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00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

16:27
hello, I'm having problems trying to format the date returned by an sql query. it is stored in sql as a timestamp data type but when I try to use either the php or the sql command I get errors. I can post my code if someone can help me.
Well, post it and we'll see what we can do.
I tried $out=DATE_FORMAT($row["thedate"],"%a %e, %b %Y %r"); is what I tried on sql and $out=date("D d, M Y h:i a", ($row["thedate"]); first one gave me an error that I gave it a string not a date the 2nd one gave me the epoch time. and that's not the date that is in the taple.
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM `testdata`';
$result = mysql_query($sql);
while($row = mysql_fetch_array($result))
{
$out=DATE_FORMAT($row["thedate"],"%a %e, %b %Y %r");
echo $out."<br>";
}
is the whole block of code
date_format() accepts a DateTime object, which is why that one didn't work.
What does $row['thedate'] contain?
2011-08-11 15:30:28
date() accepts an integer timestamp, which is why the second didn't work as expected :)
If you do new \DateTime($row['thedate']); then you'll have an object that you can use with date_format()
16:39
ahh I see thanks.
@user833567 yup. Let me know if that gives you trouble.
@rickchristie I am changing all my passwords to "correct horse battery staple" RIGHT NOW!
there's even a generator for that, preshing.com/20110811/xkcd-password-generator
and for a more academic article on it: baekdal.com/tips/password-security-usability
It's correct, but most people are taking the wrong lesson from it
and it's correct for the wrong reason
16:47
interesting comic there. I am curios as to why you say it's correct for the wrong reason.
He never touches on how easy a password is for a HUMAN to guess.
(that wasn't an answer, just an observation)
if someone knows your password scheme, it's probably easier for them to guess
yea that's what I was thinking
Our Wifi Password is "WelcomeToCompanyHaveANiceStay"
@rickchristie Hi :)
@edorian - hello :)
16:55
How are you
fine, and you?
a little stressed out; All in all fine
I got an error from the code. "Warning: date() expects parameter 2 to be long, object given" I used $out=date("D d, M Y h:i a",new DateTime($row["thedate"]));
22 mins ago, by Problematic
date() accepts an integer timestamp, which is why the second didn't work as expected :)
16:59
date() accepts a timestamp (number of seconds since the start of the *nix epoch).
21 mins ago, by Problematic
If you do new \DateTime($row['thedate']); then you'll have an object that you can use with date_format()
or $date = new DateTime($row["thedate"]); $out = $date->format("D d, M Y h:i a"); for that matter
Was trying not to throw too many changes into this mix, but yes, that's the way I'd go :)
or $out = date_create($row['thedate'])->format('D d, M Y h:i a');
thanks edorian that finally worked. and thanks for helping me problematic
@ircmaxell Did you just advice static functions to create value objects? (Look ma, I'm ignore the context completly)
17:04
@edorian No, it's not a static function :-P
And yes, I did :-D
@Problematic The entropy calculation is based on character guessing. If you run a dictionary attack against it, the entropy will be MUCH lower. Example: it says there are 2^44 guesses (on average) needed to guess that password. But if I accept a dictionary of 20,000 words (average for english speakers), there are 2^57 possible combinations. So that password has about 2^57 possible 4 word combinations. BUT the entropy provided is FAR lower than 2^57, because of statistical limitations.
so while there are only 2^57 possible combinations, the entropy provided is likely much less than 2^44
I'll have to bookmark that one for later. Cheers :)
17:51
Hey guys
anyone here has some experience with GitHub?
What's the question?
If I store my (public) code there
can I view it in action? and write down my notes??
a PHP application for instance
Define "view it in action"?
is it possible for me to see the result of my code and not just the source?
<?php echo "Hello World!" ?>
that's the source code
Github won't execute your project, no.
17:53
in action would be seeing 'Hello World' in the output window
shame :(, oh well
You can leave comments on the source code of your commits, though.
but I'll still have to manage 2 copies of my project
one local or on any other development environment, and one on
Yes, I suppose that's true.
which kinda renders github useless...
Well, github isn't really meant to be a deployment platform.
17:58
since the point of all the history tools and collaboration is to keep one project and keep track of the revisions, and not to have multiple revisions
so what's github's point?
develop, get to a complete version and then upload it there? :x
To store code and allow collaborative development.
@RikudoSennin Huh?
it's only "one" copy, that's what version control is for
@ircmaxell yes, but seeing as I can't really develop there (since I can't test my code), it kinda renders it useless.
Develop locally, push up to github to share it, get help with it, show it off...
When others expand on your work, pull it back down and fold it into your codebase.
It's not any more useless than having a master repository and developer repositories with any other VCS
18:06
@Problematic Forget sharing. Push to git as your version control (so you can revert mistakes, etc)
Well, yeah, but you can do that locally too :)
I always saw the strong suit of Github as the social aspect that storing your code there allows.
Sure, but the primary task is version control
the social aspect is a very good side-effect
37
A: Fundamental difference between Hashing and Encryption algorithms

ircmaxellWell, you could look it up in Wikipedia... But since you want an explanation, I'll do my best here: Hash Functions They provide a mapping between an arbitrary length input, and a (usually) fixed length (or smaller length) output. It can be anything from a simple crc32, to a full blown cryptog...

Only +3 away
18:34
Evening.
i love github because it allows any machine to easily become my development machine git clone [email protected]:cspray without github moving to my new computer for school would have been much more of a nightmare
@CharlesSprayberry s/github/version control/g
fair enough...i just prefer git :P
My hosting has SVN, but I never got it to work :(
it boiled down to git or mercurial for me and i like git's branching
18:56
(meta) do i have to open a new tab to join another room?
user1385191
today, I've learned two things:
user1385191
1. stop using require_once and include_once for templating
user1385191
2. wordwrap is awesome
@MattMcDonald you sound scarry
@MattMcDonald when is wordwrap awesome? in nano i just hate it
user1385191
I used it to format a long string of content
user1385191
19:00
so instead of <p>textx100000000000000</p> it was <p>text line 72 chars wide \n\t\t\t text, etc, etc</p>
oh, wordwrap in the produced result, that may be awsome, just keep it away from the code i write :-)
@MattMcDonald why?
user1385191
point one or two?
Point 1
user1385191
I got bit because I'm reusing templates
19:09
Errr, that's what I'm doing right now :S
include_once("header.php") and then the same for footer :S
@Fallion works fine for header and footer, as you only wants them "once", but i think matts problem was he used it on a template he needed twise
user1385191
yeah, turned out I didn't need it twice in that particular instance. I spent 20-30 minutes figuring out why in the world my body tag wouldn't echo.
@MattMcDonald , you should avoid using require_once/include_once in general
user1385191
yeah, seems inflexible
What to use instead?
19:15
require and include
what are the differences?
.. and i thought the hint was in the name
Yeah, but how does it prevent the same problem?
what problem ?
@MattMcDonald . my reasons are mostly based on issues with opcode cache
Nevermind, my mind is racing and I'm not sure I even know at this point.
19:19
include_once("header.php") << takes me back to when i first started to learn php
@teresko I started not too long ago.
user1385191
ha, I'm just getting past string replacement
19:35
re: PHP templating engines:
Whether you use Twig or not, he raises some interesting points.
@Problematic , keep in mind that this comes from person who made the abomination known as Symfony 1.x
@teresko We all have to start somewhere :)
start ?
you will notice how in the benchmarks of the article there are no "pure php template" row
19:48
Well, he addresses his reasons for that early in the article.
As in, first paragraph early.
that is bullshit
he is making assumptions and backing them up with bad code
user1385191
don't you love it when "beauty" and "elegance" get thrown around when you compare a function call against the code that would be in that function?
> PHP doesn't support many features modern template languages should have nowadays
.. but a templating language written in php does ?!
Well, why not?
i thought that a templating language B , which is written in language A will have less features , because B is a subset of A
19:56
PHP doesn't support annotations, but you can write a parser to approximate them in PHP.
user1385191
love this part:
user1385191
> Of course, you can create your own function to make it shorter, but that's not my point
what would be "annotations" ?
you mean like comments
what has this to do with templates ?!?
19:59
Nothing. It has to do with feature B, written in language A, possessing features that language A does not.
@MattMcDonald , it reminds me about quote from his book , about symfony :
> Surprisingly, you will find very few constants in symfony. This is because constants have a major drawback in PHP: you can’t change their value once they are defined.
user1385191
...
user1385191
reminds me of john resig complaining to google that chrome didn't enumerate object properties in order
does that author just not understand the concept of constants?
or that they can in fact be redefined?
@CharlesSprayberry Constants are not really useful in most instances in a dynamic language
20:10
i'm not saying they are. i use only a few in my own projects, mostly for directory info. but saying that a constant in <language> is a drawback because you can't redefine it seems to entirely miss the point of constants imo
if you are redefining a constant, regardless of whether or not it is useful or correct, it is not a constant. it is a variable. if you're even wanting to redefine a constant you're probably doing something wrong and should look at your app...again imho
I'm not sure that he's really arguing for redefining constants as much as flexibility.
ok, again. that argument is also moot as PHP allows you to redefine a constant if you so desire
fair enough
But it's bad practice D:
@CharlesSprayberry Oh, yes, agree 100%
20:18
I'm not saying it is good practice. But, this guy is trying to say that Symfony doesn't use constants because you can't redefine them? That is retarded and not factual
Any anyway, isn't the only way to redefine them through runkit, or am I missing something?
@CharlesSprayberry the author is Fabien Potencier
it was @teresko comment about the symfony book
thank you teresko
anyone know what search function exists that I can use to get the names in between p* *p like so "
i mean the book author
20:23
p* Bob,John,Kim *p
@teresko yea, i figured as much :P
what search function would i use to get the names in between p* kim, john, Chris *p
@JeffHodge preg_match() ?
sounds like a job for regex @JeffHodge
20:27
ahhhhh
i wish there would be something easier, i could write a method.....
3 things web developers think that they dont need to learn : javascript , sql and regular expressions
regex works i guess.....I havent worked with that stuff in forever...,I want it to fetch any string in between the tags p* *p
i am using regex for phone number and name checking..
but doesnt regex check for formatting?
i need to fetch the strings not check formatting
user1385191
do you just want a substring inside "p*...*p"?
yeah
just the names, then ill explode them with "," delimiter to get the names into an array
user1385191
is the string literally like that?
user1385191
20:31
or is the asterisk code for any character?
yeah
its litreally like that
p*([^*p]+)*p
user1385191
"\bp\*\s(.)+?\s\*p\b"
With escaping on the asterisks that didn't come through, natch.
user1385191
why is that showing up improperly?
20:35
o_0
"\bp*\s(.)+?\s*p\b"
is that it?
Oops, sec... mine won't match names with p :)
user1385191
SO's chat was stripping my backslashes
user1385191
"\bp\*\s?(.)+?\s?\*p\b"
user1385191
word boundaries (\b) mean you're grabbing a whole word, not part of one
user1385191
20:39
<?php
$var="p* Bob,Kim,Jen *p";

echo ereg("\bp\*\s(.)+?\s\*p\b", $var);
?>
Don't use ereg()
Use preg_match() instead
@Problematic If at first you don't succeed, you're using too much regex
user1385191
:)
Heh. Turns out.
@JeffHodge , you really are quite bad at this whole php thing
20:43
thats because im not a web developer, >_> i prefer java and C# and C
user1385191
make sure you retrieve the capturing group
java does have pcre like regex support too... java.lang.String.matches(pattern)
pcre == preg_match
$subject="p* Bob,Kim,Jen *p";

$pattern="\bp\*\s(.)+?\s\*p\b";

preg_match($pattern, $subject, $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, 3);
print_r($matches);
ive never used preg_match before but thats my try :)
the error i get is Delimiter must not be alphanumeric or backslash in
Try changing \b to /b
@JeffHodge preg_match is almost like java.lang.String.matches() - you just have to wrap your pattern inside delimiters - for example #\w+#
user1385191
20:47
oh, that's my fault
user1385191
"/\bp\*\s?(.)+?\s?\*p\b/"
err, /\b
Not on my A game today.
new error :P Compilation failed: nothing to repeat at offset 12 in
user1385191
needs to be wrapped in forward slashes to be a regex literal
this reminds me about : blog.aegisub.org/2008/12/… "If programming languages were religions..."
20:48
@JeffHodge what is that regex supposed to match? (what are you trying to do?)
im trying to get the strings in between p* *p
so p* Kim,Jim,John *p
@teresko perl would be voodoo :-D
yes , that's what article says
@JeffHodge including that whitespace?
yeah
including the white sapce
@teresko im going to die laughing from that blog :P
20:52
@JeffHodge
Microsoft Windows [Verze 6.1.7601]
Copyright (c) 2009 Microsoft Corporation. Všechna práva vyhrazena.

C:\Users\User>php -r "preg_match('#p\*(.*?)\*p#siu', 'p* Kim,Jim,John *p', $matches); print_r($matches)";
Array
(
    [0] => p* Kim,Jim,John *p
    [1] =>  Kim,Jim,John
)
i agree with python, c++ is a bit overkill there
@JeffHodge there you go
what kind of compiler are you using?
@JeffHodge
C:\Users\User>php -r "echo preg_replace('#p\*(.*?)\*p#siu', '$1', 'p* Kim,Jim,John *p');"
 Kim,Jim,John
@JeffHodge if you don't want array but just that string
@KamilTomšík , btw , you might like application named Console2
20:55
no no
yeah string is fine too
@teresko mm, interesting thx for that but I don't know - cmd.exe is weird to use but I got used to it...
@JeffHodge what of compiler for what?
console2 + gnu tools = usable windows shell
@teresko I don't agree on this one - if I really wanted unix shell I'd go for cygwin it works quite good - I'm just quite happy without powerful shell
naah .. gnu tools are there for me to solve my "ls" habbit
shell allows me to do very basic stuff and scripting language can do the rest.
@teresko powershell understands ls too
I just don't like it
21:00
didnt know
@teresko btw: depending on how much you're used to ls, you might be okay with ls.bat :) (placed somewhere available from PATH)
true
 
2 hours later…
23:28
anyone have criticisms with this piece of code in terms of the php5 way of querying:
$a = $_POST['a'];
$b = trim($_POST['b']);

if(!$a || !$b){
echo "no info entered";
exit;
}

if(!get_magic_quotes_gpc()){
$a = addslashes($a);
$b = addslashes($b);
}


@ $db = new mysqli('localhost', 'root', 'root123', 'law');

if(mysqli_connect_errno()){
echo "Error connecting to database";
exit;
}

$query = "select * from users where " . $a . "like '%" . $b . "%'";

$result = $db->query($query);

$num_results = $result->num_rows;

echo "<p>Number of users found: " . $num_results . "</p>";


for($i = 0; $i < $num_results; $i++){
2 messages moved from JavaScript
what could be better then spaghetti of html, sql and php
jeez
why people insist on creating such a mess in the code ?!
This is just for a small project
if you had a project that only included a few php files and few queries, would this be ok?
or would someone look at this and still say this is terrible implementation?
23:56
speaking of mess in the code, I've got a project that's getting larger and larger. Does it make sense to rewrite handling of user accounts to utilize OOP? Functions are typical.. registration, confirmation, uploads etc.
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