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11:02
Do we have any options to draw the border in PHPPowerpoint Library ?
@Gordon I executed the queries. The first query (without distinct) take 0.0004 seconds. The second query (with distinct) take 0.0005 seconds. I have to execute second query 6 times for every column. therefore the first option is better I think so
anyone got apcu installed ?
Hey @JoeWatkins, is it normal/expected that valgrind reports still reachable: 224 bytes in 2 blocks in the leak summary when I run PHP under it or have I done made a mistake up that I can't find?
@Anton_Sh FWIW 0.0024 is pretty much the same as 0.0030. Does that really matter? I mean really really?
@DaveRandom --leak-check=full --show-reachable=yes
some extensions have intentional processwide leaks, such as curl ...
if the allocation traces are nothing to do with your code then it's likely okay ... 224 seems a strange amount, I don't think I've seen that number before, maybe one reachable is yours ...
+try valgrind without your extension for a baseline
11:11
@Gordon ok I will use first option in this case. It doesent metter
@Anton_Sh when performance doesnt matter readability wins. so use the query you'll find easier to read and understand
Hi all
@JoeWatkins 192 bytes in php_ini_register_extensions (php_ini.c:727) and 32 in main (php_cli.c:1358) - this is a build from the git sources on the master branch so it might be a new issue
Looks like it's not me though
@DaveRandom yeah not you ...
Any body have knowledge about apn.i want to send push notification to iphone.please help me
11:13
@Anton_Sh Readability matters more than whether something takes 3 milliseconds or 0.5 milliseconds, imo (assuming this is for web). Choose the query which you think is easier to read & maintain. If you spend 30 seconds reading one of those queries and trying to understand it, thats the same as 10,000x the efficiency savings on a query.
^ And developer time is much more valuable than CPU time.
@DaveRandom curious, send me full alloc trace for that please ?
@JoeWatkins I actually do on my VPS but I've yet to actually do anything with it
@Anton_Sh when you are optimizing your code for speed, you should always have an aim. Like for instance, you want to deliver a page in less than 100ms. When you then profile your application and find that the 0.0001 seconds the one query is faster than the other achieves that goal, then go for it. But don't do that when you dont have a goal. Always optimize for readability then instead.
@SweetieBelle you dont have to remove messages praising my smartness. In fact, I strongly encourage you not to because it's true ;)
11:17
@Gordon Typically, I find buying bigger servers or more servers does a lot more than optimizing my code for speed, in terms of economic value. Though optimizing is better for e-peen.
@DaveRandom yeah they originate from (g)libc and are process wide leaks, nothing can be done about that sort of thing, the memory is free'd when the process exits anyways ...
can anyone reproduce that at all ??
@SweetieBelle it's a simple cost calculation. Is optimizing cheaper than buying new hardware, go for optimization else buy new hardware.
Ultimately, buying an E5 instead of an E3 is going to do a lot more for speed than spending the same $500 worth of time (15-20 hours? idk what the going rate is for good PHP development) optimizing code. In most cases, I find that to be true.
@Gordon, well ... I can't really agree with that, at some point recursive regression must be terminated by an action ...
@Gordon $optimalOption = ($optimizing['cost'] < $hardware['cost']) ? "Optimize" : "Buy New Hardware";
11:21
if your code is crap on crap hardware, it will still be crap on good hardware ... I dont' see that it really makes a difference ...
especially where normal php programming is concerned ...
@JoeWatkins If your code is crap, your optimizations are likely to be crap too. ;)
@JoeWatkins installing apc can make crap run 100% faster, so I am not sure I agree to that
of course it'll still be crap. but fast crap
@JoeWatkins Not comparing 'crap' code to 'good' code, comparing 'decent performing' code to 'better performing' code. By choosing not to code in assembler, you have already made the decision to accept an optimization ceiling.
that aside, if you have code with a bottleneck, which is the barrier to performance, it wil not perform any better on hardware with the same clockspeed (because mostly they are) but more cores (which is mostly what an upgrade consists of), more ram won't help it, shit 10 servers won't help it, what you need to do is fix the code ... and until your optimizations are good, don't upgrade, and don't leave your office/house ... oh and hang your head in shame :)
11:23
@JoeWatkins Trying now but my SSH is playing up, half a tick...
who says I don't code in assembly ?? I use assembly where it's appropriate to do so ... got nothing to do with optimization at all ...
@JoeWatkins but that doesnt invalidate what I said. of course you dont buy better hardware when the hardware doesnt yield a benefit. that would be pointless, wouldnt it?
also, I said always optimize with an aim. and if that aim cannot be reached by better hardware …
how do you ascertain what benefit an upgrade would give you if you do not go through the motions of optimization in the first place ?
@PeeHaa WOW. So much wrong in one 'question'.
@JoeWatkins well, you do the profiling, look at the cause of the bottlenecks and then make an educated guess. Obviously, it won't help to add more webservers when the bottleneck is the query executed on the db machine.
11:28
Yeah. OP really put some effort in it to make it like that :P
I am doing 6 things at once ... I joined in "Is optimizing cheaper than buying new hardware, go for optimization else buy new hardware." ...
I'm just saying, you are throwing money away on hardware if you are not squeezing everything you can from what you have ...
@JoeWatkins Not necessarily. What if squeezing everything you can from what you have takes 100 hours (or more) which you could be spending fixing bugs or developing features? Your time is valuable and limited too.
then you are a bloody hopeless programmer and shouldn't have a job in the first instance ... I cannot put myself in that position ...
I would much rather spend $1500 on another server than spend 100 hours optimizing.
@JoeWatkins hardware is dirt cheap nowadays. Devs are not and they are even hard to find
11:31
@JoeWatkins That's absurd. Optimization can be taken to a ridiculous degree if you allow it to. Most of us accept that all production code is in some way sub-optimal. Also sometimes the best performing code is horribly unreadable.
@JoeWatkins optimized code is usually inlined and more difficult to read and maintain so what if I squeeze out the last bit of performance and then end up with code people have a hard time to understand which then slows down development?
If you don't believe me, go and look at the shootout winning entries.
how would you have got yourself into the position where it would take that long to optimize ?? by avoiding optimization and blindly upgrading hardware when you should be optimizing is my guess
@SweetieBelle Depends if you get $15+/hour.
if you're not optimizing O(n) problems into O(1) or O(log(N)) then what you said makes no sense
11:32
@Leri I get more than $15/hour :P
but devs are RARE
good devs are RARE and VERY expensive
:P
not worried about other peoples ability to read my code, that's not really my problem, if you downgrade from me then it's on your own businesses head, and, I'm not talking about stupid optimization, I'm talking about making the most, reasonably, from reasonable hardware ...
@JoeWatkins If you really want to squeeze everything you can out of what you're doing, I'd suggest writing in a compiled language or directly in assembler. It's going to run faster than the same code in PHP.
@JoeWatkins oh, but it should be your problem. as a professional developer you have to make sure people can pick up your code and figure it out when you are gone.
@JoeWatkins By choosing to write in HLLs, we are deliberately choosing to sacrifice performance for readability & maintainability.
11:34
Yeah, good devs are very hard to find.
I subscribe all what @Gordon said. A good dev writes readable code in first place... Writing code that is fast but is un-readable is quite useless considered how much time we waste only reading code...
@Ocramius I hear they hang out at room #11 :P
Any of you guys conducted interviews?
Agree with @Ocramius and @Gordon.
@webarto why are you here then? ;) j/k
11:34
@Gordon you do if you work in a team, or have ever been replaced ... neither has ever happened to me ...
The bravado on some people who show up is amazing. People who literally know no PHP.
@webarto so not in jugoslavia? :P
@JoeWatkins you do it even if you work alone
@JoeWatkins Any good dev considers the bus effect. If you are, for whatever reason, not able to go to work tomorrow, the show has to go on.
how on earth would I forget how to read code I wrote ??
I don't want to work on code I wrote 4 years ago and not understand a single line
11:35
@Fabien start by asking for a github account
@JoeWatkins I forget it all the time. I forget the code I wrote after a week or so
Kind of tough since my own github is crap :P
@Fabien I tend to find you can tell a lot more about someone from their code than from an interview.
I don't have a brain to remember stuff. That's what my SCM is for
@JoeWatkins reproduced (source), nginx/fpm/5.4.15
11:37
Indeed. Everyone should have a portfolio. Portfolio code is usually better than their actual ability though.
yes, I'm lazy, I shoved it on a random host, shoot me :-P
@Gordon I'm just hanging out with the cool kids.
I agree with @Ocramius. It's very easy to forget what you wrote. I have code from a few years back where I have no clue what it does and reading it to figure that out is just tedious.
well I don't, and I genuinely don't have to worry about anyone picking up my code, and if they did they'd have no problem reading it if they had half the experience I do ...
@Gordon, you don't document as you write ??
11:37
@JoeWatkins Assuming that the code is linked to you forever is a really bad way to look at any project. The bus effect is an important consideration in any area of project management.
@JoeWatkins "a comment is a lie"
@JoeWatkins you only document what cannot be reasonably expressed in code
@Fabien I don't have. I don't have much to show off as long as I work mostly on internal stuff.
@JoeWatkins If your code is not readable without documentation or comments, it's not good code from my perspective.
I dont write websites, I write systems, using several languages, from the ground up, I comment every method I ever write with the appropriate tags for documentation, pdfs are generated with each api update, none of the things you mention are problems if you follow best practices in the first place ...
11:38
Hey wait, it's now working again, wtf
@Leri, I am the same. I struggle to think of good small projects. Even if I do, I am never satisfied with my ability enough to do it.
Most of us do the same thing when we look at someone elses code, we think about what could be wrong with it.
I would never, ever be in a position where it would take me several tens of hours to optimize anything because it's written optimized and maintained well ...
I swear I got a couple of requests where I just got gibberish in the keys
@DaveRandom did you have to session_start() ??
@JoeWatkins Writing self documenting code is the best practise ;) Documentation tends to go out of sync
11:40
@JoeWatkins Again, laziness
not if you are the ONLY person writing the code, if I change a method I change its documentation ...
@JoeWatkins So, presumably you're self employed and the company will die when you choose it to. In that instance I guess it's your perogative if you want readable code or not.
@JoeWatkins after 4 years, that will just look like voodoo
Certainly when not working on web, performance is often more important
11:41
@JoeWatkins not only is that tedious to do, but it will still happen eventually (the sync). I've used to be a documentation nazi because I haven't seen people write code that is really self documenting. Can't say it helped me too much though.
I would never hire anyone who writes unreadable code... Considered that 3/4 of what we do is debugging (even on clean code) you don't want to read ugly code
@Fabien I am still trying to decide go open-source or commercial.
that's a problem for yourself and for anyone that has to deal with the problem
you all seem to equate optimized with unreadable, I do not ...
@Leri Tough decision. Open Source is more my preference.
11:42
@JoeWatkins The most optimized code is typically unreadable.
how is unreadable optimal in any way ?
that's silly ...
@JoeWatkins optimized code is de-abstracted code in almost all cases
@Fabien Going open-source is harder and requires more responsibility.
From a POV of performance, the best code is usually written in a way to make the machine best interpret the code. The machine does not think like you do.
additionally, show me some unreadable PHP, I don't think i've ever seen any php I did not understand, written by anyone ...
11:43
In commercial apps you may have few lines of bad code while in open-source you can't.
@JoeWatkins any implementation of MD5 in PHP for example
that's basically unreadable code
@JoeWatkins I wouldn't ever write a performance-sensitive system in PHP.
As for documentation, how is that valuable documentation:
/**
 * Sets foo
 *
 * This method sets Foo.
 *
 * @param Foo $foo
 * @return void
 */
public function setFoo(Foo $foo)
{
    $this->foo = $foo;
}
@Gordon - that documenting strings are crap
@AlmaDoMundo That's exactly how I document :/
11:45
oops, sorry;) just read above messages -)
Most of the time the only thing I need from the docs is argument description and return value. So I often omit description part (name should be descriptive enough).
Except I don't put the title at the top of the comment
Hey look! A thread about commenting best practices!
@SweetieBelle - you're documenting such cases?
@Gordon, omit tags and it might be omitted from the documentation upon generation, how useful is that ?? who are you writing documentation for, people that can read code, that know your codebase anyway, or people that are not ???
11:45
@AlmaDoMundo I typically document every function.
@SweetieBelle you mean PHPDoc ?
I use Sublime DocBlockr which does macros for PHPDocs for me. Tis very useful.
it should be a force of habit, if doc tags have more than ^^ to say, then you have a place to say it, if not, you know it will be included in the documentation ...
@AlmaDoMundo Yes
@JoeWatkins With the exception of the @return void there is nothing in the DocBlock that isn't already expressed in the method signature and we could argue that the return is implied because setFoo is a Command and by principle of CQS it should not return. That makes the entire DocBlock superfluous
11:47
i.e. that, for example. IDE shows details when autocomplete your method
still force of habit, what is the point in establishing best practice if you intentionally ignore it ... even if it's justifiable ...
@JoeWatkins we are not ignoring it. Omitting the documentation for code like that is the best practise. Only document what needs documentation
Of course, if you are going to write a framework that is supposed to be used by other people, you might not get around adding these docblocks. But that's a requirement of the product then.
I don't agree with that, different devs will have a different idea of what requires documentation. Best practice is to satisfy everyone from the newbie to the expert, so document every function & class.
wait, what about the bus effect ?
@SweetieBelle nope, gets out of sync and is extra effort. document what is not expressed in the code.
11:50
@JoeWatkins Replaced with pastebin.com/8LQY8t30, it seems to be completely hit an miss. It periodically does something weird but most of the time it works ok
@JoeWatkins I thought that's why you should write good readable code first? :P
@Gordon Everything is expressed in the code, the question is whether it's intuitive or not and that's subjective.
I must concentrate ... withdrawing from conversation ...
For me, having a 3 line regex is intuitive. Most people will shout at me if I don't comment it.
@DaveRandom cannot reproduce in apache, which bug was reported in ... gonna get an fpm going now ...
11:51
@SweetieBelle no, it's whether it's readable, not intuitive.
@Gordon I consider a long regex readable, I think most people are too lazy to read it, but it is readable. I'd still comment it.
When debugging someone else's Regex: i.imgur.com/Oab4Yz8.gif
@SweetieBelle regex are perfectly fine example of code that I tend to forget what they do after a week. It's okay to document then, especially since you can use x to put documentation right into the regex. But that's a different thing than having DocBlocks that are already clear from the API signature
@Gordon I wont forget what this does: wget -q https://check.torproject.org/cgi-bin/TorBulkExitList.py?ip=my.server.ip.address -O - | sed '/^\#/d' | sed "s/^/RewriteCond %{REMOTE_ADDR} ^/g; s/\./\\\./g; s/$/\$ \[OR\] /g; 1i# TOR-REDIRECT-BLOCK" >> /path/to/www/.htaccess but I would still comment it.
11:55
Well, I won't forget what this does:
return preg_match_all(
    '(
        http://              # match hyperlinks
        (?:www\.)?           # optionally starting with www
        stackoverflow.com/   # pointing to stackoverflow
        q(?:uestions)?/      # with path q or questions
        (?P<qid>\d+)         # and get the Question ID
    )xiu',
    file_get_contents($this->webpage),
    $matches
)
And I'd be surprised if you'd say yours is more readable ;)
Mine's not more readable, but it's easy enough to understand
If I had that code of yours in an application, I'd wrap it in a function that says what it does
@Gordon It's bash script, and the script generates a .htaccess file which redirects all TOR users to my hidden service.
In order to put less load on TOR exit relays
@SweetieBelle I must say that's mostly unclear to another reader...
@Ocramius It's just one line of the script
11:59
@SweetieBelle yep, I hope it's commented :P

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