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06:02
@Orangepill 2005 was an interesting time ... the tests explosion lol
And pdo I believe.
Well I'm out... night guys
@Orangepill I get 500 errors =o(
@crypticツ that is way too many errors :D
@Orangepill lol, no I get multiple HTTP 500 errors
finally loaded
In Singapore we have this crap to deal with when our kids take their exams =(
06:09
On the same topic, Google 500 errors output something like this pastebin.com/ZnVNy5sC where the error messages are encrypted. Is this something easy to setup?
^ self-duplicator (and most likely also duplicate material)
Apparently if a sentence in English is meant to mean something else than what a normal English reader would understand, it's called "scientific" English =(
@crypticツ I've seen that a few times... I don't recall what the resolution was though
hi to all
I have a big problem in config of linux vps
06:16
mornings :D
@saeid please define big.
and what does tech support say about it?
I have a linux vps with centos 5.9
I want to install kloxo mr on it
onclick=\'alert("I am alert")\'
i am calling this in dynamic list view and its show perfectly
but how can i pass `var Temp="I am alert";`in onClick ?
@chintankhetiya well let me ask back: why do you want to set a variable you can't use anywhere else?
06:18
@hakre can you help me??
@hakre Thanks, because that is my view of list row ,
@NikiC Remind me why we do this:
> Cannot traverse an already closed generator
user image
2
yay! We #1
NikiC and likewise:
> Cannot rewind a generator that was already run
@igorw ping.
06:22
@saeid I think this gives some inspiration: stackoverflow.com/questions/6877826/…
@LeviMorrison what do you mean by that?
there is no concept of a rewind in a generator.
rewind is from iterator, not generator.
@hakre Some context:
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return array|\Iterator Returns array if $input is array, if $input is Traversable then an Iterator is returned.
 */
function map($input, callable $value_callback, callable $key_callback = NULL) {
    if (is_array($input)) {
        $mapped = [];
        if ($key_callback !== NULL) {
            foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
@hakre my problem is in linux vps config not javascript !!!!
@hakre its same view of my row with two button , so i want to pass selected row ID on that click event
@saeid yes and this is the PHP chatroom, not the linux VPS config chatroom. Sorry for clicking wrong, this was meant to the other nice guy.
06:26
hakre: Note that while testing the above function, you cannot reuse the iterator that is generated. I think is a valid use-case.
@hakre ok ok sorry but I dont know what room must I go??
function testMapTraversable($input, $value_callback, $key_callback, $expect) {
    $iterator = map(new ArrayIterator($input), $value_callback, $key_callback);
    $iterator_copy = map(new ArrayIterator($input), $value_callback, $key_callback);
    $this->assertInstanceOf('Iterator', $iterator);
    $this->assertEquals(count($expect), iterator_count($iterator));

    foreach ($iterator_copy as $key => $value) {
        $this->assertEquals($expect[$key], $key);
        $this->assertEquals($expect[$value], $value);
@hakre in
@hakre I couldnt find any room about config of vps
@LeviMorrison Your code doesn't map the keys properly in absence of a key modifier.
@LeviMorrison That method does far too much. You want to use a DecoratingIterator on a TraversableIterator that also handles arrays (and probably extend it to decorate keys as well which normally is not needed).
Also what I don't understand is why doesn't that method wrap the input into an Iterator first and then process all input the same.
06:29
@hakre I understand it does too much. However, if it has a chance of making PHP-core, it's in that form.
@hakre Simple: it's inconvenient:
I guess you're looking for an equivalent like array_map for a traversable.
$records = getMyLovelyData();

$mapped = iterator_to_array(map(new ArrayIterator($records), $value_callback, $key_callback))
^ That is nasty.
more than nasty.
$records = getMyLovelyData();

$mapped = map($records, $value_callback, $key_callback);
^ That is nice.
But it needs to also work on Traversables.
And in the case of Traversables it returns an Iterator (via a generator)
Basically, you don't want to break out of a coding style to use map. It should work in either one.
@Jack Explain? I'm not saying it's perfect; I'm still writing tests.
foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
                $mapped[] = $value_callback($value, $key);
            }
It should use $key as the index to $mapped.
Otherwise keys go in, and they don't come out.
06:34
@Jack False.
If you don't supply a $key_callback then you get incremental ids. This is by-design.
In which case would that be beneficial?
In many cases, actually. Here's one:
map([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7], function ($val) { return $val * 2; });
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $value_callback, callable $key_callback = NULL) {

    $iteratorClass = NULL;

    if (is_array($input) {
        $iteratorClass = 'ArrayIterator';
    }

    if ($input instanceof Traversable) {
        $iteratorClass = 'IteratorIterator';
    }

    if (!$iteratorClass) {
@LeviMorrison I don't see how that proves the point :)
@hakre No. That still returns a generator when you have an array input. That is not helpful.
06:37
@LeviMorrison It does not matter. Also one thing that shots through the brain is why allow this mixed input types?
Well, two reasons:
Map all the things!
for array there is array_walk.
array_map is already taken and I'm am 100% confident it will not break BC.
@hakre This is unsuitable: it modifies by reference.
Secondly: traversable_map <- uhm... that definitely sounds like a noun. I have a traversable map.
Furthermore: they do the same thing.
map_traversable() :)
06:39
It's just function overloading a la PHP.
It's fine in C++: why not in PHP?
traversable_map_key_value_pairs
heh
@hakre I think you be would surprised at how many use-cases are NOT covered by array_map, array_filter, and array_walk...
maybe this function would be nice to have: array_generator - creates a generator out of an array.
@LeviMorrison I'm not suprised, PHP's API is so often incomplete despite the age of the language.
To give a more modern example: There is no array_map counterpart function for iterators/traversables.
Sure, but even within the array realm there are many use-cases that are not possible, and many that are not easily possible.
06:42
@hakre How about iterator_apply?
Okay, let's apply some principle from clean code here first to sort this out.
@hakre This is PHP: clean code is off topic.
Well okay, it doesn't return anything lol
@Jack this is more the array_walk of traversables.
Yep
06:43
@hakre Except even worse.
Yeah, because of the return value behaviour.
Your callbacks must return true to keep going ...
Why can't they just compare === false?
@hakre There is nothing wrong with`map`: it's a facade. It does the same maps on two types. Internally we can clean it up into multiple functions, yadaya, but as a PoC it's not helpful to do that, imo.
And ease of use here trumps cleanliness easily.
I've been working on this stuff for several years now. I'm not saying your points are invalid: I'm just saying I've thought a LOT about mine :)
@LeviMorrison Btw, this map([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7], function ($val) { return $val * 2; }); example would give the same results if you would use the keys in the output array.
@Jack I can give a better example, just a moment.
Cool.
Reading the git-scm book I now understand how I messed up my repo lol
06:49
@LeviMorrison I only do that to reduce the code and get a better view, it can be further reduced then.
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|Array|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $value_callback, callable $key_callback = NULL) {

    $result = NULL;

    $result = $key_callback
        ? foreachable_map_key_value_pairs($input, $value_callback, $key_callback)
        : foreachable_map_values($input, $value_callback)
        ;

    return is_array($input) ? iterator_to_array($result) : $result;
@hakre As a PoC I don't think that's easier to understand than my single function.
@LeviMorrison It shows that you have two problems to solve here: First to differ between array and traversable and second to differ between having an optional key callback or not having it.
The rest is a generator calling callbacks. And you don't have a single function in your poc, you just have covered the many functions inside a single one.
@hakre It's a facade function. It's fine to do multiple things.
@hakre Yes, and it's very easy to understand that way.
@LeviMorrison yes it is fine to do so. but you also should always question itself to make it finer.
Anyway, the whole reason this got started is because you can't reuse a generator.
06:54
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|Array|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $value_callback, callable $key_callback = NULL)
{
    $result = function() use ($input, $value_callback, $key_callback) {
        if ($key_callback) {
            foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
                yield $key_callback($value, $key) => $value_callback($value, $key);
@LeviMorrison there are no two iterations of the array.
I misread your code; sorry.
Oh, and it's invalid.
Well, maybe.
I tried return $mapped and it hated me, but a plain return might be okay.
yes I pass the input type checking down to foreach, I would consider that problematic.
morning
there is also an exit early possible on falsey $input before or after type checking depending on style/strictness.
@hakre Also:
Well, actually, I'm not sure; generators are still so new to me and do not behave as expected.
:11876759 no, you only get back a traversable (more specific: a generator) if you invoke $result.
here is the code with error checking an exit early:
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|Array|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $value_callback, callable $key_callback = NULL)
{
    if (!is_array($input) and !($input instanceof Traversable) {
        trigger_error('$input must be an array or Traversable');
        return;
    }

    if (!$input) {
        return $input;
    }

    $result = function() use ($input, $value_callback, $key_callback) {
@hakre But if you call it you lose the first value: you need to have a yield at the beginning of the function.
Well, maybe.
You need to do something.
@LeviMorrison I don't think so.
But back to your original problem to rewind a generator.
Wasn't it?
It is by-design, but I do not share his view.
It is true that some generators don't make sense to be rewound, such as ones yielding results from a database.
07:05
Right. As Traversable does not guarantee to allow a rewind() operation, one common solution is to use a CachingIterator (in case of compatible keys and when you're okay setting flags) or the FullCachingIterator (just works) for any Traversable which is not an Iterator.
@hakre CachingIterator is horrible. What is this FullCachingIterator?
Oh, you linked it.
One could also argue that a map function for an iterator / traversable should also be able to map the validity of each iteration.
not "only" values and keys.
I don't understand what you said.
just some food of thought; $valid_callback
07:11
I still do not understand what you said.
And probably the index of the iteration should be passed to all the callbacks, too.
@hakre Okay, that one is unnecessary: use lambdas if you need it.
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|Array|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $valid_callback, callable $value_callback, callable $key_callback = NULL)
{
    if (!is_array($input) and !($input instanceof Traversable) {
        trigger_error('$input must be an array or Traversable');
        return;
    }

    if (!$input) {
        return $input;
@LeviMorrison as map is a facade, this reasoning is somewhat moot.
@hakre No. I am firm on this one. It's totally unneeded.
And if you are stopping input before the end of the iterator, then you are not doing a map operation. You would need to filter first.
@LeviMorrison okay, that's a point, true.
07:14
And we need a better filter operation as well.
:)
Currently you cannot filter based on keys.
throwing valid callback out now:
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|Array|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $value_callback, callable $key_callback = NULL)
{
    if (!is_array($input) and !($input instanceof Traversable) {
        trigger_error('$input must be an array or Traversable');
        return;
    }

    if (!$input) {
        return $input;
    }

    $result = function() use ($input, $value_callback, $key_callback) {
No. Throw out the index. That information can be obtained by using a lambda.
For instance, you cannot get the key by a lambda or a value by a lambda, this is why both have to be passed to the callables.
But iteration index? That is doable via lambda.
ahh, I also suggest something different now.
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|Array|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $key_value_callback)
{
    if (!is_array($input) and !($input instanceof Traversable) {
        trigger_error('$input must be an array or Traversable');
        return;
    }

    if (!$input) {
        return $input;
    }

    $result = function() use ($input, $key_value_callback) {
there is no need to have two callbacks here (per-se) for example.
as it is a map operation and not a divide-and-map-twice operation.
No.
You are too narrow in thinking here.
Well, sort of.
If you really want you can make them return a tuple.
I don't think it's narrow, I'm just thinking aloud and outline.
07:20
The end is the same, here.
@LeviMorrison well, the code is less complex.
@hakre It does so at the expense of making it harder to use. Consider auto-incrementing keys.
@LeviMorrison what do you mean? I mean I don't see the difference here having two callbacks instead of one and vice-versa (for auto-incrementing keys).
In the previous version, no key_callback meant you got auto-incrementing keys.
In this version, you have to code that to happen.
It's bothersome as it's a very, very common use-case.
However, it is simpler in that you have fewer functions to pass around and code.
I would suspect the previous design is overall better.
Maybe more eyes and minds would help that situation.
@LeviMorrison well that is your $index lambda argument, isn't it?
07:24
In any case, I don't like returning fixed-size arrays with semantic meaning in PHP anyway.
But just the inverse.
@hakre No.
Well, $index is an implementation of auto-incrementing keys.
... you missed the point.
And also: how often do you use the key AND the index of iteration?
Or the value and the index but NOT the key?
/**
 * @param array|Traversable $input
 * @param callable $value_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @param callable $key_callback Takes ($value, $key) returns mixed
 * @return Traversable|Array|NULL
 */
function map($input, callable $key_value_callback)
{
    if (!is_array($input) and !($input instanceof Traversable) {
        trigger_error('$input must be an array or Traversable');
        return;
    }

    if (!$input) {
        return $input;
    }

    $result = function() use ($input, $key_value_callback) {
Regardless how often, you can return NULL for the key in the tuple to fallback to index in the last example.
07:26
@hakre As I previously mentioned, fixed-sized arrays with semantic meaning in PHP are really stupid.
Also, a NULL key could theoretically be valid; you would convert it to an integer instead of preserving the value.
@LeviMorrison normally you don't and ignore the key. That's why for example I didn't map the keys in DecoratingIterator even though I naturally did wrote the code for it. I just threw it away later as practice turned out that this is not needed.
I will be honest, a NULL key is a pretty obscure case in terms of usefulness, though.
@LeviMorrison Not in a PHP array. And if you want to allow all, the only suggestion I can give is to pass $index as parameter to the callback so that inside the callback the user can decide to turn keys into auto-incrementing something with a single assignment easily.
Just within in the context of the mapping.
@hakre But in an iterator, yes.
@LeviMorrison Also within foreach since PHP 5.5 (thank you NikiC :)).
07:30
I know it was loosened, and I would hope it would include NULL, but I haven't checked that case.
@hakre Another thing that bothers me is that null instanceof Interface results in fatal error. I really think it should just return false.
@LeviMorrison It doesn't eval.in/private/45c202ce4c84c6
/usr/local/php/5.5.1_gcc-4.7.2/bin/php tmp.php

Fatal error: instanceof expects an object instance, constant given in /home/levijm/Projects/Ardent/test/Ardent/tmp.php on line 3
^ have always got this for as long as I can remember, version agnostic.
if there is a constant, there is no need to use the instanceof operator on it, doesn't it? :P
Fair. But it still seems pointless.
Fair. But it still seems a pointless fatal error.
well it works with a variable expression.
and also with other expressions :) - eval.in/private/0a57d9e6730b34
07:39
@Jack you better make it quick, leaving on a jet plane in a few mins
regarding iterator stuff, behold the power of functional programming with generators: github.com/nikic/iter
@igorw Hmm, I was going to ask you something about configuration approaches in silex, but that can wait :)
@hakre I'm going to bed (again) but I'll think about the single callback more. I don't think I'll change my mind, but maybe :)
@Jack I assume you're familiar with github.com/igorw/ConfigServiceProvider?
I'll take a look at it, thanks :)
Where's the airplane taking you?
@LeviMorrison sleep well and find wisdom in your dreams :D
07:47
@hakre
I'm back.
I figured it out (I think). Will post in a moment.
user895378
@LeviMorrison Good to see that I'm not the only one eschewing sleep because he couldn't resist the call of the code.
@rdlowrey Couldn't resist it twice now.
user895378
BC Break Thursday ... it'll getchya every time.
guys, happy mid-autumn festival
the best time to enjoy mooncakes :)
07:53
@hakre :) It works. IT WORKS!
Oh wait. That may have been premature.
I may be hitting a bug in generators.
@crypticツ looool
Can someone help me check my logic?
function map($input, callable $callback) {
    if (!(is_array($input) || $input instanceof Traversable)) {
        trigger_error('$input must be an array or Traversable');
    }
    $iterator = function(Traversable $input) use ($callback) {
        foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
            $g = $callback($value, $key);
            $g->rewind();
            yield $g->key() => $g->current();
        }
    };

    return is_array($input) ? iterator_to_array($iterator(new \ArrayIterator($input))) : $iterator($input);
Result, which is not expected:
array (
  0 => 1,
)
@NikiC Can you look at the above?
Note that if I change my mapping function to function($value, $key) { yield $key => $value; } I get the expected:
array (
  0 => 0,
  1 => 1
)
@LeviMorrison can you provide a snippet?
mornings
morning, Dave
08:06
@LeviMorrison I looked at it yesterday, looked at the sauce as well, there is no initialiser value for it either, you can't skip it with null because it errors out if the arg is not string or int. I supposed it doesn't need to be skippable since it's the last arg but it still sucks balls.
@DaveRandom The last arg? You can supply null just fine.
I tested it.
@Jimbo, Thu-ring :p
@LeviMorrison Should throw an E_WARNING (I thought, maybe I read it wrong, didn't test it): lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_5_5/ext/standard/…
@LeviMorrison Yeh well it badly needs some love, I have been doing a bunch of work with it lately and I got fed up of hitting partial/undocumented functions
@DaveRandom :) Well good on you.
I updated a few SPL things, but I have been busy with php.net website.
08:11
Yeh well it's worth the effort I think, it's coming along nicely :-)
@LeviMorrison Why $g->rewind(); ?
(the website)
@hakre That's simply so you could return a normal Iterator, not just a generator.
Normal iterators require to rewind before use.
It's harmless on a generator.
@LeviMorrison well, this seems pretty rough. And that method is Iterator only, not across all Traversables. Take care.
@hakre Could be fixed with a function pair(Traversable).
But in idea I think it should do what we want.
Either I have a bug or am overlooking something.
08:15
@LeviMorrison Oh it's a Z!, I didn't notice that
I don't see the bug... confuses me a bit.
Hmm, a Generator is a Traversable, is that right?
@Jack correct.
Cool :)
Morning
08:21
If this is a bug, please let me know and I'll open a bug report for it.
Going to bed; third try.
@LeviMorrison no it is not, you are missing a parameter: eval.in/private/711317a22ed4b8
perhaps some sleep will be of benefit to you :D
(I love sleeping)
hi, @Fabien
08:40
good moring
08:52
@LeviMorrison ^^
Morning
Got my 6-month probation review in an hour. Googling for questions to ask :P
Good luck :P
heh cheers. I already know I have passed, so at least that's not a concern.
Ask for more money, always popular
09:02
Yeah I already brought it up with them when they hired me. They said they would review it on probation. I reminded one of them a few days ago too.
@Fabien cheating? :p //would be interesting to take a look for 1-2 samples
huh? :P
user895378
@DaveRandom I'm going to sleep but FYI the SAN certs work just fine for me -- no one has yet provided an example where PHP is to blame as far as I can tell. The OP of that comment DM'd some URIs that "should fail" and with the correct settings peer verification worked without issue. Please share if you can demonstrate this failure.
@rdlowrey I had an issue with github, as mentioned by ryan, I'll try and reproduce it
Hmm, the Git book says that I shouldn't rebase my master branch after it has been pushed ... but it seems that it's the only way out lol
Otherwise the changes I've stupidly made on it get included into every PR I send out =(
09:18
@Jack I've squashed commits in after I've PR'd, seems to work fine
I didn't realize that doing a revert makes another commit haha
Is there an easy way to say "squash this particular commit" without having those master~1023 syntax?
Oh, it seems you can just use the hashes.
@Jack can you elaborate on that? What do you actually want to acheive?
Let me dig it out for you, hold on.
That
It nullifies a commit I've made a while ago.
But it keeps getting dragged into my PR's
@Jack Y U NO CREATE NEW BRANCH FOR FEATURE DEV????
is it possible to move file defined source to defined destination in move_uploaded_file() function ?
09:32
Yeah, that's what I'm trying to eradicate from history.
But tbh I'm not totally sure how to fix that, I've only ever done a simple squash of the last few commits on a branch, I've never tried to do it further down the line
Yeah, this one is ... ahem ... pretty far.
I could replay upstream onto my earliest commit.
@Jack Have you got any outstanding dev work? Either way, it might be simpler to just get your diffs as patches, burn the repo, refork and apply the patches. It's a bit of a carpet-bomb approach but it would definitely fix it
please, recommend books to read to learn OOP
@DaveRandom I wanted to do that, but then I started reading the Git book and I was thinking maybe I can salvage it ;-)
09:35
@John Ummm... pardon? Can you elaborate on that a bit?
@iroegbu no
@Jack Well yes you could. But the day you spend fucking it up further before figuring out how to fix it could be better spent, I feel
21 hours ago, by Gordon
I hate git
@DaveRandom Well, let's just try this one mother of all rebase operations and bail out if it doesn't work lol .. I have saved my patches anyway.
@DaveRandom I mean that suppose I have 1 file source/pic1.jpg and I want to move that file into destination/pic1.jpg using move_uploaded_file() PHP standard function,is it possible?
@Ocramius why? wrong route?
09:37
@John If it's not an uploaded file, just use rename()
move_uploaded_file() is specifically for handling file uploads, it does a bunch of extra checks that the file actually is an uploaded file (within the context of the current request)
@DaveRandom Ohh!! thanks man... :)
@iroegbu I'm just kidding
> # Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged,
# and have 2 and 2749 different commit(s) each, respectively.
lol
Awwww, @LeviMorrison broke the build... lynch him, lynch him, lynch him
> Failed completely
:D
noooooob
09:50
lol
yay, i fix0red it.
> git fetch upstream
git rebase --onto e1711b267212a4b11f2edcff24bd1765c398361e~1 upstream/master
git reset --hard HEAD~2
git push origin --force
@Jack tick, tick, tick, tick
Okay, no life changing PR there ... but still :)
It's a small "I've made fire with Git" moment.
I'm impressed, I have to say. I was expecting Kaboom! by now
Anyone here with some C#-fu?
09:57
@MadaraUchiha Problem?
(I don't have much but I do have some)
@DaveRandom See the C# room, recursion is giving me trouble with recursion.
@dragon112 is your man really, not seen him for a bit though
@MadaraUchiha well for a start, tell him to write code in English :-P
@DaveRandom :D
Horrible teacher, carry on.
He knows not to use Hebrew in production.

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