make your script die gracefully
isn't domain names price supposed to be standardized ?
09:15
@Gordon I did that already. I've got an intelligent debug mechanism which determines syntax issues in included files, by logging inclusion and comparing it at the end in register_shutdown_function().
@Gordon
> And in case of primitives, raise an error (which we can catch, turn into an ErrorException and throw it back).
I just can't get the hang of this chat formatter thingy. >:(
whatever makes you happy :)
09:57
@KamilTomšík Stop swearing and deleting it. :P
10:16
@ChristianSciberras: I never use ide completion, so I don't see why I would want to do that
posted on July 26, 2011 by Liip

In the PHP content repository, we have a set of interfaces and implementation classes of those interfaces. The interfaces define the standard and are extensively documented. The implementation was built by copying the interfaces and implementing the methods. Now we have the documentation comments duplicated, which is a pain to maintain if we clarify or change anything in the interfaces document

posted on July 26, 2011 by Henri Bergius

GObject Introspection is one of the hidden jewels of the GNOME stack: you write a library in C or Vala, and it becomes automatically available to a wide variety of languages and runtimes, including Python, JavaScript, Java and Qt. Now I would like to bring GObject Introspection to PHP. Why? For many years we in the Midgard community have been using GNOME infrastructure on the web server si

@ircmaxell morning :)
morning
@ircmaxell blah. :P Hello @ircmaxell
how's it going?
10:25
@ChristianSciberras and I don't think you should use autocompletion either
@ircmaxell Let's leave that at that.
here we go, flame time :-D
@KamilTomšík Don't say a word.
10:26
I do think that too, gvim made me better programmer
it's great pick between auto-completion (suggests only already typed words) and simplicity.
I never write a single character of code unless I know what I want to write. And if I know what i want to write, autocompletion just makes me slower (since I can type faster than the lookup takes). So I turned it off...
@KamilTomšík QBasic made me as well...
..avoid GOTOs, actually.
@ChristianSciberras gvim is not programming language :-)
@KamilTomšík And?
What's the point of a programming language if you have to type it out in notepad? Where's the fun in that? lol
10:29
beleive it or not, I do write my code in notepad with syntax highlighting :)
@KamilTomšík 2 with 3 doesn't make 2. It makes 5. Believe it or not ;-)
@ChristianSciberras I use other features of IDEs. But I turn off autocompletion...
@ircmaxell madness :-P
I think I'm going to blog on autocompletion and why I turn it off in my #IDE...
10:32
@KamilTomšík lol. Auto formatting is one of my favorite features when it comes to working with legacy code
please dont
@ircmaxell What other features do you use?
@Gordon oh?
@ircmaxell I understand why you turned it off, but thats practical reasons and not design reasons. Unlike Kamil, I dont think Autocompletion is harmful and we should not tell people it is.
3
10:34
@ircmaxell I'd add type to foreach just for the sake of completeness.
@Gordon I don't consider it harmful, but I think not using it can be beneficial
@ChristianSciberras what completeness
@Gordon Been waiting for that all day long.
@ircmaxell i think it is completeley a matter of personal preference
@ircmaxell function aaa(Type $var) ... catch(Type $var)
@Gordon autocompletion is as that helpful as static calls are...
10:35
@ChristianSciberras but why would foreach need a type? I'm confused
@ircmaxell To force a collection of a specific type.
@Gordon I don't. I think it's a matter of knowing what you want to write before writing it vs writing as you go
@KamilTomšík No Kamil, Autocompletion has nothing to do with that. Dont tell me how I should use my IDE please. If you want to use vim, fine.
@ChristianSciberras how's that better than throwing exception in add()?
@KamilTomšík Huh, what are you asking?
I just listed two examples where type is given.
10:37
@ChristianSciberras if you want to enforce collection of specific type, why not restrict what can be added there?
@KamilTomšík Your argument that autocompletion limits you to what the existing API provides can easily be turned around. Not knowing the API will make your API explode because you add method after method instead of limiting yourself to what it already provides and/or refactor the API.
I like controversal blogs, so I think I will do it...
@ircmaxell that I agree with. But that has nothing to do with autocompletion.
@Gordon it won't, you'll express what you want, method does not exists, in that point (hopefully with debugger showing available methods) you can pick right methods instead of introducing same ones with different name.
@Gordon Well, autocompletion is a means to that end. Sure, it's not always used as such, but a fair amount of time people type $foo-> and wait to see what's shown before deciding what to call...
10:40
that was exactly my point
ok, off to shower and work
later
@ircmaxell which is perfectly fine to know what already is there
saying autocompletion is bad is like saying using an iron pan is bad when the real issue is not thinking about what you want to cook. that doesnt make the iron pan bad.
@KamilTomšík yes, it does. your approach convolutes your api. If you insist on autocompletion being bad, I insist on the opposite. simply because the entire argument is ridiculous.
@Gordon For some reason @KamilTomšík believes he can work with no documentation whatsoever.
@ChristianSciberras which is very much possible with a well designed self describing API.
That doesn't mean there shouldn't be any documentation. Heck, I do my best to document my code so much so that that notion [@KamilTomšík's] sounded offensive.
Also, I just won't believe it possible that a complicated system could be as much self-describing as to not require documentation. We're talking about a system on the line of frameworks, where they achieve several objectives at the same time.
10:49
@ChristianSciberras not that again. we had that so often now.
@Gordon I'm just being realistic. Of course your regular DI[C] implementation is self-describing.
It's a one-sided objective. I'd argue that knowing the pattern, you wouldn't even need a clear API to use it "blindly".
blah :)
Dinner. Cheers guys :)
@Gordon I didn't say it's bad. I said I don't use it, and you might not want to as well...
@ChristianSciberras just remember, comments are not documentation (they can be, but most often they are not)...
@ircmaxell DocBlock?
11:00
docblock or inline comments.
I didn't quite understand that. What's not fit for documentation resides in regular comments. Documentation, inside docblock.
I've got an issue tracking system which tags via // hotfix 1234: Short description for two reasons: it's not fit for documentation, there's nothing in docblock where this fits.
go to any major project and look at their docs, how much of it comes from doc blocks? (hint; very little)
@ircmaxell I don't contest that. A short outline of @param, @return is what I ask for.
And maybe @author and all at the beginning of "loader" files. But I don't see much point in that.
I agree that should be there as well, but realize that's different conceptually from documentation. Yes, it does autogenerate limited api info, but it's not quite documentation (as it doesn't give you anything the raw code does not)
@ircmaxell but I want to use it. It helps me. I find it convenient.
Tom
Tom
11:04
Hi folks, can anyone shed some light on some html encoding confusion? Basically, I have an administration page that allows one to edit pages' HTML. What I need is for strange characters like ó to be converted to their HTML code as they will otherwise not display properly (&#243; in this case). However, I do not want HTML tags to be converted since the HTML still needs to be valid. Eg. <div> should just remain the way it is.
Sounds like neither htmlentities nor htmlspecialchars will help me?
@Gordon then use it. I'm not trying to say you are dumb if you do. I'm just trying to say turning it off helped me write better code (and continues to do so)
@Tom If you don't have a blacklist of those characters, then a simple solution that comes to mind is to convert everything, and turn the < and > entities back to brackets.
Tom
Tom
@Zirak well what about quotes? And there are probably other characters valid in HTML. There must have been a lot of people trying to achieve the same thing right?
Then whatever else you also need. That is, if you don't have a blacklist of those characters.
Tom
Tom
I'm sure I'm not the first with this need, I guess I should find something more battle tested
What about 1. htmlentities everything and then 2. htmlspecialchars_decode ? I believe that should decode all HTML characters back.
11:15
@Tom iconv()
Tom
Tom
@ChristianSciberras that's for changing character encoding?
@ircmaxell I'd argue that thinking about your design helped you write better code (and not turning off AC)
yes, and turning AC off makes you think about design more
@KamilTomšík no it doesnt. thinking about your design makes you think about your design
11:36
@Gordon use your IDE as you wish :)
@Gordon Use Vim, it's your vish
Tom
Tom
12:13
Very awkward problem I am facing with encoding:
0
Q: Zend decoding html entities in form input element causes empty value

TomI have a form element, called metaDescription: //inside the form $description = $this -> createElement('text', 'metaDescription') -> setLabel('Description:') -> setRequired(false) ...


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