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10:01
@MadaraUchiha OK well the first question would be... what version of C#?
@DaveRandom If only he asked for VB-fu eh ;)
@DaveRandom Well, the one shipped with Visual Studio C# 2010 Express, I'm not sure otherwise.
Because in 4 you can just make count an optional param = 0 and pass it along as another arg in the recursive calls
Let's have this discussion at the C# room, okay?
@DaveRandom And the resulting PR: github.com/php/php-src/pull/460
^^ David mentioned that it would be easier to do in userland, but I'm not sure what he meant by it.
10:08
Good evening!
@TejaSwaroopArukoti good morning :p
Can anyone tell me am i right or wrong for my code ?
what's your opinion? using a template engine or not in a small blog software?
@AlmaDoMundo @Recode
and all ,
@chintankhetiya don't ping random people
10:12
okay
ping @MadaraUchiha - he is a chat moderator here :p
can you guide me ?
i am mobile developer and working on phonegap
@Jack What do you mean by "destined to become associative"?
lolzzzz phonegap.
@DaveRandom It's empty now, but it's supposed to become associative.
10:14
Am I the only one who always finds starting a project to be fucking hard? :/
No matter how simple the project is
The use-case is messaging back and forth with JS
I'm staring here at my IDE like 'duuuh how i code?'
z____z
@Jack What I mean is, how does PHP know that?
@DaveRandom It doesn't, but you do.
Perhaps you could propose a rephrase? heh
@Starsong you're not the only one ;)
10:16
@Recode I'm just trying to make a simple blog platform
Because wordpress is needlessly bloated
And all I want to do is type crap so the world can read it.
@Starsong First, you composer require phpunit/phpunit :)
@Starsong lol, me2
@Jack No, no I don't. :P Writing in perl. :D
Then wtf are you doing here?
use Test; # This though.
Chilling with fellow developers
10:17
@Starsong I have a login already^^
@Recode I dont even have a template >_>
I have 4 lines of code
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Test;
@LeviMorrison What @hakre said in the comment :)
squashing keys in iterator_to_array() is rather surprising when you first see it.
@Starsong I've one, but now I think it's bad: jshack.org/snippet/6 (just a random snippet)
@LeviMorrison And of course, that's some bad abuse of yield you have there ^^
10:22
I was going to just install MT but it also seems overly bloated.
@DaveRandom I'm still amazed at how this worked exactly the way I wanted lol
@Jack idk, the whole concept seems odd. At that point, I think (object) on the emtpy array is better than trying to explain to json_encode() what you meant
@DaveRandom Maybe ...
I readily admit that the use-case is seldom seen.
But an object cast on an array can cause some weird shit as well.
Especially if the array is numerically indexed :)
numeric properties anyone?
In this use-case I don't actually know whether the passed array will be empty or not until it's time to serialize.
@Jack Isn't there an internal difference between an assoc and an indexed array?
10:34
No, that state is not maintained anywhere.
Just count the number of assoc keys .. when it drops to zero it's either empty or numerically indexed.
:11881406 No I would say that's over-complicating it. Once an array becomes assoc, it is assoc forever
I would say that everything starts of indexed, as soon as you do anything other than push/unshift/access existing key it becomes assoc, then it's assoc forever
Possible, but then you would want to have functions like is_associative($array) :)
And if you do (array)(object)[] you get an empty assoc array
@Jack I have wanted that before now, but I suspect it was in bad code
I can't believe some parent actually called their kid Rainbow Dash. >_>;
@Starsong lolwut
10:38
@DaveRandom And I thought this was messed up lol.
Just as bad as naming your kid after One Direction :)
@DaveRandom On Toddlers & Tiaras today
There was a child called Rainbow Dash.
Luckily they didn't call "it" Diner Dash.
Hello
i have run php file from ssh terminal but i also want to give parameters same as we give using query string how to give that
?
Beware: $argv and $argc are not superglobal, you have to fetch them from the global scope or from $_SERVER - although that doesn't matter, since you delete all the superglobals in the global scope during the bootstrap phase (right)?
10:47
That's why you need Global::$argv and Global::$argc ...
Global + static == <3
@DaveRandom thanks for replying me back
i wanna ask 1 stupid question
i am new to php
Morning.
@Jack No no no, that's too much tight coupling. Instead you should inject 'Global', so you can do $globalClass::$argv
i am running script from ssh CLi shows something but where it is showing resukt?
10:50
@DaveRandom
@MuneemHabib What do you mean "where is it showing it"? All the output goes to the terminal when you run it from the command line...
@DaveRandom Cool, and then class MyApp extends Global { ... }, got it :)
@DaveRandom terminal is only showing warning and notices?
it is not showing output
@MuneemHabib Ahh OK, what warnings/notices do you get? And what's the full command you ran?
@DaveRandom alot of warnings/notice mostly undefined refeernce
10:54
php-src/master: y u fail the test cases?
i run php file.php 1
Here's a trick btw; add #!/usr/bin/php at the top of your script, chmod u+x on it and run it like ./file.php =D
@MuneemHabib OK well probably what's happening is that your script isn't producing the output you expect because of problems that are causing the warnings/notices. You need to fix those errors, and then if you still have a problem then we can help - and by the way, turning error reporting off doesn't count as fixing them ;-)
@Jack I saw a really neat trick for the shebang involving which php the other day, let me try and find it
So. How come that when you have the friday off. Thursday still feels like a friday...
because Thursday has become last working day (Friday)
11:12
stackoverflow.com/posts/18892805/revisions Who the hell approved last revision? :|
How do you people feel about static functions?
@BenjaminGruenbaum In PHP? In a project?
I guess, that's stupid in PHP. In languages where everything goes in classes.
That is, functions that have no class owning them, and don't access mutable state.
@BenjaminGruenbaum In my personal experience I don't really have that much need for static functions at all
11:20
@BenjaminGruenbaum I use them, because I like oop
@Recode You use static functions because you like OOP ?
That doesn't make too much sense to me :/
@BenjaminGruenbaum e.g HTML::esc(..), so all functions that have to do with html are bundled in a class
@Recode That's not OOP, that's just namespacing...
@Recode :|
@BenjaminGruenbaum in this case, true, in my database class it's different
11:23
@BenjaminGruenbaum In environments where memory is shared between requests they are not that stupid, in my opinion. But mostly my opinions are useless sh*t.
@Recode yeah, you might as well put functions in a namespace then.
^ that
> I use them, because I like oop
Doesn't make much sense to me
@Leri On the contrary, I want to make it static to convey the fact there is no state.
kk, this was nonsense ;)
@igorw Without function autoloading, it sucks. Static util classes are sucky, but they do solve that particular problem
11:24
@Recode No it wasn't :)
@DaveRandom autoloading still sounds like a horrible idea to me.
@DaveRandom soon.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Of functions or in general?
@BenjaminGruenbaum maybe because I started with java ;)
That was a bad typo, possibly a freudian slit slip
@DaveRandom general imo, but I have no practical experience with it, it sounds like something that makes dependencies more implicit.
\
11:31
@BenjaminGruenbaum No, all it does is allow you to avoid a shitload of explicit requires. Without it you'd have to do require_once on every dependency at the top of every class file.
...which would mean that any given class would be dependent not only on the class, but the relative location of the file that contains that class
SO behavior is so shit, same answers, I answered first, quentin was second, mine was down voted, others are upvoted.. crap
Back
Yay I finally have my old number of my new phone, no more carrying two phones around
@Mr.Alien well the question is total crap.
^ just DV+Eradicate.
@LeviMorrison on the grounds that I didn't care for it, but I didn't want to vote no because I didn't think it was bad (broken window theory wise at least)
11:37
Something I can think of to solve this with is with a CSS-Book. But it requires reading. — hakre 15 secs ago
<form action="<?php $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'];?>" method="post">
<input type='text' name='practice_text'/>
<input type='submit' name='submit' value='Submit'/>
</form>
<?php
try{
echo $_POST['practice_text'];
}
catch(Exception $e){
echo "There was an error: " . $e->getMessage();//$e->getMessage();
}
?>
@BenjaminGruenbaum I think there are many cases where they would be appropriate but are currently not used.
I get an error displayed even though I try to catch it and display my own text.
@igorw Indeed, but unfortunately code designed to be portable isn't going to be relying on it for a while yet :-(
@SineLaboreNihil errors != exceptions
In that case you should check that the variable isset() before you try to use it for anything
you guys use blank or $_SERVER['PHP_SELF']; in forms that process on the same page?
11:41
@DaveRandom Thank you so much Dave! :) I'm still learning. :)
@hakre closed
@Mr.Alien not yet. can't wait to delvote this.
Hi
Can anyone help me to solve this stackoverflow.com/questions/18893320/…
Anyone have a decent resource on errors vs. exceptions? Once again Google produces some sucky results
internals still ignoring my points on the is_* topic :-/
11:46
@hakre I voted, pm for delv
@SineLaboreNihil ^^
@igorw forward thinking is actively discouraged...
What does ^^ mean? :)
11:47
@ircmaxell I was about to go search your blog actually, it seemed like the wort of thing you would have written about
1 min ago, by ircmaxell
@DaveRandom http://blog.ircmaxell.com/2011/08/error-handling-in-php.html
@SineLaboreNihil I meant "read the link post above this one"
@DaveRandom :-D
@DaveRandom Thanks. :)
2 days ago, by ircmaxell
lol, I just noticed some guy gave me my own blog post as a reference to help me better understand generators :-P
11:49
@ircmaxell Yeh that's awesome
@ircmaxell the only counter argument was "I don't like function names in strings"
@igorw which is a lunatic argument if you ask me
I must admit I'd like to be able to pass a named function without the quotes, but I am aware that can't ever happen in this life :-(
nope, not as long as functions and constants live in different hash tables
@igorw I don't like adding another layer of abstraction on top. Feels too DSL-like for my tastes.
11:54
@DaveRandom something similar to Foo::class
@DaveRandom True fact sir. True fact.
I suppose you could just suppress the undefined constant notice if a function by the name existed, but no-one would go for that idea I imagine
@igorw Yes but that's just ridiculous. I have yet to see a single valid use case for that
NetBeans gives me a warning on this line: <form action="<?php $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'];?>" method="post">; saying Bad value " " for attribute "action" on element "form": DOUBLE_WHITESPACE in PATH.
What does that mean?
@SineLaboreNihil It means you forgot echo ;-)
And don't use PHP_SELF
Also it means you have some extra spaces in there somewhere
I put echo now and saved it but still it gives me the same warning.
12:00
@SineLaboreNihil You have some extra whitespace in there somewhere
But even without the echo the script workd just fine. It's just that error in NetBeans that I'm getting.
Yes, browsers will compensate for the error, but you should still fix it
<form action="<?phpecho$_SERVER['PHP_SELF'];?>" method="post"> Now it looks like this, but I still get the same error.
@NikiC @Ircmaxell ... bit of help ?
I want anonymous objects
I am getting parser wrong
it's basically action="<?php echo $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'];?>" vs action=" <?php echo $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'];?> "
12:02
it's doing my head in ...
see the difference?
@SineLaboreNihil Spaces between " and <
(or >)
Ok, but I got rid of all spaces and saved it but I still get that error.
@JoeWatkins what's an anonymous object? An instance of an anonymous class?
12:03
yes
those too
anonymous classes
sorry ...
$var = new stdClass extends stdClass
{

} ("Hello");

var_dump($var);
this works
without extends stdClass doesn't ...
probably simple mistake but I don't see it ...
@JoeWatkins huh?
And what should I use instead of $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] to post to the same page?
why "stdClass"? why not new class [extends blah] [implements blah,blah] {
@DaveRandom there's plenty. it ensures the name is actually valid. it conveys that semantically this is not any string, but a function name.
12:04
yeah exactly, that's what I want ...
but when I remove extends stdClass it goes tits up
@ircmaxell Oh, and happy birthday :) Though I guess I'm a bit late here...
@NikiC thanks!
@JoeWatkins well, replace stdClass with class (the token) and see what happens
@SineLaboreNihil Well, the empty string is a valid self-referential URI. But certainly REQUEST_URI constructs are safer than PHP_SELF
@ircmaxell how old are you now?
@NikiC how am I? I am well
12:05
@ircmaxell I a word ^^
I figured
I'm 30 now
@igorw To be honest, nobody has contributed much of value to that thread. The goal was very simple, to allow functions like is_null to accept unpacked variadics. i.e. is_int(...$args) would return true only of all of $args were ints. All of the feedback has been around: not liking the name, being able to do the same thing in a loop, or being confused about failing at the earliest opportunity evaluating LTR. Not really any "this is a good/bad idea because..."
ah, so you're two years from a round number :)
@DaveRandom Thanks. :)
@NikiC I'd prefer to think of it as 10 years
@Leigh Welcome to internals
@Leigh igors comment was pretty reasonable
@JoeWatkins pthreads, now this... if you want us to move on java tell us directly. :p
His suggestion solves the issue in a more general and elegant way
12:08
@NikiC I don't really think it's more elegant. and every doesn't indicate very well what will happen on the result of the function being specified.
@Leigh sure it does. every() by very definition returns true only if every function call for each element returns true
@ircmaxell huh, do you have 5.3 support or what?
@NikiC no, it uses generators, so no
@ircmaxell but why the cuf then?
good question
will fix later
12:11
@ircmaxell by definition every should execute the function for each value, regardless of the return value of that function.
@NikiC Why does 5.3 matter in that context?
@Leigh That's each() (<-- not that, stupid linkifier)
@DaveRandom 5.3 did not have full $callback() support
@Leigh no, you're allowed to short-circuit...
@ircmaxell the word every doesn't imply that
@Leigh the point of using every/some over map+reduce is that they can short-circuit
12:12
it's every in the boolean context (ensure that every element is true)
@DaveRandom In PHP, are requires always per class or can you require per namespace?
@NikiC orly? I thought $callable() had always worked like down to PHP4, is there something special about the early closure impl?
@DaveRandom It didn't work for array-callbacks ;)
I'm absolutely certain that $str() worked before 5.3
@BenjaminGruenbaum That question doesn't make sense...
12:13
@ircmaxell @NikiC pastebin.com/hYmsRpXy see if you can spot my error, please ?
Oh right I remember that now
@NikiC When you require do you always require a file?
@BenjaminGruenbaum requires are per-file. What is in that file isn't relevant to require itself
yeah, you can implement function every(callable $cb, array $array) { return array_reduce($array, function($a, $b) use ($cb) { return $a && $cb($b); }, true); }
All it does is import code from another file, whatever that code may be
12:15
@DaveRandom So there is no way to add all files in a namespace? Or make a namespace available?
@JoeWatkins not quickly, no. What's the "blow up"
@JoeWatkins shouldn't T_STRING extends_from be T_CLASS extends_form? if I got the idea right
@DaveRandom yes, but array wasn't added until 5.4
@BenjaminGruenbaum No, you have to import entities, not collections of entities. Which sucks a bit, but it's an unavoidable penalty of the PHP operational model, because it's only compiled at run time
@ircmaxell Yes I remember that now, it's not a problem I'd ever come across so it doesn't stick in my mind, I only realised it was a problem from reading the changelog
@DaveRandom Hmm... what about how module loaders do it in JavaScript like require? That's pretty similar to PHP I guess but without autoloading and it works quite well... Have you seen it?
12:17
@JoeWatkins btw I don't think the unticked+DO_TICKS is correct in that context. The DO_TICKS is already emitted by the new statement itself. You should just drop the unticked rule and go directly for anonymous_class_declaration_statement
require(["firstDep","secondDep"],function(firstDepExports,secondDepExports){
    // code runs here, if firstDep or secondDep have any dependencies they are
    // resolved as well
});
hey. anyone familiar with laravel?
Need a small help..
Wait, even if you import single files in PHP, you can still do this... you just require things at the right moment. Autoloading still sounds like hiding your dependencies to me :S
@BenjaminGruenbaum Eh, hiding the dependency on manually importing a file. In real life I don't think it is that big a deal. If somebody really wants to instantiate the object without declaring it as a dependency autoloading or not really isn't gonna stop them
12:21
@cspray It sounds counter intuitive to explicit dependency management, then again I don't know what the common practice in PHP is.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeh but PHP doesn't have the concept of exports or module-scoped members (which I would dearly like to to have). The problem is that symbols are resolved at compile time, and require is executed at run time. So you can't do use Foo, Bar; and then do new Baz where Baz is actually a Foo\Baz - PHP doesn't know what members Foo has until runtime, so it can't resolve the names
@DaveRandom Symbols are resolved at compile time?
@NikiC okay, I think I spotted a couple of things now I look at it on it's own too ...logic is a bit wrong in a couple of places ...
oh, I didn't look at the logic. Only at the parser as that seemed to be your issue
I was going for "$we = new Whaever {}()" rather than "$we = new class Whatever {}()"
yeah the parser is the bit that is confusing me. I'm getting somewhere now anyhow ... ta
12:24
@JoeWatkins Both syntaxes don't quite make sense to me ^^
new Whatever() {} is how java does it
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes. Imagine I have a file that's namespace Foo; - if in that file I write new Bar; the compiler resolves that to new \Foo\Bar;. My file doesn't have to declare class Bar, it can import it from another file via require at run time (it has to be at run time because you can require $var;). Thus I can't write namespace Foo; use Bar; and inherit the Bar\Baz as Baz, PHP would consider new Baz to reference Foo\Baz
That looks like a sucky explanation
you think do it the java way ?
Any of you guys familiar with hadoop?
@JoeWatkins not necessarily, but please some way that has the arguments first ;)
otherwise you have this big code block and only then the args ^^
$var = new Object{} () seemed to make sense, doesn't seem much different to
$var = call(); does it ?
12:27
@DaveRandom Sorry, I'm still not sure I understand properly. That's my deprecated PHP knowledge and the fact I read a lot more PHP than I write. It sounds very strange though. Why aren't namespaces resolved in compile time? What was the reasoning?
yeah I think I'll just copy java ...
@JoeWatkins Don't forget that this is actually:
$var = new Foo {
    // some
    // stuff
    // in
    // here
    // and
    // some
    // more
} ($arg);
@BenjaminGruenbaum In a nutshell, because PHP is too dynamic. Without actually executing a script, you cannot know its dependencies. So yes, autoloading does hide dependencies, but it doesn't make the problem any worse than it already is.
For the record, I'm not defending this approach, it does have serious issues
By now I'm pretty sure that whoever implemented the SPL did not have a solid grasp on PHP internals at that time
@DaveRandom What about what JS does at the moment? (It has pretty shitty dependency management, but it's as dynamic, and just using a module loader kind of works)
For the very least it does not hide deps
12:38
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeh but you are defining an entire module in one file, and the system mandates that you do that. PHP doesn't impose that requirement.
When you do require in JS the return value is an object, the "result" of the file. When you do it in PHP all it does is import symbols (if that's what the file does)
@DaveRandom You don't have to define an entire module in one fine, you just have to declare it in one file, it can be composed by multiple files... then again JS's notion of OOP allows that (monkey patching and decorating objects easily while keeping them the same object and refernece)
@DaveRandom Hmmm... I guess I kind of understand better why you guys are obsessed with IoC Containers now :) It sounds like a lot of work in PHP
@BenjaminGruenbaum The difference, I suppose, is that in JS everything is runtime - you get a thing (object), not an abstract design for a thing (class)
@DaveRandom I like doing the abstract design for things in the runtime too :P That's just me though.
http://stackoverflow.com/q/18894771/1723893
It makes more sense to me in a dynamic language... but I know that my opinion is not the most popular one, especially in this room :)
12:44
So guys... watcha workin' on?
@NikiC this could be. last issue that puzzled me was: bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=49104 - I do not think the auto-rewinds are necessary (any longer?).
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh yeh, I abuse JS into classical submission, @Zirak has berated me for it a few times. But even when you do new Thing in JS, it's like you're doing new ThingDesign; new Thing - the thing that you call new on is actually an object and not a class.
It is very hard to explain, the differences are actually quite subtle, more so than they are in my head
:o ff!
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm generally on board with the JS model in that respect. I still maintain that JS and it's uber-async model isn't great for generating web pages though.
I have to go but we'll definitely continue this later. I don't like new but I do think there is a case for structural subtyping in JS:
15
A: No ways to have class-based objects in javascript?

Benjamin GruenbaumShh, come here! Wanna hear a secret? Classical inheritance is a tested and tried approach. It is useful to implement it in JavaScript often. Classes are a nice concept to have and having templates for modeling our world after objects is awesome. Classical inheritance is just a pattern. It's pe...

(I know the answer has a small mistake, but overall it voices my opinion - I argue the case for structural subtyping and then show it holds for strong behavioral subtyping - anyway, be back later!)
12:52
@Leigh yeah, sorry again; but what you said there (you comparison to isset()) was also a bit misinterpreatable…
@NikiC Object initializers?
13:08
@Ocramius Your loader hint yesterday worked perfect. Still got one problem left: When I try to add a row that already exists, I run into a 500.
@kaiser Check error log on your server.
@Leri that was the first thing I did. But it got none. Guess because of the Reflection stuff. Else I'd get errors in the browser as well.
@NikiC which would mean what exactly?
@ircmaxell just arguing against his syntax ^^
yeah, I would do\
$foo = new class extends Foo {
    // stuff
} ($arg1, $arg2);
13:15
@ircmaxell You really want the args at the end?
no, but I don't think it makes sense anywhere else...
in java it's right after the class name ^^
there shouldn't be a class name
@kaiser You can always get to the failing part with breaking your script with exit. But this is really time/energy-consuming and rarely is actually needed. If something went wrong and server sent 500 it should be logged somewhere... unless you send it manually.
@bwoebi Not a problem, was my fault.
13:17
@kaiser log PHP errors as well to the highest level. you might find something in there then.
@ircmaxell I would recommend having a quick look at the Java implementation at this point ;)
Recently I have the feeling that you want to put every known langauge feature into PHP^^
@NikiC The name of an interface to implement or a class to extend. In this example, the anonymous class is implementing the interface HelloWorld.
and I think that's confusing as hell
@ircmaxell It is rather confusing indeed
13:21
I prefer new class implements HelloWorld
@hakre error log and php error log stay empty. error reporting is set to max, Silex debug activated. I can get some output if I var_dump() upfront, but dunno how I'd get an even higher error logging to actually see something :)
People who complain that CSS is really tricky to maintain, I'd like to give you memory management to cope with, just for one day.
3
@ircmaxell well… that's true :-/
@kaiser there is no higher error logging :D
13:39
@bwoebi What do you mean by saying that? Won't you enjoy a nice multi-threading in PHP? :D
@CvetomirLazarov pthreads is fine currently?
Memory is easy to maintain if you don't have to share it :)
@Jack and if I don't need to free the memory manually…
Pff, who frees memory nowadays? ;-) just switch off the computer at the end of the day.
@Jack PHP source does ~.~ (no, it's not a bad idea, just searching for the places to free sucks)
13:44
I know it does :)
Damn, finding ideas for proper application configuration management for beanstalk is hard to find.
When configuration is done within your repo, all is fine, but not ideal.
@bwoebi But it is emulated in a way, isn't it?
=O
Yeah, in the background it's actually just doing cooperative multitasking with coroutines :)
@hakre maybe I should plugin you into my dev stack :P
@Jack Is this a performance issue and should I be worried if I have lots of users?
something is fucking wrong with my account today, getting down votes for no reason, now why downvote here
13:57
@Mr.Alien It's not -1, dude, it's 0. And why are you even posting this on PHP chat?
lol
@CvetomirLazarov I guess you are new here :)
and btw thanks for flagging
@Mr.Alien Pretty much, yes. I do not know the rules here
Rule #1 - don't flag things you just don't like.
@Jack I guess even basic user should be given split up functionality
13:58
Split what up?
@Jack votes
@Jack Thanks :) I won't. I guess that I cannot unflag?
@CvetomirLazarov nope you cannot :)
@Mr.Alien Sorry, dude. Accept my apology
I will flag your flag ... ;-)

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