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00:03
Hmm, is there a "safe" unlink(), i.e. don't complain if the file doesn't exist? :)
@Jack @unlink
:)
@PeeHaa lol
00:21
I have a quick question: are 'am/pm' string comparisons liable? This works in my code: $today->format('g:i a') >= '4:00 pm', but would it be better to get the military hour instead or is this perfectly acceptable?
@JohnSmith why do you need to format first before comparing? it's easier to compare timestamps, right?
is there another way to get PHP master snaps other than using Github which always complains about some compiler dependencies. This bug bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=65816 doesn't look like it's being fixed anytime soon.
@reikyoushin my answer: code-readability?
im not sure how the others do it, but i compute dates as timestamps or sql date type.. then format them only when printing them..
@JohnSmith you can add comments for that, no?
this date is constant
I set this date in the code
00:26
btw, i'm no PHP Pro so still ask them.. that's just how I do it now. I'd be interested on how they do it too..
it's fine, I appreciate any help, since most of this chat seems afk
I guess I'll just use $today->('G') > 16 wondering whether it's safe to compare string dates
FOREVER
@JohnSmith if the question is if it is safe.. i think it would be. i can't find (yet) of any way that would hurt in that specific example
but I think what your saying is that this wouldn't work in other languages
so it's not very "standard"
thanks!
and my orm starts to fv*k up. T-T geez! three levels of relation means 3 loops just to display? d*mn!t i will just use joins instead. pffft
@Danack T-T my eyes are bleeding already given i only read the summary part.
@reikyoushin That's ORM for you.
@Danack so tldr version is "ORM Sucks"?
@reikyoushin Yes, though for some very specific problems (particularly when you don't give a shit how the data is stored) they are useful.
But seeing as most web applications are basically all about the data stored in the DB, then they're just a bad idea imho.
doing joins mean i only need one loop. sticking with relations means i end up having to do 3. T-T
02:07
@reikyoushin You should read the rest of the article - orms get worse.
its as if i have Object1->Object2->object3
but i need obj2 to be owned by object1, where object3.is_active = 1
gaaah!
lots of overhead. pffft
@Danack this sucks..
@reikyoushin Is there any reason why you're writing your own rather than using Doctrine?
@Danack not mine.. its eloquent.
sucks, i know. >.<
@reikyoushin insert nope gif here
02:23
@Danack http://www.funelf.net/photos/Nope!.jpg
How would you go about tracking "consecutive logins"? I know I'd have to setup a field in the database -- but would it be something like -- login { 1. grab timestamp of last login 2. check timestamp if logged in "today" 3. increment new field if last timestamp was not "today"?
If I run ls *.jpg *.blah I get the error ls: cannot access *.blah: No such file or directory if an extension matching it does not exist. Is there any way to suppress that message if it finds no matches?
is the return value the same if there are matches or not?
with all the switches on ls im supprised there isnt a silent option that would disable that.
02:39
@Orangepill no, if it finds matches it returns the filenames that match, otherwise if one of those extensions does not match it errors instead.
@Orangepill yeah I agree, and I can't use > /dev/null 2>&1 either since the output I want to get will even be suppressed.
@crypticツ ls *.jpg *.blah 2> idgafAboutErrors.txt
You can just pipe errors.
@Danack let me try that
hurrah! people are awake again. ^_^
@reikyoushin most people are, but just lurking in chat
good "day segment name as determined by your relative angular position to the sun"
is that a good locatioon agnostic greeting?
02:45
@Orangepill that would cause problems with astronauts on the ISS
no they just get to have more mornings then we do :-)
they get to have 16 mornings 1/16 of the length of us earthbound jokers :-)
@Danack thanks, that works! =o)
flex
@Orangepill good ("day"+- GMT_DIFFERENCE)!
03:03
same problem that cryptic pointed out.
some smartass always has to come up with a corner case that makes the logic fall down.
haha. oh well, i'm about to go. bye guys!
I'm seriously wondering where people are getting these kinds of questions stackoverflow.com/questions/19473462/…
smh
@reikyoushin good......ummmm... whatever
Does that mean "close vote please" by chance?
I'm still new to SO ;P
03:11
@OraBrush see to the right of chat, where it says cv-pls all the info is there. "Meaning/Docs"
Ah okay, thanks!
Got it, so can a person w/o close vote privilege use them? (I know you can but should they?)
@OraBrush yeah, anyone can post it in chat
OK, good to know. Thanks :)
03:31
sorry everyone, primary backlog is down. Server has become unresponsive, VPS host is looking into it right now, so hopefully should be back up soon. Until then use mirror.
Jay
Jay
sup
goodnite everybuddy =o)
03:59
good morning friends...
04:50
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19474004/how-to-send-sms-to-multiple-numbers-using-php
moanin
05:43
@bwoebi ah yeah perdir will be okay
morning all
mornin joe
this is an unreasonable time to be up on a sunday
agreed
6am your time?
05:53
so you're one of the cool kids still up on a saturday night ...
you're right about the "still up on a Saturday night" part
lol
all i can hear is the noise of mario collecting coins on mario world ... this is too much ...
or adult playin' mario -- nothing wrong with that :)
at 7 am ... there is a lot wrong with that :)
06:01
hryy guyz any pointers on how to get the list of tweets containing specific url
heyy*
yeah damn kids
twitter API only allows 6-7 day old tweets
06:11
gosh I am so sleepy
someone said on twitter they are "not sure" about expect
I wish you'd really focus on improving assert itself. However, I agree it might be problematic :/
Link to specific tweet?
if anyone votes no on this they are fucking being dicks .... you don't get to improve the speed of something by a factor of 26-52 times in the real world, it doesn't happen, assert is bloody awful this should replace it ... if I doesn't I'll be quite annoyed ...
we cannot improve assert
it is a function
I want this: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/expectations #php #rfc
if you're not sure, then you haven't read it properly ...
assert is 26-50 times slower to assert true than expect ...
there's no way to do that for a function, none ...
dunno how to post the replies to that ... but it was in a reply to that...
because it's so devastating assert cannot be used, it cannot be used just for complex assertion which we would normally do in C ... expect is the implementation it should have been at the start, a high level language benefits massively from the ability to write self-debugging code, and switch off that debugging in it's entirety in production ...
/rant over ...
I didn't put a bunch of effort into this like nested classes, but I'm just getting a little bit annoyed with politics ... nobody in their right mind who knows what they are looking at could possibly be convinced that assertion is better than this ... but from past experience it seems a lot of the people with the power to vote aren't in their right mind ...
06:35
hi @JoeWatkins
Are you there?
I need your help about PHP joomla
hi @ds
@DS.
don't ping strangers, it's annoying ... I don't know anything about joomla
do you know joomla?
if you ask and someone knows you'll get an answer ...
hi @jo
not very many of us in here this morning mind you ...
06:38
ok @JoeWatkins
I installed joomla on php then I getting error when run on machine.
if you know this error : Strict Standards: Non-static method GantryLoader::import() should not be called statically
you could probably fix the code pretty easy, if there's no references to $this in GantryLoader::import then use static modifier on method declaration and the error will go away on it's own without changing settings ...
ok thanks @joe
worth noting that shutting up the warnings doesn't actually fix the code, E_STRICT warnings are sometimes intrusive - ie. they change the behaviour of your application ...
I need to set E_STRICT in php.ini right?
unset E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE & ~E_STRICT
but it may not allow the code to run, just allow it to fail silently ...
06:44
you are absolutly right. thank you very much @JoeWatkins
@JoeWatkins I guess I'm not sure why assert can't be salvaged? I am perfectly fine with BC breaks, unlike most in internals ^^
just because of bc
you are absolutly right. thank you very much @JoeWatkins
I wanted to replace assert with this, this is an assertion api
but because the old implementation is already there, and crippled, there is no good way to replace it in a backward compatible way without crippling this implementation in the process ...
I wonder how many people would be in favor of breaking BC in this case.
I'm not sure how the rest of the community might vote, and I've missed some conversations on IRC.
06:49
I think I already explained it pretty well, nobody even wanted to discuss it as a replacement for assert
I really don't see the big deal ... there's even a benefit to breaking bc .... right now, anything out there using expect as a function or method name will be borked ...
but its not a battle I can win ... I'd rather it went in under the name "duck" than didn't go in at all, I don't much care what it is called ... but if the response from the people in charge is "no, we will not provide a way to write debuggable code 50 times faster" I'll be pretty disappointed in the whole idea of spending time contributing like this, prolly just stick to docs and my own projects ...
There are reasons I've stuck with very, very low hanging fruit ^^
Unlike your nested classes RFC, I will be voting yes on this one. It is a bit of a pain to have to add a new keyword that isn't assert, but oh well.
I don't get anything out of it though, I use doc bugs to distract me when I need thinking time .... everytime I open a file in PHP I see something I could improve ...
that's fair enough, nested/anons, that was ambitious, and I retracted nested before it went to the vote because I thought okay fair enough, I'm getting to understand what is acceptable ....
I'm sure that's the case. I am still figuring out a lot of how PHP works internally. It seems really nasty but perhaps that's just an uneducated perception.
06:55
but I don't see in any way how this shouldn't go in, it could go in under assert/expect/duck, but it should be available, users should have this, I want this in future ...
So I've just fixed some bugs, changed a few style inconsistencies, etc.
I'd really, really like to replace the entire SPL.
The only part of it that worked out reasonably well is the Iterator API, but it can be cumbersome at times.
The structures and exceptions are awful.
And there are so many edge-case bugs on the various array variants.
spl makes no sense
well
it depends what you are aiming for ...
to me, exceptions, iterators, all the stuff in spl doesn't belong externally, there is some pretty stupid ideas floating about, not ideas that any one person would have had, but compromises in the minds of many ...
this rule about not throwing exceptions from internals ...
I do not understand this
I think my latest work in progress will get accepted
the thought process of the collective mind is baffling, it went something like this:
our error handling is not good enough, we need to do something about it
-- implement exceptions here ---
right we have this better error managment
nobody can use the better error management designed to overcome the problem of poor error management
nobody, nobody ever, thinks like that ...
It's the first majorish change I have come up with that is fully backwards compatible (except for the names, of course).
07:00
what is it ?
It's rather unexciting to most developers, I'm sure: wiki.php.net/rfc/spl-improvements/exceptions
I as a reasonable human being can see that this makes perfect sense ...
I have other ideas for improvements to structures and exceptions but coming up with BC ones that don't compromise the added value is tough.
have you probed the idea of replacing spl in some distant version ?
07:03
how did that go ?
I have some support, namely NikiC, ircmaxell, salathe, Gordon.
And some others as well.
so that'd be then implemented in C at some point ?
In this comment - a guy that just doesn't get it:
@BenjaminGruenbaum you use a lot Angular and don't know that angular.min.js is smaller than jquery, don't know about Google libraries CDN also? If there are plenty of scenarios - give at least one example. — OZ_ 5 mins ago
are you able to implement it all in C ?
07:04
This is mostly an API testing period.
My skills in C are fine.
I just know very little about PHP's internal API and such.
Some parts will be tricky, such as using callbacks from PHP-land.
@LeviMorrison Ooh, nice! JS is getting real collections too. Using objects for maps is just so frustrating sometimes.
just asking, I'd help out with that when the time comes ...
the problem is though, how to change minds ...
Agreed.
So for now I am working on improving the API whenever I find something better.
say this was implemented as an extension, it's only as useful as spl is to the rest of php now ...
not much ...
I think it's more useful than the SPL by quite a bit, actually.
07:06
from an internals perspective I mean ... spl might be useful to the programmer, but not so much to us ... the problem is that it exists at all, that these concepts are not core to everything ...
It integrates various structures into a cohesive API.
oh yeah I don't mean that ... it's obviously better than SPL, what I mean is that the concepts in these libraries don't belong in a library at all ...
But being a core extension would get us that much closer ^^
(I've seen this project before, I forget why)
It comes up from time to time here in PHP chat.
07:08
yeah it would be a vast improvement ...
I have some things that it can improve still.
for those using SPL, but for us as internal developers, what out of it will we be able to use to further the features of PHP ... none, just like we can't use SPL, just like everyone complains when core throws exceptions ...
these ideas belong at the core, everything should build upon them, not next to them ...
I agree. Java has many faults but having a wimpy standard library is not one of them.
yeah, it's quite horrible to make the comparison ... but it is exactly the comparison I am making ...
They embraced a design and went with it.
Whereas PHP mostly doesn't embrace anything.
07:11
I don't love java, I spend as much time with it as I absolutely must ...
that's exactly the problem, php doesn't need a vision, or leader at all, they need a solid foundation ...
C++ also has a specific design that it follows for the most part.
It's a bit complex but works for them.
the people working on sun's java were not much more a team than we are, spread out working on their own little things, on their own ... but they build upon a solid foundation ...
A lot of the newer languages are very, very simple, so unlike C++, Java and PHP.
For instance, I could see someone like me rejecting the exceptions RFC because it might cause someone somewhere some headache and doesn't add that much value.
yeah, but we're not that ... we're not starting out, we have the whole internet bearing down on us, begging for things we point blankly refuse to provide ...
I'm also of the opinion that small, simple improvements are quite valuable.
For instance, not being able to use non-scalar keys in a foreach was a joke.
It's not a big deal to most, but for when it is needed it was so frustrating not to have it.
It did help me get some good API designs to work around it though ^^
07:17
it doesn't add that much value when you think about in the context of PHP, because people don't write debuggable code, because people don't care about testing, because although the frameworks have the loudest voices we don't pander to them ... people should write debuggable code, people should test their code, and we should provide every support to any project externally to further the developement of their ideas that's the brilliance of being open source, I can go anywhere an help ...
and should ...
every single individual will agree with that ...
but ask a thousand people a question and you'll get back 800 answers of complete nonsense, and be in a democracy and the compromises you come up with are just, sorry, fucking mental ...
was an rfc needed for that ??
non-scalars in foreach ?
it was wasn't it ?
Uh, I'm not quite anymore
Yes, actually.
It used an RFC.
see, that's daft
It did have BC impact (though small).
small fixes are dead important ...
but nothing is a small fix when you have to rfc the damn obvious ...
It passed 21 - 0
^^
07:22
it's not a thing that requires the C in RFC ...
there's not many of those, I'd have probably got a picture or something ...
I think we take bc way too far
Well, RFC's are all we really have on PHP to agree and vote on.
people are still using 5.3
The C part usually happens on the ML.
we are worried about the compatibility of 5.6 with 5.5
wtf that doesn't even make good sense ...
I've already stated that I'm a bit cavalier on breaking BC ^^
I agree with your astonishment.
07:24
well yeah but the only genuine reason there to have an rfc at all is the bc issue which is really a non-issue ...
if we could just agree on that simple thing, we could get a lot more done ...
these small improvements actually become small improvements ...
we can start getting things actually fixed ...
because I agree that it's these small things that make things feel broken ...
not that variadics, or closures, or nested or anon or any of that stuff is missing ...
is that the obvious doesn't work ...
it's just all but impossible to imagine a way to organize all these people ... with mostly different ideas, experiences, goals ...
I'd love it if PHP6 has the solid foundation we require ... I don't give a shit about unicode, and nor does anyone else, but we've all heard the parable of the man who builds his house on sand ...
it needs to be a bit more zend and a bit less php ...
I realise it's a loose distinction, but it seems anything outside of /Zend could literally be anywhere ....
all the important stuff therefore should be done at the level of zend ...
Yeah, it's hard to get people to agree though.
For PHP 6 I'd like to see more type and syntactic improvements.
However, there are vast amounts of people in PHP internals who think syntax is not important. I really, really don't understand that.
I sometimes wonder if dmitry reads anything outside of /Zend, or listens to any of the mental conversations being had ... /Zend clearly intends the core to throw exceptions, /Zend is prepared to throw only exceptions ...
I think there are issues underneath syntax that require addressing before syntax can be one of those non-issues that we can just "do" ...
right now a lot of the time it's not really worth introducing syntactical changes, there's too much impact around them ...
I don't know a lot about it, but tend to think the ast parser idea will make syntactical changes trivial, I think people are likely more inclined to talk about syntax changes then, when it's less of a headache to actually implement and include ...
whenever you discuss an idea with someone, they tend to think you are asking them to implement the idea, they think well how much work would it be for me to do, it is worth it for me to do ... I don't know why, but it seems that way ...
NikiC and I also like the idea of an AST. It could only be justified if we get better optimizations out of it.
At first it's certainly going to be slower than what we currently have.
is there an implementation ?
07:38
then I know why you can't get better optimizations out of it ...
:)
because it's physically impossible to improve the non-existent ...
There's just a lot of work involved.
Don't want to start something that big without more support.
And I personally don't have the expertise for it.
I'm not sure how much work it is ... but you can only improve it so much in the model you create in your head, the real thing is more complex, there's more to consider than you can reasonably imagine, I'd implement it, there's certainly going to be things you don't have the resolution to see now ...
I think it's definitely worth pursuing ... if it's a long thing then the quicker you get started the better ...
and you'll probably get more help when it exists ...
because if I could fit in your model, you wouldn't want me in it, I'd only be going round taking stuff apart to see how it worked and ruining your model ...
Well, bed time.
Good night, Joe.
07:56
nite
08:17
@CodyTapping something special about that website ?
@NullPoiиteя just a silly spammer
and awful designer too ...
08:36
@LeviMorrison every time when I read this I have to think about my own rfc… the extended keywords support…
08:50
@bwoebi get it up for vote
it is a stupid thing to have to consider ...
it obviously shouldn't be a restriction at all ...
@JoeWatkins what's a stupid thing? that a keyword cannot be used?
but actually I'm unpleased to have to announce the small performance decrease…
09:44
I just noticed something
@bwoebi
ZEND_JMP
appears to require jmp_addr doesn't it ??
@JoeWatkins nope. It requires an opline_num
the jmp_addr is added in pass_two()
ah
okok
did not get that ...
goood ...
clever clever ...
that's what I thought and done at first, then looked at the opcode handler ...
well… I'd done it wrong two days ago too…^^
then everything broke ...
then noticed not a single thing references jmp_addr in zend_compile
which I thought a bit odd ...
do you see any cs issues with my patch now ?
I think it's all good ...
./sapi/cli/php -r 'class c { const b = 3; const a = 2 + c::b; } print c::a;'
5
nice, nice … now going to implement static scalar expressions for function declarations…
09:52
cool
that was rfc'd wasn't it ?? isn't that a withdrawn one ?
I noticed something else ...
@JoeWatkins yup… but the problem was that it didn't support constants in constant declarations
duplicated switch cases are ignored
e.g. const foo = bar + 1; was not possible, only const foo = 1 + 1;
ah I see ... so constants in constant expressions
@JoeWatkins duplicate switch cases also don't make sense?
09:55
exactly
gcc fails to compile duplicated switch cases ...
we should error out I think, seems a sensible, even helpful thing to do ...
@JoeWatkins case expressions in C are constant
did you just make ever zval bigger ?
In PHP you can do case $a: case $b:
@JoeWatkins no, that's a union
09:57
is that a union I can't see
@JoeWatkins I added a pointer to the union
oh kk
constant ones could be checked though right ?
a few more lines in the compare thing would be good ...
some way to detect the block
is should show you the last {}
@bwoebi so where is the performance decrease here then ?
@NikiC do you think that what I'm doing there is a good idea?
@bwoebi I don't think that you need to add an OP_ARRAY type to VM specialization
Z_OP_ARRAY_P
10:00
@NikiC no, I don't need to, but it helps optimizing
we don't add "exotic" types for specialization
this is fucking with me a bit ...
just set extended_value or something to disambiguate
@NikiC true… I'm also actually unsure if it's a good idea.
@NikiC extended values would conflict
@bwoebi why?
the only place you use it right now doesn't make use of ev at all
10:03
Btw. I'm having a problem I don't really know how to solve the best: class c { const b = 3; const a = 2 + self::b; } print c::a; … self::b is in this case an IS_CONSTANT zval… should I here just transform self::b at compile time to c::b?
@NikiC right now. As said I plan to implement static scalar expressions for function declarations too. It was just a little beginning for constants only until now.
10:18
@NikiC open up voting for Automatic Field Ini?
10:53
Hello people
@Gordon well, as people are very actively not discussing it, I guess that's your only choice ^^
maybe proposal is so simple that everything is obvious
@Gordon Will you include a second vote as to whether allow body-less syntax for ctor?
So, my composer is acting completely weird with autoloaders
user924016
Morning
The autoloader won't work in one project, but works perfectly fine in another
11:03
Ya Jamaican mon?
@AshwinMukhija You have my sympathy. But do you have a question?
I get a class not found error, for every class that I try to load.
@NikiC @Gordon I'd prefer a second vote for allowing that also on arbitrary methods… (btw. body-less ctor… that'd mean saving one char: ; instead of {}; that isn't worth it I think)
Something as simple as the Monolog\Logger class
@AshwinMukhija Still not a question.
11:05
So, my question is, where the hell do I even start to debug this
@bwoebi That's my opinion also. Save one character for the ability to accidentally not implement a constructor body.
@AshwinMukhija You get your debugger, open up the file vendor/composer/ClassLoader.php and put a break point in the function findFile. Run until you reach the class that isn't loading. Step through the function to see where it's going wrong.
If you want to save time, you can add:
if ($class == 'ClassThatIsntLoading') {
   echo "found it";
}
and put the break point on the echo line.
@bwoebi Yes, might be better to just drop the body-less ctors from the RFC altogether. Less confusion, more chance of passing
11:13
@NikiC Hmm. I'm not sure that's true. If you ask people two questions they seem more likely to say yes to the one you care about, compared to just asking only the question you care about.
@Danack From my experience anything with more than two voting options or more than one vote usually ends in lengthy discussion as to how our voting process is to be interpreted in that case ;)
Especially what constitutes a 2/3 majority
At which point @Gordon can magnanimously step in and say that he is dropping the body-less ctor from the RFC as there is a lack of consensus, which makes the bit we really care about more likely to pass?
On the other hand - it is more drama than anyone needs.
@tereško why do you waste time typing a custom close reason?
@NikiC can't you just make to separate votes then: one 50/50 about "when vote passes, include also …" and one 67/33 about "should we include the general feature"?
@bwoebi you can - at the danger that people will complain that they want to vote yes, but only if that part of the feature also makes it in, otherwise no, so pls change this to a multivote...
I've seen that before
Afaik that's the reason why the 5.3 EOL RFC had this biiig range of voting options, because having two separate votes was deemed to be not precise enough ;)
wiki.php.net/rfc/php53eol#vote <= look at those voting options ^^
because I'm actually not so interested in having this feature for ctors only…
@NikiC so, I take it that community is actually implementing option 1 ...
@bwoebi maybe ^^ nobody discussed the rfc so maybe nobody will fuss about voting options either
We'll just see what @Gordon chooses :)
user924016
hehe
user924016
11:27
Weekend is almost over =[
@NikiC haha :-)
11:44
@NikiC I'm imagining code like function setActivity ($_SESSION['activity']) { $db->update("activity", $_SESSION['activity'], ["id" => $_SESSION['user_id']]); }
@bwoebi that's outside the scope of the RFC
@NikiC I know; I'm just imagining such code…

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