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13:17
@Tom Yes.
@Gordon Usually, you shouldn't process stuff in ctor. But what if you call public methods that do, is it still bad?

class TestClass {
    function __construct($args){
        $this->test($args);
    }
    function test(){
    }
}
@ChristianSciberras dont do work during construction phase
offloading work to a function is still doing work
@Gordon I was trying to make work repeatable, by pushing it to a function.
13:23
That's well written. What's an "initialization block" though?
Oh. Java specific. Ironically, I used to use it. :P
Odd question: I know there is no need to pre-define variables like arrays in php, but is there any down side to doing it? It's a nice logical step for me, but I don't want to do it if it's detrimental is some way.
13:38
I always predefine variables
You mean define like define('VAR', 22)?
What do you mean predefine? You always have to define a variable before using it
@Michael That's not a variable, that's a constant. sigh
I agree with @ircmaxell.
@Michael that's not true :)
@Michael

$ar = array(); // predefine
foreach($other as $value)if($value)$ar[]=$value;
@Michael preg_match(pattern, str, matches)
matches is undefined, yet it will receive right value :)
13:42
@KamilTomšík True. Doesn't make it good practice though.
Yeah, that's the safest way I think
@ChristianSciberras If $ar was not initialized to an empty array, if there was another variable with the same name that was used before, you could run into issues.
More like:
$arr = array();
....some code...
$arr[] = "Booya";
For example, if $ar was an array with elements and you did not re-initialize $ar to be an empty array, you would be appending elements to the old array, which is not what you intended to do.
I mean like:
$array = array();

rather than:
foreach( $jack as $jill )
array[] = jill;
If I remember correctly, you also get an E_NOTICE, or was it an E_STRICT?
13:44
@ChristianSciberras well, I think array_filter($other, function($item){return $item > 10}); is better version
@KamilTomšík That was just to illustrate a point. die(1); is the best version. :-P
notice
You get an E_NOTICE if you try to read from an undefined variable
Unless you use the @ symbol.
@Michael or write to in an indirect assignment context (as happens with $array[] = 'foo';)
13:45
scream operator :)
@KamilTomšík You meant silencer, no?
no, it's scream IIRC
Yes, the safe approach is to always predefine your variables.
@ChristianSciberras it will fail the build in all of my applications
@ircmaxell What will?
13:47
@ChristianSciberras using the @ error supressor
Using @ when reading an undefined variable will cause null to be returned.
@ircmaxell There's undoubtedly good reasons for using @. (reading variables isn't :)
@ChristianSciberras show me one
@ircmaxell Writing procedural code and expecting a true/false (success/failure) from a function which instead raises an error.
@ChristianSciberras exceptions are the proper way of handling that
13:51
@ircmaxell fopen() is a good example
@Artefacto no it is not
@ircmaxell procedural code, remember?
@ChristianSciberras exceptions are procedural
exceptions are objects.
13:52
I'll just sit down, watch and chill out ;)
@ChristianSciberras in implementation only. It's easy to write procedural code using classes and objects. Just look at Code Igniter...
fopen raises warnings on expected scenaries (unfortunately), so @ is necessary
@Artefacto No it's not. Install an error exception, and try/catch the opening
@ircmaxell Exceptions change flow of code.
@Artefacto And what happens if it raises an E_FATAL? All of a sudden WSOD
13:52
That is bad from a non-OOP context.
@ChristianSciberras what are you talking about?
@ChristianSciberras so does goto, which is most definitely is procedural
Let's all use GOTO.
@ircmaxell you seriously think using an error handler is a better solution?
it's an awful solution
@ChristianSciberras What if the function is supposed to return "false" in certain situations?
@Artefacto it is the only proper solution to the problem we are discussing. PHP has no way to turn off generating errors
13:54
it has. It's the @ operator
@Artefacto Please explain to me how it's an awful solution. I'd like to hear this
php is ultimate error generator :-D
@Michael That's the point. If FALSE==ERROR why do I have to SET AN ERROR HANDLER??
the problem with it is that it kills all kinds of errors
@Artefacto @ ignores errors. It doesn't handle them. No error should ever go unhandled in the context of which it occured
13:55
@ChristianSciberras You do not know what kind of error occured. All you get back is "false".
@Michael error_get_last()??
@ircmaxell Yes, it does ignore errors. And it's only a mild problem as long as you know what errors you might get
False is enough to handle an exceptional case.
@ChristianSciberras take for example strpos. Sometimes false is a valid return value (that's not an error). But if you pass an array to it, it will generate an error
@ircmaxell actually - @ will be handled by error handler, so you can at least log that error....
13:56
No need to blow up my code for that.
@ChristianSciberras Is that really guaranteed to be the last error?
What if multiple requests are coming into your web application?
@ircmaxell That's not fopen().
@Artefacto If you think ignoring errors is ever ok, I'm not going to discuss this any further
@Michael I don't care about any. I'm handling fopen() issue. Period.
@ChristianSciberras The error that you get back could really be an error from another request that occurred concurrently.
13:57
@ChristianSciberras I'm giving examples of where your concept breaks down. Remember, one working example does not prove anything. But one failed example disproves everything...
@Michael That's not possible.
@ircmaxell You don't have to ignore the error
I'm talking about silencing the message
@Artefacto if you install @, you are ignoring the error.
@Artefacto If all you want to do is silence the message, set error_reporting off
@ircmaxell Look, no one is telling you to put @'s everywhere in your app.
@ircmaxell No, you're not. You're ignoring the error if you don't check the return value of fopen
13:58
@ChristianSciberras and I'm saying the existence of even one is a sign of rot
@ircmaxell <- that is moot.
@Artefacto what if the error was an out of memory error? You wind up with a WSOD and no clue as to why...
@ircmaxell At that point in time I don't care about that.
You keep talking about WSODs.
There's ample ways to handle such errors.
@ChristianSciberras explain one (that involves @)
This isn't about handling them, but handling the result of a single damn function.
@ircmaxell Huh? What's the point?
14:00
@ChristianSciberras You said there are ample ways, I'm calling that. Please explain at least one way to handle such an error involving @
@ircmaxell A very unlikely scenario, but it's a valid point
Again, that's the problem of @. That it's a blunt tool
@Artefacto Not an unlikely scenario
it happens all the time
@ircmaxell They don't involve @ at all.
that's why I'm saying you need to handle errors, not ignore them. Not cast them to boolean
@ircmaxell Only if you're using a wrapper that doesn't stream
14:01
@Artefacto that's not true.
@ircmaxell And that's what I'm saying. Whatever is handling errors is separate from the application logic.
If allocating 10K will get you over the memory limit, something wrong with your setup
@Artefacto And doing that doesn't require checking the result of a function, but actual logging.
@ChristianSciberras which is exactly why using an exception makes perfect sense in this case
@Artefacto Not at all. You could be riding up against it, and that puts you over. But it's still a possibility that you must accept can happen...
@ircmaxell An exception destroys the flow. You should be raising the exception yourself.
14:03
@Artefacto or you are derick running php on a nokia ;)
Look. Error return codes have been used since the dawn of programming. But no language that has been developed in the last 20 years with the exception of PHP actually uses them. Everything else uses exceptions in one way or another. Java, Python, Ruby, Go, JavaScript, C++, C#, etc, etc, etc. They are all wrong, and exceptions are evil. All errors should just be cast to a return boolean. I'll write RFCs for each one of the languages that uses exceptions, because they must be wrong...
@ircmaxell The problem is what fopen() does.
No one said anything about those
@ChristianSciberras whatever. I'm done with this conversation
The problem is specifically fopen.
Likewise.
All this x is evil everywhere anywhere mantra is ridiculous.
@ChristianSciberras what about it focuses the error? What's so different about fopen than anything else?
(hint: nothing)
@KamilTomšík point countered
@ircmaxell The difference with fopen is that it throws warnings on EXPECTED scenarios
@Artefacto can you please name one expected scenario that you speak of?
If people don't want the above issue but still want exceptions, they should be using streams. Period.
> If the open fails, an error of level E_WARNING is generated. You may use @ to suppress this warning.
@ircmaxell but nor error codes, to be clear :)
14:08
@ircmaxell Some webserver serving one of a list of 100 feeds is down.
@ChristianSciberras and if it fails, is that not a sign that an error occurred somewhere (such as an unreadable file, a file that does not exist, etc)
@ircmaxell I don't want to continue on this, and I mostly agree with you, using @ is sign of very poor code, however sometimes (in very very specific case) it makes sense. like when you're deleting cache.
Happens all the time and it's not something I want to write to the error log
Read the comment thread on this:
60
A: Top bad practices in PHP

MichaelUsing the @ modifier to suppress warnings & errors, particularly when talking to a database. The proper way is to make sure errors aren't displaying on screen, but are being logged where you address them. @mysql_connect(...)

@Artefacto and if you used error exceptions, it would not write to the error log
@KamilTomšík That's what we're all saying.
14:10
@ircmaxell I'm not saying using an error handler is not an option, but it's a more complex, and IMO unnecessary, one
@ChristianSciberras I doubt ;)
@ircmaxell Reminds me of an issue I had a while ago with json_encode(). It raised a warning even if it encoded correctly (something to do with character conversion).
@KamilTomšík even that case I think that supressing errors is bad, just as bad as catch (Exception $e) {} since you never know why the error was thrown
@KamilTomšík As much as it sounds unlikely.
@ChristianSciberras then it wasn't encoded correctly ;-)
14:11
@ircmaxell It was a WARNING
And it encoded correctly.
@ircmaxell yes, it's bad, however on the other hand, it doesn't make sense to die only because somebody else cleared cache too (maybe even admin)
@KamilTomšík who said anything about dieing?
@ircmaxell so you'd rather define special error handler, working only in context of that method?
@KamilTomšík No, I run a global error handler
because I think the whole error concept is flawed (with the exception of parser errors)
@ircmaxell so what would happen when unlink would want to show notice about missing file? what would user see?
yes, we agree on this... errors suck
14:15
@KamilTomšík Nope. It would throw an exception, and then I'd catch it and handle appropriately...
what's appropriate handling for that?
auto-converting all errors into exceptions doesn't seem like a good idea at all. I see errors as logging statements, not something that controls my logic
2
otherwise, someone comes up with the idea of adding a notice and the behavior of my program changes
@KamilTomšík it might be ignoring the error, but it also could be doing other things (such as checking for the existance of another similar file, etc)
not mention in 5.3 functions like htmlentities en json_encode which choose whether to throw an error depenind on the value of display_errors (!)
@ircmaxell If it's a global handler you can't do that.
14:16
@Artefacto and it should. Because notices are errors, and should be treated as such...
@ChristianSciberras sure I can
@ircmaxell but that's the problem - even if you could catch that exception, there's really nothing what you can do about it - deleting old cache file, I could log it, but that's all, it's just cache
notices are diagnostic messages
I used to run code similar to: if(!@unlink($f))if(!ftp_unlink($f))throw new Exception();
@KamilTomšík that depends on your exact architecture
@Artefacto No, they are errors.
@ircmaxell Unless you go into the kind of error, detect it was caused by a delete operation and try it yourself, I don't see that possible.
14:19
errors are conveyed through return codes, out parameters or exceptions...
Which is ridiculous considering it could have been done inline where it should have. Instead of some global handler which abruptly caught application logic.
Believe what you want
at least that's the convention used in the built-in functions
with exceptions reserved for constructors
@ircmaxell I'm not sure, if you see, what I'm telling you - I can't imagine any other proper case for @, and I written a lot of code - so I second to you in this, and yes, exception would be better, but we're talking about caching, which is supposed to be fast. this is something which always bugged me, but I really couldn't come up with anything better
you are free to trigger user notices for whatever purpose you want, but don't pretend PHP uses notices to control logic
14:21
Then again, it's definitely possible @ircmaxell has an architecture which is all about avoiding this scenarios. We less luckier mortals have to resort to less methods :)
@KamilTomšík I tend to believe that if the only use case is so narrow, perhaps it's not really a valid usecase (or the reasoning for it is flawed in a way you can't understand)
Anyway, I'm off. Cheerio.
I don't care. I'm trying to help show you a better, stronger and more robust way of writing code. A way where you system can't get into an unstable state
You guys wasted a lot of time today it seems
@ircmaxell could be :) and it looks like so.
14:21
At least noting I've got to reread :)
@ircmaxell Avoding @'s is the way to go, I think we all agree on that.
@KamilTomšík On the surface your example seems to work. I'm just cautious whenever I come across an edge case so narrow...
@edorian Hi there.
@edorian You're telling me :-X
@ircmaxell like I said, I can't remember about any other use-case for @
Tom
Tom
14:24
In PHP, why do people do things like if (false === $this->_enabled) instead of if (!$this->_enabled) ?
@Tom because they came from Java
no kidding
@Tom because its easier to overread the ! than it is to overread yoda notation
@Tom because they want to check value and type. !$this->_enabled just checks if the value is falsy (loosely evaluates to false)...
false === $this->_enabled checks that $this->_enabled is a boolean value, and that the value is exactly false
so if you set $this->_enabled = 0;, the if statement would be false (but ! would make it true)
Tom
Tom
@ircmaxell right, but if you want to check whether something is enabled, a loose evaluation seems to make more sense to me
and more readable
14:26
@Tom it depends on what you're trying to do
gm all
Tom
Tom
I see, I just see people using it everywhere with no exceptions
There's also a theory that says positive logic is easier to understand than negative. So false == $foo is easier to comprehend than true != $foo...
@Tom For one thing, that === is the identical operator. "The value must be false", null, empty string, 0, etc do not count.
Tom
Tom
Right, well I guess it comes down to preferences for the most part. Personally I find if (!enabled) much more readable.
14:29
@Tom as do I
@Tom Sure is. Just ensure that $enabled doesn't contain anything else than [truth|false]y values
See the docs for strpos as an example.
and there's also common convention in java, which says - always write constant (true/false/1/0/"string") as first one in conditions - this is because if ("string".equals(passedString)) can't raise NullPointerException...
Tom
Tom
@ChristianSciberras aye I am aware of the loose and strict evaluation differences
@KamilTomšík ah that is why they always start with the constant. I always wondered.
@Tom ok. Well, that's what the identical operator is for. For the rest, !$enabled is indeed enough.
@Tom yeah :-(
14:32
@KamilTomšík That sucks.
tell that to inventor of "null"
@Tom that and to try to prevent accidental assignment (since false = $bar is an error, but $bar = false is valid)
@KamilTomšík null is a very important concept
@ircmaxell I disagree. but let's don't :)
@KamilTomšík eih
14:35
@KamilTomšík Agreed. Sadly.
@ircmaxell I don't have anything against null object, however null itself is useless and contraproductive...
@KamilTomšík if you say so...
@ircmaxell it would be easier to program if there were no nulls.
@KamilTomšík it would be impossible to program if there were no nulls
okay :) just like programming without returns... ;)
14:39
@ircmaxell It certainly wouldn't be impossible, but you'd have to have a lot more variables (and types). But likely you'd also have less errors
@ircmaxell Huh? Why exactly? I rarely use them.
Most of the time I'm pressed with deciding on using false vs null.
Avoiding null's is as easy, if not easier, than @'s :)
I'm not going into this, but you must have null. It's a mathematical requirement... You can't have a concept of a variable without the concept of a null...
@ircmaxell yes, exactly, that's why scala does not have variables, but rather parameters.
@ircmaxell Good ol' pointers.
14:43
@ChristianSciberras not pointers, variables (which can contain pointers, sure)
@KamilTomšík can scala represent itself?
Well, in pointer-based languages, null makes sense. In scripting languages, not so much.
undefined should be a good replacement for variables.
I'm done
@ircmaxell Citations? I'm interested in this "mathematical requirement"
@ChristianSciberras undefined is null
You know what, I'm done
@ircmaxell No.
14:45
read: putative mathematical requirement
believe whatever you want
yeah, bad "mood" in here today...
I don't have to believe if there's a mathematical proof
@ircmaxell Undefined doesn't have to be a value. Unlike null. In fact, it shouldn't.
@ChristianSciberras it's basically the same thing, as well as nil is
14:47
@ChristianSciberras null is the explicit lack of a value
@Artefacto all algorithms that back up modern CS are a derivative of either abstract algebras or set theory. And the concept of null (nil) is a fundimental axiom to both...
The difference:
var a=null;
var b=undefined; // error undefined is not defined
however my point was about functional languages - there are no variables at all, and you could program even without nil, but they're great as list terminators there...
@KamilTomšík could you program scala itself in scala without the concept of null? (I doubt it)
no because scala sucks
@ircmaxell That says nothing about the need to introduce a null in a programming language...
14:51
@ChristianSciberras var undefined = null; //now what? ;)
@KamilTomšík Still undefined. You have to edit my message. XD
@Artefacto meta-circularity says a lot about language, I see his point, I'm just bad at expressing why nulls are not mandatory.
Hey- I know its off topic but was just wondering something. for SEO purposes purely. does using /page.html have any benefit over /page/ ?
Ask @Google :P
yeah I been googling for ages now, everyones opinion is different, and googles docs dont give a definate answer :(
14:54
@OwenMelbourne Of course they won't. People would otherwise ruin them.
Gah. Annoying :) Lots of results are people talking about how link stucture effects PR- so I just discredit anything they say and close the page- and its happening a lot.
15:14
A little off topic: What is everyone in this chat's general experience in the field like?

I'm a sophomore CS student at UNH :)
@OwenMelbourne Main point: site.com/Important-Topic >> site.com/?id=7
The details are way less important
@Joshua sophomore? UNH? What field ? Programming? It? PHP-Programming? Web-Development?
And: Hi :)
UNH is the University I am attending, and I'm a computer science major. Currently I'm taking Java courses and have a job on campus writing (and learning) PHP
RPM
RPM
@Joshua does your job require you to use a framework?
@Joshua So United States? In that case i can tell you less about the field as i only know (some) EU things
but maybe if you have specific questions or something? :)
@RPM No. It's not a programming specific job, we deal with internet technologies and PHP is what we use to access our database.
@edorian I don't have any specific questions, just looking for a general idea what it's like to use PHP out in "the real world"

I'm very new to PHP, I'll admit I had to google what a framework was
15:23
So PHP and not programming / beeing a software developer in general :) Thats enough to answer :)
(To answer the beeing a software developer in general there is a great book called "The Clean Coder" that goes over the general points of growing up in a young industiry)
For PHP: A lot of your peers will know pretty much nothing about programming and all and if your education is halfway decent and you have SOME knowleage of the language you will find a well paying job without much hassle
Of the scripting languages it's the most mature/uncool/boring one and much of the code (wordpress, joomla, many frameworks) is +5 years old
Or written like it was 2002 and OOP was the devil, so getting work beyond "make a shiny website" is something to focus on
Hello world!
@edorian Very interesting. I'll have to look at "The Clean Coder". I've heard a lot about it. I read "Godel, Escher, Bach" hoping to gain some insight into the logic behind good code. It was certainly an interesting read and helps in a more abstract way, but this book sounds like it's more narrowed down to the specifics. Which is nice.
15:44
Re, colleague showed up ;)
Apart from that: currently there is dire need in the industry to support all the php applications and since the lang. it not 'cool' anymore the jobmarket is quite good (with many people going into ruby/python or if the go 'uncool' with java/c# )
When it comes to coding in PHP: Oh dear. The language is quite bad and has lots of ugly pitfalls that you'll learn over time
Nothing that makes it impossible to produce good code (php, for a scripting language, has very good tooling)
But many samples and stuff thats not updated for years teach you lots of bad practices
@ircmaxell @Gordon Where is the "Don't to that stuff in php" SO post (i just assume there is one) ? :)
@edorian Haha, I've been becoming familiar with some of the nuances of php.
15:59
argh... mailserver is down :-/
16:17
Hmm. Nice. FF eating 1.3 gig of RAM. Guess its time for a restart
@Gordon Ever heard of Chrome?
@Zirak im not using Google products
opera's pretty hungry too - I wonder if it's because of those mail accounts or something else (runs okay on netbook)
@Gordon Another one...What's your reason? They're evil? Greedy? Take over small websites?
@Zirak i dont trust Google
16:21
sigh I don't get you people :P
1.3 is not that much. Opera's here taking 1 Gb with just a dozen tabs
@Zirak they know way too much already. I dont want them to profile my browsing
@Artefacto im pretty sure it was some script hogging that memory though. its down to 300k after restart and thats normal for me
You could use chromium
Even if they are conducting weird sessions over data they might receive from Chrome, what they most likely not do, so what?
@Artefacto yeah, but im really fine with FF tbh
@Zirak i dont want them to know about me. same reason im not using google mail, gtalk or those other services, including g+. im only using a few selected things.
16:26
Yeah, I'm pretty sure they don't know about me either, they know about user #4271
And I really don't see how they can use any of the info you think they collect against you.
Or actually see it at any point.
well, scheduled the post about autocomplete
@Zirak they do for their advertising. thats a known fact
Over specific things from specific locations. I only see ads saying "This XML editor is AWESOME" next to Feedburner notices about web dev blogs or stuff like that...Failblog notifications give me different ads.
well, they also collect your location data from androids and stuff. and who knows maybe they also use that data for customizing the searches. I dont want to see the world like Google wants me to see it
I'm creating a simple site plugin for photos. Someone downloads the zip file, unzips and uploads a folder, photos, to their site. They then have PhotographersSite.com/photos which is their gallary of photos. I want to have a little login link on the gallary to then add and delete photos. Having them make a database for their user account is too much, but having a flat file login system doesn't seem easy or secure. So can they be registered and authenticated through a site of mine?
16:35
call me paranoid but i prefer to divide vendor products instead of using one vendor alone
be back in a minute
@Gordon Too late for that. Google already uses stuff like location (from IP), user agent, etc to customize results
And I was looking at using UserCake for the user account system-
even if ew're not logged on, you and I will see different results
we're already seeing the world as Google wants it :p
That's a bit exaggerated, it's not seeing the world as Google wants it. Until you can show that they actually omit or at least bring minor pages to the first page, I'm not buying that
that's not difficult to show
16:38
Is my gravitar to eccentric?
I'll be waiting
compare your search results to someone else in other country
say the initials of a party in your country
We're in different countries, so let's try. What to search for?
"Cake"
leaving, follow me if you like crappy tweets twitter.com/devinrhode2
16:45
Looks quite identical
you cropped my image?
no, I cropped my image, if you want I'll take another one with the @gmail at the top
Or with the horrid XP status bar
Now do you believe me?
well, the time it took being 0.11 seconds all time is suspicious :p
16:53
Come on, seriously?
no, I believe you
Even if I was a Google fanatic, my art skills are that of a gimp 4th grader, I couldn't replace the top with a regular Chrome thing
@Artefacto Thank you. That was...that was all I ever wanted. sniffle
still, I'm not making anything up (see e.g. the gl parameter)
That thing always seemed bizzare to me. It's too much monolithic.
@ircmaxell Oh dear
hmm. chat is surprisingly usable on a phone
@Charles yeah, it's not bad
@Charles
Depends on the phone lol
sam
sam
18:03
hey u guys know any good books for php?
@sam The Clean Coder
@sam I hear. I haven't read it
sam
sam
thank you
@Joshua Thank you
@sam lol no problem. You asked literally the only question I could answer:)
@sam what about?
hi, guys quick question, I want to run some sql: update products set price = price/0.25 but want to exclude productid = 2 from the update
whats the best way to go about it?
18:11
WHERE productid != 2 ?
duh sorry long day i have no idea what i'm doing anymore
sleep needed!
i'm so silly!!!
It's okay, I found myself Googling how to append a string to the beginning of a variable.
lol
In my defense, it was after two days of trying to get some C code to compile, giving up, and switching to php.
thats fair enough ;)
18:42
I've got an array in php, lets say indexed 0-5. How could I insert a value at 3, and bump the index values originaly at 3-5 to now be 4-6?
see: array_splice
18:56
@Incognito http://php.net/manual/en/function.array-splice.php

Edit: Oh, basically what @ircmaxell said

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