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00:05
hi, does anyone know how to pass a variable from a javascript block into php contained within the javascript? - stackoverflow.com/q/6918191/840973
 
2 hours later…
user1385191
02:28
@Phelios fixed the PDO problem. It was just me trying to do too much with one binding. Thanks for the help last night.
user1385191
making two separate queries did the trick
you are welcome :D
user1385191
I noticed the same result today at work after a quick test
It's 5.30am here, been working on this project that was supposed to end yesterday at 10pm all night, i feel how my eyes just want to run away.
user1385191
ha, I was up until 11:30-ish messing with PDO and I feel sickly
02:33
I'm still just around 70% done
@CodeInACan do you have to finish it by today?
probably
most definitely, otherwise... well, there can't be no otherwise.
@MattMcDonald 11.30 am? or you should go to sleep? haha
user1385191
no, PM
user1385191
that was the joke
02:40
nah, screw it, client will and must and must definitely can survive another day without he's precious invention. I'm going to lean back in this year with headphones on and fall...fall...fall... to the land of php where there are no errors, where all code is art and art is code.
i can't even believe my eyes on how much i misspell with no sleep
hey anybody interested in helping me with a javascript ques i knw this is not a js room but the js room is kinda asleep now
03:31
@lovesh ...the Javascript room is often as busy or busier than this room, and that really ought to be over there.
user1385191
it's mostly euros, so it dies down at night (out west)
08:22
posted on August 03, 2011 by Lorna Mitchell

Last week I tweeted a poll with the question "Which PHP static analysis tools do you regularly use?". These are the results: My interest was mostly because I'm working on a book chapter which includes some static analysis content, and there are a couple of these tools that I include in my own builds, but I don't do much with the output of them. However I didn't want to drop anythin

posted on August 03, 2011 by PHP 10.0 Blog

Being at OSCON, I’ve attended one good talk about Python oddities, which got me thinking about language syntax in general. PHP is notorious among scripting languages for it’s verbose syntax – you have to spell out many things that are much shorter in other languages. Some people think it’s very bad that they can’t be “expressive”, meaning writing more clever code with less keystrokes. Sometime

 
2 hours later…
10:22
posted on August 03, 2011 by TechPortal

This is the second part of a series about Outside-in Behaviour Driven Development in PHP. The first part introduces outside-in development, and how to execute scenarios with Behat. Read this to catch up with the tools and the example we’ve used so far, then come back to find out how PHPSpec fits into this picture. PHPSpec is the first ever PHP BDD framework. It is a port of RSpec to PHP crea

 
1 hour later…
12:34
Eih. Math humor. Gotta love it
points @KamilTomšík at dzone.com/links/…
12:50
@Gordon huh? what's that about? :)
@KamilTomšík functional programming
@Gordon why? I don't have anything against FP, it's different paradigm which can work very well, if only new data-types are added and not functionality :-)
i misused the term (hence the edit). just thought you might like it since you talk about it so much
otherwise it can get pretty messy (cause functions should be general-purpose and if they're not, oo fits better)
ah :)
@Gordon I'm looking into it, and I have to disagree with that argument about concurrency - performance should not be reason for switching paradigm, architecture should be.
i didnt read it yet, so i cant argue
12:58
BTW: anybody here knew that google map-reduce is c++ library? really, it's not FP-only thing...
@Gordon bad boy :-D
@KamilTomšík some people have work to do :P
well, I should work too... later :-)
and tabs are piling up today
laters
13:13
i am using php version 5.3.1 and my sample application is codepad.org/eJuWD6D1 then also its not showing anything on my browser any guesses??
How are you accessing it? Are you a beginner? use localhost
@ircmaxell what's your standing about 403 and showing login dialog? is that okay? or is that too much "info" for attacker?
Its not only OK, it's good
@ircmaxell I was wondering about that - I had a "pleasure" to work with novell, so that's why I'm asking (there was flag to even allow showing that file)
so there's nothing wrong with that, right?
hi@all
13:23
nope
unless you look at the SEO aspect, but if you're setting the proper header, that shouldn't matter
actually, no. You want to throw a 401 Not Authorized, not a 403 Forbidden
@ircmaxell thx for that, wasn't sure about this one (from ux point of view, it's easy decision - 403, however I don't have enough strong background in security, that's just it)
@ircmaxell yes, sorry for that, I meant not authorized
@ircmaxell I think 401 needs a header with the authentication method
@Artefacto as far as I know you can provide custom auth
so 403 would be the appropriate header unless you want to do Digest, Basic, SPNEGO...
(dynamic page - showing fine-grained login box)
13:26
what good is a custom authentication method if the browser doesn't understand it?
browsers only understand those three
@Artefacto I don't think so, since the auth header is the important one, not the 401...
@Artefacto fair, but at least you're sending proper header :)
and NTLM, which can be negotiated with SPNEGO
wow, another sec guy in here?
krb means kerberos, right?
yes, browsers can do kerberos and NTLM with SPNEGO
10.4.2 401 Unauthorized

The request requires user authentication. The response MUST include a
WWW-Authenticate header field (section 14.47) containing a challenge
applicable to the requested resource.
(RFC 2616)
13:30
fair enough
so what's the right approach? :)
403 or 401?
403 is not right either:
10.4.4 403 Forbidden

   The server understood the request, but is refusing to fulfill it.
   Authorization will not help and the request SHOULD NOT be repeated.
   If the request method was not HEAD and the server wishes to make
   public why the request has not been fulfilled, it SHOULD describe the
   reason for the refusal in the entity.  If the server does not wish to
   make this information available to the client, the status code 404
   (Not Found) can be used instead.
@Mobinga cant gettin' ur point
@ircmaxell That doesn't tell me it's not right
"Authorization will not help and the request SHOULD NOT be repeated."
right
13:34
the request to that resource
you'll be submitting a request to the action of the login form
correct, but auth will not help...
that's a vague statement... In the context I will interpret it as basic/digest authentication will not help
if the application has an ad hoc method of authentication, that's outside the scope of the spec
I could see that, but I'm not sure
Then again, since when did the spec really matter with respect to header status codes. Aside from the important ones (500, 404, 301, 302, 303, 304), do the others really matter that much? The 300 series dictate what the browser should do, whereas the others are pretty much informative only. Just because we see a 404 doesn't mean the content doesn't exist, it's just saying the request could not be found with what you gave me. So 400-500 are really just "informative" headers
Well, yes, but as informative only. The browser doesn't (and shouldn't) do anything different for different 200 status codes with the exception of 206, which is handled by a Content-Range header indicating the next bit of content...
@ircmaxell 204 does something very different - no "refresh" will happen - which makes it great for "like" functionalities
@KamilTomšík it has nothing to do with "no refresh"
10.2.5 204 No Content

   The server has fulfilled the request but does not need to return an
   entity-body, and might want to return updated metainformation. The
   response MAY include new or updated metainformation in the form of
   entity-headers, which if present SHOULD be associated with the
   requested variant.

   If the client is a user agent, it SHOULD NOT change its document view
   from that which caused the request to be sent. This response is
   primarily intended to allow input for actions to take place without
13:48
but that is imho too far from original topic - 403 is better than 404, but is it better than 401?
it's merely for returning a success response without content.
@ircmaxell right, but if you do this with 200 OK, "refresh" will happen (to blank page)
huh?
Oh, I see what you mean
fair, 204 and 206 both cause the browser to do something different...
but that's OT, I'd like to hear something about that 401 vs. 403 I'd probably prefer 401 but @Artefacto has some fair points :-/
yeah
quite
devshed.com/c/a/PHP/Creating-a-Secure-PHP-Login-Script-59941 <-- See Codex's reply to my comment (and my reply to him)
14:08
@ircmaxell funny guy, he challenged you :-P
@ircmaxell just one point for you - most successful attacks are social ones... and you can't prevent them
well, that's true
sadly, but don't take me wrong I'm not saying it's useless to care about security
Oh, I completely understand
a social attack is easier than going up against a well designed system. But a poorly designed system can be attacked in an automated manner.
which will always be cheaper than a social one (since social attacks require human time)
14:19
unless the social attack is sending email with "click on this and then agree"...
which unfortunately works too
That's quite true
OR, and I'm not kidding on this one, I saw facebook "password strength validator" somewhere :-D
it's a sad, insecure world we live in. And that depresses me sometimes
(type your account name, password and click on "validate") :-P
0
A: Guarding against cryptanalytic breakthroughs: combining multiple hash functions

ircmaxellWell, I see two clean ways of having practical resistance to these vulnerabilities. If you want to use two hash functions, make sure you feed back the original data in a HMAC to the second function: hash = algo1(data) hash = hmac(algo2, data, hash) The benefit here is that any collisions for ...

My first Crypto answer :-P
14:22
@ircmaxell nice :)
I'd vote you up but I'm not registered and it would be useless account - I don't know anything about this kind of stuff :-)
don't worry about it. I posted it for bragging value, not the upvote ring
:-)
btw, just for case if you were interested, I've just drop instance variables from my lang... or replaced with something more powerful :)
interesting
I was wondering about this, if it makes sense to make inst. vars on steroids (with contextual mixins) or just introduce something new with better descriptive name - subject (subjective projection of given object - ability to introduce/override methods)
Well, does it make sense to separate out the instance vars into value objects (which can then be decorated)?
I'm not sure if there isn't better metaphore/abstraction for both objects and subjects (which would be even cooler) but for now, I'm okay with this philosophy.
@ircmaxell it's basically language-level decoration (or wrapping - that's better name)
@ircmaxell decorating each object would be clear but very time-consuming and also against SRP. private method returning anonymous object is not much better because of type-safety. subjects are elegant in this - you're "decorating instance variable" so every call to that var will feel like call to wrapper
right
but how would you do that in PHP
14:42
@ircmaxell probably with __get, but I'm not going for php - at least not right now.
fair enough
14:55
@Artefacto: do you have a minute or 3?
Or @Kamil, or @Gordon. Just want a quick read of a post I wrote before I schedule it for publishing.
@ircmaxell link?
@ircmaxell hm... not sure if you've picked the right guy, because I politely disagree with exceptions being the best thing, they're better than error codes but they should be used very sparingly, if ever
They should be used for exceptional errors. But not all errors are exceptional (which is the point)...
yes, I've read that :)
@KamilTomšík What would you consider the right approach to error handling?
however irony is that when you're catching exception, it's not exceptional anymore...
15:25
@KamilTomšík That's not irony, it's expected, since you can convert an exceptional error to something else (either alternative code flow, an incidental error, etc)
@NikiC self-way, passing error handler for given (expected) error, that way, it's obvious what can happen and what shouldn't (and when app should die)
@ircmaxell not sure if you see my point - when you're catching, you're actually expecting that failure, hence the name is imho incorrect
@KamilTomšík You should only catch if you expect that the failure may happen (and have something you want to do with it)
@ircmaxell and that's not the only thing which I don't like on exceptions, there are at least 2 other ones:

1. procedural code (try-catch is like if/else)
2. exceptions are like "hey, something bad happened, now forget about everything you now about programming, switch your hat and start thinking in term of global gotos"
hi anyone familiar with using wikipedia api?
I disagree with that. Exceptions are very much different from goto. It allows you to choose what to handle, and it bubbles to the topmost available handler. So it's completely dynamic (which is the beauty of it, for a library, they can let the caller handle the exception if they want)
15:30
i m using it with javascript got some advice?
@ircmaxell right, but:
a) how's harder for you to pass lambda instead of declaring try/catch?
b) when you're catching exception, you've already lost the context, it's then very weird to "rescue" (you have to store that object in var and then call something "magic")

on the other hand, when you pass lambda, that object can call it and optionally even provide fine-grained rescue
@ircmaxell it's completely static - because of static nature of classes/interfaces
@KamilTomšík static nature of classes/interfaces? Huh? What about polymorphism?
@KamilTomšík I'd argue exceptions are more fine-grained, since otherwise you'd need to provide a lambda for each and every possible error (to handle the error appropriately)
@ircmaxell you can disagree, but have a look on this:

try{
  something();
}
//#1 procedural code (try/catch variation of if/else, no polymorphism there)
catch (SomeException $e){
  //#2 procedural mess (plain old non-polymorphic if/else)
  if ($e->error == "expected"){
    rescue();
  }
  else{
    //not interested
    throw $e;
  }
}
@KamilTomšík Why would I do that?
@ircmaxell well, not exactly - you can provide fine-grained handler, you're not forced to. however with exceptions, you're not able you're always coupled to if/else
15:35
try {
    something();
} catch (SomeException $e) {
    resuce();
} catch (AnotherException $e) {
    failGracefully();
} catch (Exception $e) {
    throw new MyWrapperException('Something Failed', 0, $e);
}
@ircmaxell because having 30+ exception types is not greatest idea :)
and sometimes you really don't want to catch all of them
@KamilTomšík I, along with the vast majority of the rest of the OOP developer community, would very much disagree with that statement
@ircmaxell not catching != swallowing (sometimes you want to rethrow them further, this is hard to explain have a look on java a enjoy piece of that exception "dream")
@KamilTomšík That wasn't what I was replying to
I agree with sometimes you don't want to catch all of them
@KamilTomšík Java uses checked exceptions, which is a bit of a different beast
so what was you reacting for?
15:38
@KamilTomšík look at what I replied to
@ircmaxell my point was not about checked exceptions (and a lot of them were already turned into unchecked ones)
@ircmaxell ah, so you think that more exception types, the better?
@KamilTomšík Within reason, and with proper inheritance patters, yes
@ircmaxell you're not entirely wrong, but this is just not real - you would endup with 300+ exceptions (or possibly even more) just for php core, how would that feel to study all of them?
@KamilTomšík You wouldn't need 300. You'd need about 30 or 40...
now imagine few frameworks and libraries and don't be naive - every average developer just loves to define new exception types
15:41
@KamilTomšík With more appropriate exception types, the need to define your own decreases significantly
@ircmaxell really? I saw your work on github, there's ~=30 exception types, just for IO, am I correct? think about core, iterators, simplexml, dom, curl, streams, filesystem, threads, sessions, ...
@ircmaxell I think you still haven't come to terms with the error-code model :p
there are tons of lib-specific exception types, worth of implementing (because that could make easier error handling)
or in PHP's case the error-boolean model
@KamilTomšík 19
15:45
@ircmaxell okay, 19 just for IO
that's nearly half of what you've expected.
@KamilTomšík But realize that most of those will reuse existing exceptions. For example, most of curl would throw IOException or deriviatives
And streams and filesystem are included in those IO exceptions
@ircmaxell why? wouldn't it make sense to handle timeout differently than close?
iterators really don't need exceptions, since they can use the standard SPL ones (range, etc)
okay, but you should count them too, 30-40 is pretty low number
15:47
@ircmaxell Your string parsing approach to handling errors is interesting, though I'm not sure that all of the things you qualify as exceptional errors really are such. For example I wouldn't consider your min($foo) example as such. Yes, this error will probably prevent the program from operating correctly, but I don't think that it is an error that one would ever want to catch, as it is merely a typo (forgot to specify second argument). So just a programming error, not incorrect input.
@Artefacto That has no point. The "good vs bad" exception example is silly, since in either case the icon is not returned (if there's an exception thrown by getType).
I gotta run, but I'll be back in like 15 or 20
@ircmaxell The point is that setting visible has collateral effects
16:07
@ircmaxell I'm pretty sure that your article will get positive reaction from php developers, it will get negative from java guys but they would probably argue you just by "I've read that in effective java" which is pretty dumb, but I think that anyone who ever experienced self would agree that lambdas/closures are far better choice (probably perfect one) - just imagine script reading from one stream and writing to another, both of them raising the same exception type, now you have to query (very procedural) that exception and compare if it was raised by input or output and behave accordingl
back
@NikiC Well, yeah, but if you expect an array, and you pass something other than an array, you'll get an error
@ircmaxell great, there's my reaction.
I agree the example is a little bit of a stretch, but it demonstrates the point
great, I'm not very good at making examples...
that was to @Artefacto
16:12
@ircmaxell Another example is the DeprecatedException in your github example code: This one does not (normally, always?) prevent normal program flow at all, still you qualify it as an exceptional situation.
well, that's true. That one is a little bit of a stretch
just don't instantiate it with E_DEPRECATED
@NikiC To be fair, most errors are programming errors (hence the presence of a LogicException)
Can we please vc my question: stackoverflow.com/questions/6914596/… as too localized?
I want to delete it
because, well, its too localized
@Artefacto wiki.php.net/rfc/error-formatting-for-developers Is this basically not about HTML errors but about XDebug (mis)using the ini setting for var_dump formatting?
gtg, later
@ircmaxell I hope you're not mad on me :)
@KamilTomšík I'm not mad. It was a very interesting a useful discussion
16:19
@ircmaxell well, that's great. it really was not meant to be offensive or so, you've done a lot of great work, but I'm probably that 1% of people who will consider it useless (or at least, not solution just hack) :-/
later
I agree it's completely a hack
The real solution is to introduce exceptions at the core, or at least standardize an error code system which can be used to identify not only that an error happened, but what failed...
Creating a new programming language code.google.com/p/mli-compiler
Hi
@NikiC well, yes
that was what motivated it
@ircmaxell does that make sense?
16:26
but even if we don't think xdebug should be using it, there's no point in leaving it off
@Neal Just accept your answer and live with it
@ircmaxell cant for another day and a half
@Neal Then wait...
@Neal or flag it for mod attention
@Gordon i did
16:40
hello?
hello
hola
@ircmaxell o?
@ircmaxell Oops.
@CyberJunkie Hi
16:43
@Neal No, the appropriate response would have been hel
@ircmaxell orly?
nevermind
Yay for RFC 5965!
Link?
16:51
   While there has been previous work in this area (e.g., [STRADS-BCP]
   and [ASRG-ABUSE]), none of it has yet been successful.  It is hoped
   that this document will have a better fate.
Seriously.
it's true, don't get me wrong. But it's still funny
That said, the spam alerts that Amazon's Simple Email Service delivers come in that format. This pleases me.
What Syntax Highligter you prefer (for PHP 5.2) ?
@Charles: I've got another blog post coming tomorrow that I think you'll provide some interesting feedback on...
16:56
@ircmaxell Oh goodie.
@Robik Syntax highlighter for PHP 5.2 code, or syntax highlighter written in PHP expecting version 5.2?
Written in PHP 5.2, my bad :P
@Robik What languages are you trying to highlight?
The go-to highlighter seems to be GeSHi.
Well, I'm expecting list of popular Syntax Highlighters written in PHP
Is this project Dead?
17:00
There was an update in Feb of this year.
Okay, thanks.
17:28
posted on August 03, 2011 by Ilia Alshanetsky

I've just released a new version of php-excel extension that exposes the new functionality offered by libxl 3.2.0. The new functionality in this release includes the following: - ExcelSheet::setPrintFit(int wPages, int hPages) that fits sheet width and sheet height to wPages and hPages respectively - ExcelSheet::getPrintFit() that returns whether fit to page option is

Oh, Oh!
@ircmaxell Session fixation'able at autenticate.php/37 ? ( Maybe I'll guess right :) )
yeah, that's one
(that was stupid)
17:38
Nvm
17:59
I'm trying to do a part time job on side now I have interview on for PHP. But I spent past few hours with Ruby and Java. I have been doing short php projects here and there but nothing substantial. They want to give me a test on PHP. Anyone can recommend a study guide?
I read the book PHP Objects Pattenrs and Practice. But I dont think that's what they would test someone on. It might be PHP4 concepts.
yes
I read that, but thats mainly design patterns
I dont think that is good study material for PHP the language itself
First or second edition?
ugh at PHP4 concepts
TBH, if you went through the book and understood it all (and understood how PHP does the OO thing), then you're probably OK on "the language itself"
18:01
actually its addition 4
However, there's a lot more to PHP than just the language.
I mean 3rd addition I read
The standard library (the default extensions) is worth knowing.
And I know no better way to learn the standard library than to RTFM. In all seriousness.
the book doesnt talk much about sql database connection and protecting from sql injection and the like
They probably won't actually quiz you on "what does strtok do" and whatnot, but building awareness of what the builtins can do is going to serve you well.
It happens that the best way to mitigate SQL injection in PHP is the same exact method that every other language uses: prepared statements.
Most of the database adapters allow you to perform prepared statements. One notable exception is ext/mysql, the prehistoric and soon-to-be-deprecated original MySQL extension. It should no longer be used, and there are no less than two suitable replacements.
18:04
@Charles if he's dealing with PHP4 there would be 1 as PDO isn't available to that version of PHP
@CharlesSprayberry Yeah, but they started shipping mysqli, though I believe only in procedural form.
and if they're using PHP4 there's no telling if their database version will even support mysqli
Yeah, that too.
php mysql web development 4th addition worth the read?
And even then, if they're using PHP4 in the modern day and age... well, you don't want that job.
18:05
I agree
you're working on dead technology
well...dying technology
did anyone read php and mysql web development 4th addition?
@JohnMerlino Maybe. The reviews seem favorable. Unfortunately I haven't read a PHP book in years.
yeah they are favorable
I've installed PHP mysql on my computer.
A good way to determine whether or not a PHP book is worth reading is checking their section on database connections. If they don't either teach you to use mysqli or PDO to connect to MySQL, then the book is trash.
8
18:08
I mean, just PHP.
And if they don't teach you what SQL injection is and how to mitigate it, then the book is trash.
I wish I could star that multiple times
MySQL is next.
I wanted to make sure I did everything right.
But function_exists('mysqli_real_escape_string') returns false
Even though the extension=php_mysqli.dll line is uncommented in the ini file.
@sdleihssirhc If you are using mysqli, you should never have any reason at all to ever call real_escape_string. Ever
Use prepared statements. Which, mind you, are exceptionally annoying in mysqli.
2
Right, but just as an example.
Just to see if the extension is loaded.
18:09
Is class_exists('mysqli') also false?
one sec
(Should be.)
yeah, returns false
After uncommenting the file in php.ini, did you restart Apache/IIS/whatever you're using?
Multiple times.
18:10
Check phpinfo() -- it should list the php.ini file it's using. Perhaps you changed the wrong one? (Stupid PHP...)
Maybe use extension_loaded('mysqli')
The "Loaded Configuration File" looks right, but just above that, "Configuration File (php.ini) Path" is completely wrong. Would that maybe mess things up?
Is there a file in the completely wrong location?
Not that I can see.
I have been wasting your time:
Incorrect extension path.
18:17
Okay, that should be OK. Do the extensions listed in phpinfo match those in the ini at all?
Ah
Yeah, that'd do it.
Terribly sorry.
No worries. It's usually something silly like that. We'd have gotten there eventually.
posted on August 03, 2011 by Matthew Weier O'Phinney

Until a few years ago, there were basically two tools you could use to generate API documentation in PHP: phpDocumentor and Doxygen. phpDocumentor was long considered the standard, with Doxygen getting notice when more advanced features such as inheritance diagrams are required. However, phpDocumentor is practically unsupported at this time (though a small group of developers is working o

 
1 hour later…
19:40
do i need a xhtml webpage in order to work with xpath or can i also use html?
The way each browser transforms HTML into the DOM (which is what xpath kinda works upon) may result in unexpected unexpectedness.
20:07
is there a css room? i have a problem with damn IE7 and a margin
did you try to look ?
of course
you can post css questions in javascript forum, they tend to be friendly to css questions
may I do it here?
how can i check with xpath the href of my css declaration ? <link href="skins/blues/css/text.css" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" >
20:41
@sanders /html/head/link/@href would get all href attributes of link elements that are children of head elements that are children of html
21:20
whoa cake bake is pretty awesome!
posted on August 03, 2011 by Zend Developer Zone

The Zend Framework team announces the immediate availability of Zend Framework 1.11.10, our tenth maintenance release in the 1.11 series. 1.11.10 includes more than 50 bug fixes and may be downloaded from the Zend Framework site .

 
1 hour later…
22:23
ping @ircmaxell
if acos(8) is capable of returning float(NAN) shouldnt 1/0 do the same instead of returning false, which in turn will result in an incorrect result when doing var_dump(is_nan(1 / 0));
23:09
@Gordon. No. Because 1/0 is not Nan. Its actually a superposition of all numbers (which is to say undefined). There's a slight difference between undefined and Nan. Now acos maybe should be undefined (can't remember)...
$a = @(0/1);
echo empty($a); //1
meant to put 1/0 still same result
with any other data type check such as is_null, or is_numeric, etc it wont output anything
So it appears empty() is the only test for something that is "undefined", even though "undefined" itself is not a data type in php, unlike some other languages
posted on August 03, 2011 by Michael Maclean

I'm very pleased to be able to announce that I'll be giving two talks at this year's FrOSCon conference in St Augustin near Bonn in Germany, on the 20th and 21st of August. The first is on the PHP track, and is an overview of the PECL/Cairo extension for PHP. The second talk is on the main track, and is about Making Software See, where I'll give an introduction to the OpenCV image processing l

23:25
empty not only checks if it exists but if it has a nonzero value
23:42
guys i have a mini-site, 4 html-css pages they are very simple but i need to compress them in such a way that they end up with a really tiny size (each file) what would you suggest to do it? for example would this be a good praactice to achieve the goal? --> make a separate php file containing each DIV and then use php includes
the main landing page needs to be exteemely light

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