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16:01
@GregAgnew No. We cannot mute people. But you can choose to ignore people either mentally or by clicking a specific avatar in the participants list and then click "ignore" or "hide posts".
@teresko you there?
Yes, but Karem, programming is art art art art. You wouldn't use a camera to check if some of your paintings colors were off? You wouldn't use an auto-tuner on your songs? (well you might.) . The reason to keep this not-automated is so that you as a programmer will learn to not make these mistakes faster. You'll tell me I'm wrong, but automation ends up like this: 'oh i don't need to check my code, I'll just make sure it pasts <testa> and <testb>'.
a good reason to use vi
Greg,
no
programming is a profession
16:04
Painting can be a profession too. But anyone who is good knows its an art.
art is subjective
Programming styles arn't?
development principles are objective
"using global variables is bad" is not subjective
I dont like to think about programming as an art. Art for me, is about creative freedom and expression of mind. That's not what programming is about. Programming is a craft. but not an art.
I have used notepad++ and it does not help me out in any way, as bad as normal notepad. I can say i have wasted time in compiling, see error, go back find the error and it was a missing char because i was too quick writing..
16:06
@teresko actually that is subjective, because there are cases in which global variables is not nessisarily bad.
Programming is a kind of magic. You can mess single thing in milion ways
@GregAgnew one case where using global variables i a good practice
one
Programming is not art, but if you look in its creative part of problem solving its creativity that can be considered art.
single
Then again, a lot of what is called art is really crap and the same is true for a lot of code I saw in my life. including my own. that shouldnt lead to the conclusion that they are the same though :)
16:08
@Gordon well put I understand what you mean, the art for me is how you craft things, If I told 100 programmers to write a calculator, they would each do it differently and perhaps in different languages, to me that is where the art comes in, now what you accomplish, but how you accomplish it.
@Robik and magic is amazing facts, its science. :D
@teresko this UserCollection you did, $user is calling the object User, but I did two parameters in it, one for pdo and other for userid like you said.
So i am missing one parameter now, the userid, can i do $array['id'] to get the user id?
yes , you can
@teresko Javascript? lol... I donno theres these things called libraries.. they tend to use globals lol
@Karem , or you can create an optional second parameter for $id
16:09
ok
@GregAgnew FYI , using global scope in javascript is a bad practice
@GregAgnew But now, there is logic for saying which one is better, you look at its UI, performance and capabilities then back to the point its something objective.
@GregAgnew hmm, no. I dont think programming offers the same amount of freedom. Also, art can exist for art's sake. Programming is always about solving a problem. You dont write code just to write code.
you can't do that kind of comparing with art, tell 100 designers to make hats can you compare which one is better ?
@Gordon I do :/
16:11
@Robik Programming is not magic. It's deterministic and good programmers understand what and why things happen
@Karem keep in mind that as your User class will evolve , it will have functionality to create users too , and then they will have every parameter , except $id
@GregAgnew no. you dont :) you do it to practise. to become better at problem solving.
@Robik , actually good code is when it does not contain any "magic"
yes @teresko maybe i should make it optional
let me point you to Zawinski's Law
> Every program attempts to expand until it can read mail. Those programs which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can
16:13
@teresko how do i iplement the iterator
@Karem , and in the case of UserCollection you can ignore that parameter , because it can be set in the $user->assign() method
@Omeid I understand what you mean, as in each of those programs would be able to be tested in a scaler format, and I would agree you could certainly determine a winner, but I think in most cases the differences in performance are negligible, and thus Legibility of code is also an important factor, not just Scaler tests.
@ircmaxell Yeah, that's true. I'm talking about someone else code :P
@Karem , php.net/manual/en/class.iterator.php look at the code example , only instead of $array , the UserCollection has $_pool
@Gordon No really! Sometimes I'll just code, maybe not even at a computer, but I'll just write it out on paper somewhere, it doesn't necessarily solve a problem, just does something I thought was 'cool'..
16:15
@GregAgnew True that, but you can scale the legibility of codes.
what it does is the problem it solves
/me is confused
Anyways, I came to this channel like an hour ago to ask a question lol.. I have a json_decode() thats not json decoding.
@teresko i dont understand, should i copy paste that example?
16:17
var_dump(json_last_error());
does that work? sweet.. i'll try that..
no , you should write it yourself , and try to understand it
lol, I would have
i'll at minimum go check the manual
method names must not change , but you should think about names for the variables
for example $position might not be such a good name in a long run , because User can have a "job position"
@GregAgnew If it's equals to JSON_ERROR_NONE something odd happens
16:20
It says content type is not application/json, but when I print_r the string directly before the decode it comes out as: {"uuids":["b919fc519884364ff163a5e818037aa8"]}
which is json.. lol.. I've tried using trim and/or addslashes but it does not help
don't use print_r, use var_dump...
@ircmaxell why is that?
@GregAgnew that JSON is okay
@teresko poolposition?
var_dump for those same lines prints: int(0) and int(1)
16:23
@Karem , dunno , think of something
@GregAgnew if it prints 1 it does mean that error occured
a var_dump error you mean?
ok done
try var_dump(json_last_error() === JSON_ERROR_DEPTH);
$x = {"uuids":["b919fc519884364ff163a5e818037aa8"]}
var_dump($x)

Prints: int(0).


I'll try that
16:25
Ehh
It's not JavaScript, you must keep JSON in string
Although x is not being statically set to that, the json comes from couchDB
@ircmaxell do you use xdebug ?
yeah that was just a typo here, thats not from my code, just to explain whats happening
wait, that is stupid question.
var_dump() is even styled with xdebug.
@Robik it returned false
16:27
var_dump of your JSON returned 0?
yes 'int(0)' exactly
which seems wrong to me.. lol..
Why are you trying to json_decode null then?
.. I'm not..
Okay so heres what happens:
Show the code that gains JSON
$uuid = curl call to couch db, returns a json string.
print_r(json_decode($uuid), true) prints just the json string (not a decoded assosiative array)
var_dump($uuid) prints 'int(0)'
16:30
@GregAgnew var_dump shows type, and quotes strings so you can see things like preceeding and trailing spaces, etc)
@OmeidHerat yes
lolz
I am off, have a good time everyone :D
Later @OmeidHerat
16:47
Hello all, I know this is not the correct room to ask but I really need someones help with an issue I am having so I can choose what route to take with my project.

It relates to Castle/Windsor on C# with WebForms. If anyone can help I would appreciate it.
@teresko Catchable fatal error: Argument 1 passed to Users::assign() must be an array, boolean given

I have double checked and it is a array
I know, there's no one online in it :(
:(
@Karem , did you do var_dump() on that variable before you pass it to the function ?
16:51
Yes and i am getting the results, i have also done var_dump inside the function assign() before the foreach and i get the right array
array
  'id' => string '116' (length=3)
  'firstname' => string 'Kath' (length=4)
  'lastname' => string 'Hansson' (length=7)
  'sex' => string 'female' (length=6)
can you show the lines which throw this error ?
public function assign( array $data )
Even if it throws error on this line i can still var_dump the $data inside assign, before the foreach
and get a array
this is.. :S
17:08
no , i meant the part where are you using that method
not where you are defining it
$this->assign( $this->_fetch() ); ?
	public function get_fullname()
	{
		if ( $this->_fullname === NULL )
		{
			$this->assign( $this->_fetch() );
		}
		return $this->_fullname;
	}
$newuser = new Users($connect, $uid);
echo $newuser->get_fullname();
and how does the _fetch() method look ?
	private function _fetch(){
	 $query = $this->_connect->prepare("SELECT id, firstname, lastname, sex, bostadsort, user_level FROM users WHERE id =:id");
	 $query->bindValue(":id", $this->_userid);
	 $query->execute();
	 $row = $query->fetch( PDO::FETCH_ASSOC );

	 return $row;
}
@Karem and was there a line number for this error ?
the quickest way would be to replace public function assign( array $array ) with public function assign( $array )
i tried that too
17:14
though i still dont get where did that error come from
then i get
no error checking
i get the error on the public function assign( array $array )
i checked everywhere all seems fine
what does pdo_stmt::fetch return when there are no records...?
there is records
17:15
"The return value of this function on success depends on the fetch type. In all cases, FALSE is returned on failure. "
> The return value of this function on success depends on the fetch type. In all cases, FALSE is returned on failure.
a boolean
and is a boolean an array?
no no but it do return a array ???
if they query fails, you'll get a fatal error for an invalid argument
17:17
private function _fetch(){
$query = $this->_connect->prepare("SELECT id, firstname, lastname, sex, bostadsort, user_level AS 'isadmin' FROM users WHERE id =:id");
$query->bindValue(":id", $this->_userid);
$query->execute();
$row = $query->fetch( PDO::FETCH_ASSOC );
echo var_dump($row);
}
the var dump returns array
posted on August 10, 2011 by Marcus Bointon

There's a really horrible bug (though they won't call it that!) in Apache's mod_rewrite that means that urlencoded inputs in rewrites get unescaped in their transformation to output patterns. The bug actually remains unfixed, though a workaround first appeared in Apache 2.2.12 (which wasn't all that long ago). Put it like this: if you're not using the [B] flag in your mod_rewrite rules, yo

try var_dump( $query->errorInfo() ); before return $row;
ok i can try check for rows before i make the fetch
ok
array
0 => string '00000' (length=5)
1 => null
2 => null
@Karem could you manage to recreate that error in codepad.viper-7.com ?
well... fck .. you cannot
its an sql thing
damn
hmm
17:21
what was the rror you got if yo uremoved the type-hinting in the assign() method
?
invalid argument supplied for foreach
ok , jsut pastbin the whole thing
i have run out of blind guesses
Hey guys
what's up?
ok
it wont even output get_fullname() anymore
I have quite the discussive question
which doesn't really fill in with the SO questioning protocols
so I figured I'd ask here
17:26
you have messed up something , @Karem
pastebin
I currently have phpDesigner, which is nice.
but I want to try and improve
do you have a (very) good IDE for PHP?
what qualifies as very good?
NetBeans is nice.
in more specificity, how would you recommend Eclipse?
very good = easy navigation between files and projects
configurable auto-complete
17:28
mmm id be interested in this answer if theres a mac version too
PHP doc support
@abarrington seeing as I don't really have Mac, I don't really need it :P
i use a text editor that has different language highlighting, but id love a project manager too
@abarrington that too, can deal with PHP + HTML + CSS + JAVASCRIPT on the same page
free would be a plus
@abarrington yes but not a limitation if it isn't
17:32
@teresko it does output id(); and firstname() but not fullname
ofcourse!!
that is because the full name is not set
yeah lol
as for that error
did you make sure that it comes from $userprofile == 0 bunch ?
why cannot you just load all the data at the same time ?
I can.. i thought maybe unnessecary at some places..
but yea i dont matter actually its just one query extra..
or what am i saying lol i can make them into one query
yeah , but the way you fetch data in different ways on both brunches
17:37
yes i make them in one query and then fetch and return
yeah
if nothing else , it will remove code duplication
can someone tell what passing an optional parameter would look like in this REST api code for php? I know how to pass the url and such but cant figure out how to pass timeout and statuscallback/optional parameters...
<?php // Include the Twilio PHP library
require 'Services/Twilio.php';
// Twilio REST API version
$version = "2010-04-01";
// Set our Account SID and AuthToken
$sid = 'AC123';
$token = 'abcd';
// A phone number you have previously validated with Twilio
$phonenumber = '4151234567';
// Instantiate a new Twilio Rest Client
$client = new Services_Twilio($sid, $token, $version);
try {
// Initiate a new outbound call
$call = $client?>account->calls->create(
$phonenumber, // The number of the phone initiating the call
@teresko ohh it works !!!
when i made them to one query,
$query = $this->_connect->prepare("
SELECT up.birthday, up.photo_thumb AS 'avatar',
u.id, u.firstname, u.lastname, u.sex, u.bostadsort, u.user_level AS 'isadmin', u.lastname AS 'fullname' FROM users u
INNER JOIN users_profile up ON (up.uID = u.id)
WHERE u.id =:id");
i think it was because in soecond brunch you fetched to data no as associative array , but as object
ahh
Thank you for your help and patience..
think of it as mandatory
Yes hehe :) thanks
will have some dinner now.. good evening everyone
help
:P
me too :D
17:47
does anyone frequently use __set and __get when they do OO in php? I like the idea of creating methods on the fly like that without explicit declaration. But are their disadvantages? Reason why I ask is because some of these magic methods cause unexpected behavior.
If you want to use __set and __get methods for encapsulation, then just make them public
you never experienced problems wiht this?
this works well active record libraries in php, such as doctrine?
There are two problems. First, the properties accessed through the magic methods won't appear in your IDE.
Second, you get a function call overhead with every property access that ends up hitting the magic method.
If you can live with these, then go ahead.
the second I dont mind
hi all, i'm trying to get to grips with prepared statements. I have the following code:
$stmt = $db->prepare("select * from product where id=?");
$stmt->bind_param("s", $_GET['id']);

if($stmt->execute()){
echo $stmt->num_rows;
if($stmt->num_rows==1){
$aPrds=$stmt->fetch_array(MYSQLI_ASSOC);
}else{
echo "error - no prds or more than 1 found";
}
}else{
echo "invalid sql";
}
17:56
can you expand on the first point?
echo $stmt->num_rows; keeps returning 0
@JohnMerlino , i would say that activerecord is a pretty bad way of doing things
o would recommend for you to use DataMapper pattern instead
@Dino That's because that property does not exist.
@Dino Here are the PDOStatement docs. You probably want to use the rowCount method.
Anything about my question from before?
Oh, wait
You're using mysqli, aren't you?
17:59
i'm using mysqli
yep
@Dino It will
Ah, I forgot how much I hate mysqli. num_rows won't populate until you actually fetch the result set.
php.net/manual/en/mysqli-stmt.num-rows.php you need to call $stmt->store_result() prior to the num_rows check
18:01
oh okay, looking at it now. thanks @ircmaxell and @Charles
It's worth noting that this caveat takes up the majority of the words on that page. In the future, you may wish to consult the documentation earlier. :)
@Charles thanks
So one of the VPS providers I'm using is down.
Apparently their Dallas data center lost power.
@Charles I dont see how this is an issue "the properties accessed through the magic methods won't appear in your IDE"
18:07
Normally I'd ask how a data center loses power, but, well, considering that I've seen them freaking catch fire...
is that not the whole purpose of encapsulation?
... the real infuriating problem is that they have a twitter account that they can't access, but their reps are using their own (official) accounts... and none of the idiots whining to their main account is bothering to, say, search around the twitterverse first to see what's up.
So instead of useful status messages, I'm getting irate morons whining.
</rant>
@Charles Not my dallas DC that I can see
:-D
@JohnMerlino It's the intent of encapsulation, sure, but PHP screws it up.
@ircmaxell hatechu
@JohnMerlino The main problem is that PHP exposes only a single set of methods for all of the properties, combined.
This means that the IDE has no way to determine which of the properties can actually be accessed from outside of the private scope.
So it can't offer autocompletion or hinting.
:-P
@Charles unless you use magic typehinting
18:12
@ircmaxell How? By declaring it @public in the phpdoc?
(The IDE I use doesn't grok that, alas...)
you mean that you wont be able to declare some as private, public, and others as protected by using the magic method? But so what? If you want it to be private or protected, then you explicitly delcatre it as such, and assume the rest as public.
Personally, I'm a fan of the getter/setter RFC.
@JohnMerlino You have to either manually hardcode into the getter, or use reflection
and regarding type hinting, you manually declare those as well
I dont see this as a flaw
I would assume they created it for generic method calls
18:14
They created it because they didn't have any clue what they were doing.
There are two big cases for the magic set/get methods.
The first is creating magic properties at call-time. This is a pretty interesting and possibly useful concept.
The second is the idiotic notion that creating a single entry point for all getters and setters for normally private/protected properties was in any way sane.
I rarely if ever use __get/__set/__call/__callStatic... Very rarely
It was a stupid idea then, it's a sutpid idea now. They shouldn't have made private/protected properties fall back to the magic methods.
mainly because they cannot be enforced by interfaces. I'd much rather see hard getters/setters, since they can be specified
18:18
hi anyone experienced with using oauth
The only time I've ever used them is when playing around with the fun SPL bits like ArrayAccess.
@Charles I like the concept for a "catchall fallback", but only if there's a better way like that RFC indicates
@lovesh Yes. What's up?
@ircmaxell Agreed, because the better way is going to be better for the cases for which it is better. </tautology>
@Charles well i dont have a domain name so i registered it with gogle for my localhost
@Charles I've used them in a data storage API, that used properties as it's storage mechanism (similar to stdclass that's persistent)
18:20
let's say if you subscribe to notion that all porperties should be private and only accessible via a method, then wont you have a ton of setter and getters which becomes difficult to read? What other option is there aside from those two magic methods?
@ircmaxell My last use of them was while poking around with the idea of replacing the GPC superglobals with objects. It ended up being a bad idea. They "fixed" array_key_exists a while ago such that it no longer works with properties on objects, even if they're ArrayObjects. I hate PHP...
@JohnMerlino I'd say that this particular notion is out of step with the way PHP generally operates and that you shouldn't code Java in PHP.
If your Most Holy Properties are so fragile that they can't even be looked at from the outside, your program is broken.
Unless you're building this code for external, third-party use, that is, and want to enforce a well-documented API...
@Charles i dont think using it with localhost is a good idea because google would never be able to redirect to my url because of dns error right?
Though in that case, you'd be better off building an accessor for each property on it's own.
@lovesh Are you implementing a client or a server? One needs outside access, one doesn't.
user1385191
I've read a fair amount on topic this morning, and I'm wondering if there's an agreeable method for password hashing. I see so many different algorithms being tossed about, and I'm at a loss to decide on which one.
@MattMcDonald My gods, you have no idea the grenade you just tossed in the room. Run while you still can!
18:24
a client
@Charles LOL
So no one in here uses __set or __get then I take it
@lovesh A client will send a user to the server. The server will log them in, then send them back to the client with a token. The client then needs to ask the server if the token is OK. The server doesn't need to access the client. You should be OK here.
and what if its a server app then i need a domain name
@MattMcDonald Much of the world seems to agree that bcrypt with a high number of rounds is an agreeable way. There are other alternatives, but they all involve a high number of rounds.
@lovesh Not really a domain name as much as some way to access it from the outside world. Dyndns, for example.
@JohnMerlino Not really, because they are a horrible implementation.
user1385191
18:28
is bcrypt built-in, or do I need to outsource it?
@MattMcDonald You'd be better off using a third-party library. phpass is one such library, though it's kinda prehistoric.
I'm sure @ircmaxell will pipe up any second now... ;)
@edorian y0
user1385191
yes, I looked at his crypto lib
What now?
@MattMcDonald as of 5.3, it's built in
but you need to setup the salt properly
user1385191
perfect
18:31
phpass does that (as well as mine)
@Charles Someones, not often, i too wish for properties. Usually i then just type out the props and press "autogenerate getters and setters", delete the unneeded setters and never look back.
It's one of the last "but we are nooooot javaaaa" points that php has left. I don't think thats going to change in the next view years
And every workaround that the php world offers is (from my experience) more painful than just writing the stuff out
@edorian Exactly.
user1385191
I'll give your lib a spin
18:34
I almost want to brush up on my C and see if I can submit a patch for the getter/setter RFC...
I have a script that queries the DB and writes an excel file, which may take a long long time. Is there a better option than using something like ini_set("max_execution_time","600"); ?
C-Skills seem to be the least needed skill to get a non trivial feature into the PHP-Core
@edorian While this is very true, having a patch is frequently helpful.
@MattMcDonald github.com/ircmaxell/PHP-CryptLib/blob/master/lib/CryptLib/… Include that file, and then do this:
@Incognito ini_set("max_execution_time", 0); ? :) --- More seriously: If what you are doing takes 5 minutes and you are OK with it taking so long: All well, good choice
18:37
$cryptLib = new \CryptLib\CryptLib;
$hash = $cryptLib->createPasswordHash($password);

and

if ($cryptLib->verifyPasswordHash($hash, $password)) { //valid
it defaults to bcrypt (blowfish)
@Charles Yes, it would definitly get the needed discussion rolling. That is true
@edorian set_time_limit(0);
@edorian It's actually legacy stuff I've encountered left by someone before me. I'm making sure I don't explode anything by removing it. The script was written when the hardware was slower, I've since made a lot of improvements to the speed of the script so it all runs under 60 seconds.
It was implemented inside of a foreach loop.
It's basically a scheduled task that runs each month at midnight or something.
18:39
@ircmaxell there is more than one way of achieving the exact same result in PHP?! Mind=Blown ;)
They aren't even named similarly, my gods.
I hate PHP.
@edorian :-P
It's not exactly the same here if I'm honest, but i didn't want to pass on that joke
of course
@Incognito Well then it depends on your php.ini setting
@Incognito but there is no harm in leaving it in (imho). If you take it out make sure your php.ini configuration doesn't limit the script run to 5 seconds or something strange like that that might bite you
@Charles But tbh. that rfc is lacking imho
writing "property Weight" is inferior to setWeight($kilogramms); and i want my code to express that not my docs
But well, if it works for C# I just might be wrong here or have misunderstood something
18:45
@edorian With that process, you have to call $foo->setWeight($bar) instead of saying $foo->Weight = $bar
Alright, thanks @edorian
It's just taking the function call out of the process.
And well, you have something like properties now with stateful-traits .. maybe? .. thinking
Eh, kinda, but you still have to make a function call.
Oh right
Thanks.. that kinda went over my head .. long annoying day
2
Q: Mock MySQL DB for PHPUnit

MrBI'm trying to build unit tests for my Yii project. Problem: MySQL database. I don't want to have to run a MySQL database every time I run the tests as it is slow, unreliable, maybe some team members don't have it set up, etc. There seems to be a way to do a SQLite DB in memory and use that, bu...

Opinions? I don't see that working. (Unit-Testing against SQLite, deploying against MySql). Maybe if you have good integration tests.. but i just don't see that working out. Imho you want to make sure your database interactions really work against your database.
I know it's kind of a boring subject for most people.. but maybe someone has more experience with this than i do
18:58
TBH, it's always been the biggest mental disconnect I have when doing testing.
I "know" that when doing unit testing, I'm trying to test only a specific small bit of code.
However, I've rarely found bits of code that don't rely on other bits of code.

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