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00:00
Hey, hey. Just a sec.
@HamZa It's not complex, I just feel it's not good :) here
e'ning
Evening @JoeWatkins :) RFC is kickin' ass!
yeah not too shabby
@webarto gimme a second, I'm preparing something for @TomiSebastiánJuárez
00:09
You don't have to do anything if you're busy, I was just rusty at regex. @JoeWatkins showed me how it's meant to be played :)
@TomiSebastiánJuárez I will try to give advise for each validation rule, I've numbered them to not get lost:
1) "int" => '/^\d+$/'
2) "float" => '/^\d+(\.\d{1,2})?/'
3) "alpha" => '/^[a-zA-Z]+$/'
4) "alphanumeric" => '/^[a-zA-Z\d]+$/'
5) "symbols" => '[\s\S]'
6) "path" => '#^[a-zA-Z0-9_\\\\:-]+#'
7) "nick" => '/^[0-9a-zA-Z_]{5,20}$/'
8) "password" => '/^.*(?=.{8,})(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z]).*$/'
9) "birthday" => '/^[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{1,2}-[0-9]{1,2}$/'
awwww he went away ...
@JoeWatkins I almost voted no by accident on your php debugger RFC. I think they have a mechanism to let you change your vote anyway, but I thought that was funny ^^
Would have been only no vote.
Good lawd 23:0
Wonder if it will pass.
dunno, someone said there are 1000 voters
00:15
It kinda felt like you got phpdbg up an running in days.
we did
Pretty swift
it is not typical of c application development
What's gdb?
nm will google
gnu debugger ... the debugger
00:16
@webarto will the "showTitle" always be between two double quotes ? Or could it be that there would be a single quote ?
I think I mostly attribute that to felipe actually, and later @bwoebi ... and @webarto took care of the website like a ruddy hero ... everything fell into place ...
@JoeWatkins Have you done testing on various platforms?
yeah, bob uses darwin, me unix and windows (by force), and felipe unix too
Ah yeah, felipe the nerd that other nerds call nerd.
:P
felipe doesn't talk much, he doesn't have too ... and when he does he's right ... I wrote the skeleton in a couple of hours, the sapi module and shutdown/startup etc, he wrote all the command skeleton that night and the next morning everything worked ... later that day we had a shiny website ...
00:19
Pow.
I don't think you could assemble a team to do that in a million years ...
well you would never set out with a 24 hour turnaround time in the first place ...
Phil S just posted up on reddit about it. Well about the RFC at least
in reality it was about 2 days before it was really useful ...
What lead you to build it in the first place?
felipe suggested it ...
well he said lets code something ... I said what ... he said hmmm gdb for php ... I said okay ...
00:23
lol
it's kinda good when you can avoid a years worth of discussion, I think we've both thought about it before, I think anyone that used gdb and debugged php has ...
gdb is super but knows nothing about php
you can do a sort of integration
but why bother ...
you never heard of gdb
nothing would change if we supported it in some official way ...
I'm am sadly inexperienced when it comes to debugging. I am just now trying to evolve past print_r()
My own fault
some people are of the view that var_dump is enough ... this is crazy to me ... one of the most powerful things in my toolkit in java is the debugging tools/profilers available ...
I don't like guessing
Yes. It's more along the lines of "If it isn't broke, don't fix it" method of fixing broken code. I've never seen anyone use xdebug or head or gdb. So I had no inclination to do so myself until it gets discussed in here.
Hell I still haven't really utlised TDD.
Makes me sad, but I am working on it.
@HamZa It goes like this title (year) ... (year), I added that so I don't have to trim quotes if they exist. Makes sense?
00:27
it's all fine to stick to your favourite patterns, or technique, or whatever you want to call it, but often the systems we design exceed our capacity to model them internally, and actually sometimes a profile view is exactly what you need, or just to slow the damn cpu down to your monkey pace ...
3 hours ago, by bwoebi
@webarto you? you just made the website, nothing more.
^^
Such kind words
> 21 yes, and 0 no. That's practically unheard of.
:D
I never took any credit for anything except in footer of the website for website ;)
that wasn't necessary
he's young, full of hormones ...
@webarto a little tweak here and there. You use a lot of groups :P regex101.com/r/bO8aI9 updated
00:31
:(
Haha, I sort of told him that :)
Nikita is so humble and that's what makes him really special.
He's a little too humble. I almost wish he'd brag more :P
Yes, that's true too :P
I think I brag more about him and I don't even know the guy.
I'll be interested to see what he makes of himself ...
00:33
@Fabien I often use the debugger to step through my code when my tests are failing. That may be why you don't use the debugger ^^
bob too you know, it's not all self entitlement, he is rather good ... not excusing him ...
@LeviMorrison heh maybe.
@HamZa Nice! Yes, that's what I wanted, +1 for non capturing groups, forgot about that :) Thanks!
Noobie question. phpdbg and xdebug... would you have/need both?
welcome
00:36
@Fabien You'll have phpdbg with 5.6, that's more important :)
it depends, first, xdebug is well supported by ide's in use at the moment so if you dwell in ide-land then I'm not sure what will happen there actually .. and some people are just not comfortable on the command line, their development process is adjusted already
user895378
I only use xdebug for code coverage in phpunit.
Seems like phpdbg is more for me then. I try not to rely on my IDE too much
it is rather heavy ... it does a lot ...
but you tend to pay for it ...
Write a program in PHP that sums all numbers within the range i = 1…1000 inclusive. If that number is a multiple of 3 or 5, double it and add it to the sum.

For example, i = 1-10, the answer is 88.

shouldn't it be 165?
user895378
00:37
<-- so glad I don't ever have to do homework
or interview questions!
it's not homework, just tell me if it really should be 88
when you load xdebug, it changes compiler settings for zend, forcing it to generate a lot of extra opcodes ...
i think they made a mistake
I've had enough of interview questions this week ...
00:38
@good_evening math is not important
It's 42 isn't it?
@JoeWatkins for you or for me? :D
@good_evening project euler ?
@webarto I'm not interviewing !!
Interview questions ftl
00:39
I kid ... I enjoy it for some reason ...
do you see how they get 88? i am not asking for a code, just want to make sure there's no bug in the problem
chances to think outside the box I guess ...
hey @JoeWatkins, are you getting on Credits page? :)
@good_evening List out the multiples of 3 or 5 in the range.
who wrote the problem, could there really be a bug in it ?? looks super copied from a book ...
00:40
@LeviMorrison omg, I thought make a sum first, jesus
I think they are: 3,5,6,9,10
who wrote this bullshit
thanks
When you sum them together and multiply by two I get 66
Then the sum of the other numbers is... 22.
user895378
@JoeWatkins FYI the patch you committed for my issue earlier also resolved the segfault issues I was having in phpunit.
after 461 Questions comes just tell me attitude.
00:42
Thus, 66 + 22 = 88.
So it seems to be correct. @good_evening
yes, got the same. thanks @LeviMorrison!
@rdlowrey
@good_evening you want me to spoil the solution ?
excellent ...
user895378
lol
00:47
some of pthreads could do with revision ... I keep starting ...
but oh. my. god
?
@good_evening I'd be interested in seeing your solution when you get it worked out.
just things that are usually simple that give a big improvement, example, the object tables could use read/write locks instead of plain mutex ...
I <3 Merkelland
however, it's easy to swap out one for the other in a little bit of code, it was relatively easy to swap it out in apc ... not so much for pthreads ...
user895378
Well pthreads is doing exactly what I need it to do right now. Anything else is gravy.
00:50
@LeviMorrison It reminded me of this problem projecteuler.net/problem=1
another thing, the inheritance could do with tidying, that's trivial really but something I always intended to do, someday, along with that, it would be nice if you didn't have to declare empty stackables for no reason and if run were optional in workers (since that confuses people anyway) ... I don't actually need to rely on any serialization anymore, I've learned enough to rip that out completely ...
@HamZa Good link, I shall challenge myself from time to time.
@webarto beat me :P I got ~50 solved :)
@HamZa I just want to see his solution. It took me all of 10 seconds to write.
@LeviMorrison I see :)
00:52
@HamZa Hardly :)
@webarto Well, I did solve them with some real pain. Sometimes I spend the whole morning or weekend on one single problem -_-
and a bunch of other things ... I don't want to think anymore about it, gonna sleep at some point tonight ...
@HamZa I meant I could hardly beat you :) I know, was once solving those thingies, but it requires discipline. I got fed up real quick :)
I'm gonna stop thinking about it ... but, it's not that serialization is slow, the problem is there is no chance of a really fast thread safe object while you use serial data as a backing store ...
@webarto Well at some point I realised that I can't advance further with my current level. I realised that I should study more math and algorithm.
00:57
@opinions - Are answers pointing to the source and saying see - it's there - considered ok?
@JoeWatkins I blame PHP, it's the only reason pthreads is slow.
@BenjaminGruenbaum source you mean a link ?
Something about hammers.
@HamZa and maybe a line or code or two.
@BenjaminGruenbaum no, it was paranoia on the part of me ... which I'm slowly getting to grips with :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum If it's unlikely that link will break in near future, why not.
@JoeWatkins I still blame php, something about a singularity.
00:59
Well I thought that the policy is like the following: Pointing to a link is ok as long as you put the essential ideas in your answer too
something something something これはPHPです
K, I posted a recent answer where OP just asked "what is the signature of some function, I tried reading it in the docs and they aren't clear" and I answered "well - there you go" - wasn't sure if that's good practice.
In an app I'm making I am letting users make tables. I have come 2 a decision with storing these tables. Should I A: Just have a big long list of table entries and then each entry has a table name associated with it. Or B: should I just have a database of tables and the table data would be stored in json data. Which makes more sense?
In an app I'm making I am letting users make tables.
this doesn't make sense ... things only get worse as the sentence continues ... what is it that you are doing, perhaps we can suggest a better way maybe ?
@NoahHuppert both sound pretty horrid?
01:03
Like HTML tables. Its a small group that has events every often so I thought why not just put that in a database. But there are different types of events. @BenjaminGruenbaum How could I improve?
@NoahHuppert just to be clear, do you mean table as in <table> or a table in a database ?
table per client ... if you don't see what is wrong with that; highway per car
<table> Kind of idea.
oh oh
goood
:)
Yea.. Im not That retarted
lol
ok right, why are you storing html in a database, the database can't do anything with it, it's for data, html is for the browser ... you should send the html and store the data, firstly ...
lets see what you are storing and what it relates too
Im not storing pure html.
@JoeWatkins actually, databases like Sql Server can do quite a bit with it, they can query it (xpath), index it, etc.
Not saying you should store it of course.
doesn't seem useful for some kind of event ?
well lets see, don't like guessing ...
@BenjaminGruenbaum didn't actually know that ...
@Ben are you talking about windows only ?
01:08
@JoeWatkins yeah, it was a pleasant surprise when we found out for that one use case that one time where we ended up not doing it anyway. I can see however how it's useful.
Ok let me start over with this explanation. gimme a sec
@JoeWatkins People go nuts now that PostgreSQL does json queries when Sql Server has been doing XML queries, indexing, etc for like 7 years now and XML is just as viable data exchange non-relational format as JSON if there is no schema enforced.
not a fan of xml ...
lots of nothing for not much ...
a web browser requires that much structural information
for anything else, bit wasteful ...
So my client is an old dude with a consulting company. They give lectures and workshops. I'm only hired to make a website they can use after I'm gone. And he isnt the best with technology(When I went 2 his office I had 2 "fix" his mouse[upsidedown]) and he wants to be able to update a couple html tables on his page like books published, workshops, tutorials, and more stuff that keeps popping up, I don't want to make about 10 tables for each html table on his site that will keep chaning
So I thought id make an abstracted database api for myself that would just find a table(html type) into a database somehow and just change it. I am having trouble deciding on how to store the data in the database(sql)
01:12
ok, sounds like you want something like google.co.uk/… one of those, yes storing html in this case is fine I think ...
you could use a markdown one, but probably a bit ott, just hook one of those up securely to a table and be done with it ..
@JoeWatkins I tend to agree
that's not to say you shouldn't treat the data as you would anything you are inserting into a database
I think editing and adding to an html table would be a little hard though
make it simple for him, customize the menu with the minimal amount of buttons, get clear images, have him login, when he clicks on a bit of his website load up the editor inline, he clicks save, his website changes ... simple no ?
I guess. I already have that going with every other peice of text on his website.
01:17
I went to one of those meetup.com meetings tonight ...
totally chickened out ... such a wimp ...
01:32
My facebook cover, yay!
@JoeWatkins Really, why?
I'm totally not crowd guy.
@webarto Yea, me either.
Probably because I can't pretend to fit in.
01:47
@webarto I can pretend to fit in if we're talking about technology or football
For a little while
Not about that, 'bout, you know, normal people talk :D
hello, i was wondering if it was possible to get the entire file/tree structure of a svn or git repo without cloning or exporting it first ?
I don't choke anyone with programming too.
the purpose is to quickly read the structure of the repo
wondering if any cool commands exist for either of those CVS
Github API counts in files that are up to 1MB.
01:50
dunno drove there, parked, walked past, went home ...
It's not AA meeting :D
You should have kicked the door and come in and shout... Thread Man in da house motherfuckers!
you are not a wimp. you went.
@webarto hahahaha
Not many things on the Internet make me literally laugh but "Thread Man in da house motherfuckers!" sure as hell did
:)))
user895378
02:15
Does github use UTC time? I.E. @LeviMorrison if I make a commit now will it count for BC Break Thursday?
user895378
(It's only 2115 for me)
Interesting.
I think it will.
0315 here, so that's 0215 in UTC?
user895378
Yeah I think so
I encountered some commits in past etc. But that probably was fault of others.
Or future, not sure.
> The Key of Awesome!
On YouTube is entertaining.
I miss good fun.
sleep now, nite
02:25
Nite Joe!
02:45
Hmm, would anyone care for an operator that would return -1, 0, 1 for "simple" comparisons? E.g. 4 cmp 6 would be -1.
To replace 4 == 6 ? 0 : (4 < 6 ? -1 : 1) kind of constructs.
Never had need for it. Can you name a use case?
Comparators, obviously :)
Like, sort objects by price property or sth.
So you could simply have return $a->price cmp $b->price; .. done
I know, not ground breaking stuff heh
@Jack I don't know about an operator, but one for integers would be nice.
I like the pow one you did... yesterday I wrote... memory_get_usage(1) / 1024 ^ 2...
Thought it was a function problem, heh.
@webarto I've prepared the PR for that just now and the rfc has been cleaned up too :)
02:57
Awesomesuce!
The RFC voting will be split though, one to vote for turning pow() into an opcode and language construct and another to actually introduce the operator.
The former is arguably not a language change, so I'm hoping to get away with a 50/50 victory there ;-)
Did e.g. Zeev expressed opinion? :)
Everyone has opinions ... let me check that; so far I've only seen Johannes and Derick's response.
Nope, none from Zeev :)
> $c = sqrt(pow($c1, 2) + pow($c2, 2))

This can even be improved already:

$c = hypot($c1, $c2);
LOL
Yeah, that was classic haha
Of course, that won't work for GMP numbers though.
gmp_sqrt(gmp_init($c1) ** 2 + gmp_init($c2) ** 2) =D
03:07
gmp_hypot :P
seriously?
Dude, don't play with my head :P
No, just one search result on Google! :P
It's not in the manual, though heh
Pascal has it? Noooo~
Ooh ooh ... I know, how about dubbing it the <=> operator? wahoo!
See? Smaller <, equal =, or bigger >
Haha, okay, back to work.
Hahaha.
You actually work? :)
I've noticed you have a lot of free time lately :D
Unlike @DaveRandom bloke.
Midnight coder :)
03:14
04:15 here :(
11.14 ... wait, how do you get 45 mins timezone diff?
I'm going nuts.
user895378
@webarto Yeah, poor @DaveRandom ... He did the inverse skydive. He disappeared to do more work :(
@rdlowrey Whatever happened after your skydive? Did you spend all that time digging yourself out of the hole you made on impact? :)
03:17
Like @deceze, totally forgot about us.
@DaveChen That's quite funny actually.
If only count() were a .... language construct =D
user895378
@Jack Oh, I had an opportunity to work with some friends who were filming a pilot for a reality tv show -- it was fun and I may or may not have consumed a lot of controlled substances in the process. There were a couple of weeks there where I seriously questioned if I wanted to keep spending all my time at the computer coding.
so if PHP had something like .length the same in JavaScript, it would be better, right?
Yay for controlled substances!
user895378
But I discovered that the answer to those questions was "yes."
03:19
@DaveChen That would already be better.
What could possibly go wrong if I don't comment class/methods?
Like, at all.
user895378
@webarto I took that approach for a while.
user895378
Now I only comment docblock public API methods.
@webarto Velociraptor attacks you.
user895378
But if the code actually needs docblocks to explain what's happening there's a good chance you're doing it wrong.
03:21
YES.
user895378
But if I had my way I would comment zero things.
I agree with @rdlowrey current way of doing things. docblock public API methods and not a lot else
Eh, I like the docblocks as they break things up a little and most of the IDE's that I use can parse return types and stuff from it
user895378
Except for the odd place where I'm applying an unintuitive workaround for a bug or if there's some place where I'm likely to remove something I shouldn't unless I leave a reminder.
Yes, definitely, on places even you wouldn't know what you've done :)
user895378
I actually wrote a comment today!
user895378
03:22
// I know you want to, but don't use array_shift here! It will reindex our numeric $callId keys!
haha
Nice!
/** Request & Response */
$request = Request::createFromGlobals();
$response = new Response;
Totally not necessary, right.
But these comments are nice way to distinguish in procedural file. They're orange. (wat)
@webarto Agreed. I hate things like this; even in my procedural style code
@webarto You don't say!
If someone says your code is not commented I'll just punch him in the face.
2
that's what's github pull request diff comments are for :D
03:35
Damn straight!
user895378
that's what github pull request diff comments are code is for
> The color guard is colored! Who made them the color guard?
haha
@rdlowrey hah, yes, but someone asks "what does this code do" without too much thinking of it
user895378
Sadly this is true.
managers, but you wouldn't know about that :P
user895378
03:39
What's that?
user895378
Like a Dependency Manager?
user895378
A connection manager?
I wanted to say, that I'm not a real programmer.
I'm a hacker.
You're a programmer.
Maybe I'll be too at your age.
user895378
pffft, I've never taken a single class. I've basically turned into a programmer in the last two years by attempting projects for which I really wasn't qualified.
user895378
03:41
Once I started hitting the point where good enough tools weren't available to do the things I wanted I just started making them myself. And that's exactly when I would say I went from hacker to programmer.
Word, that's why I said it.
user895378
Honestly, stack overflow + this chat room has been by far the biggest contributor to my programming.
I was never interested in programming per se, I liked making cup holders (CD-ROM eject) and keyloggers. I started making websites because I needed the money and I sort of figured what HTML is.
@rdlowrey Same here. I count the era epoch before room #11 and after...
user895378
It's really depressing to look at the oldest answers on my account from when I first started using the site two years ago. They're very sad ... and that's after I've deleted the worst of them.
user895378
Of course, I think I've only answered like 5 or 6 questions this calendar year.
03:46
Bad thing is that there is pretty clear track record.
One "wrong" answer can devalue you.
But it's easy to make a new identity on internet :P
user895378
hehe
@rdlowrey I've all but given up on the PHP tag on SO
user895378
@cspray Same. It's soul-crushing.
It got worse exponentially.
user895378
I may try to answer a few pretty soon because I'm ~75 upvotes away from a gold badge.
03:48
@rdlowrey For me, mostly the latter hehe
webarto, Vienna, Austria
10.3k 2 21 46
Wow, I suck.
user895378
@Jack Well it started with answering questions on the main site -- I learned a lot that way because you have to really understand what you're talking about to provide a useful answer. So I learned those things. But yeah, this room has been an amazing resource.
hello everyone
@rdlowrey Same, started out answering like crazy until I was mentioned in the chat room I think lol
user895378
lol!
user895378
@EmilioGort hello
@Jack True, true.
Somebody noticed that I had a lot of free time hah
yes how you can?
i want to have free time
I had a lot of free time once
03:51
I don't ... I just answer really fast heh
user895378
Tell the boss to shove it === instant free time
haha
my free time is only 10:00pm-12:00am
Plus, when I'm thinking about big problems ... I like doing small problems as a distraction :)
good morning
03:54
good morning @happy
I just got myself a laptop and I must say the IceCool hand cooler for the hand is awesome.
A hand cooler you say? ~.~
@Jack yes! directly on it! Asus call it a feature :)
is it something like this what you say...is to know what are you talking about tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/…
the hand cooler
04:05
it's like hand heaven
ok...it's look very good the lapto
yesterdeay my boss give a lapto...but that looks supper old fashion...google.com/…
@Jack you remember the guy of geolocation
he findme on facebook and continue asking for the code
04:20
4
Q: Break on NaN in JavaScript

kibibuIs there any modern browser that raises exceptions on NaN propagation (ie multiplying or adding a number to NaN), or that can be configured to do so? Silent NaN propagation is an awful and insidious source of bugs, and I'd love to be able to detect them early, even at a performance penalty. H...

What's this ^^ A good question on SO?
@EmilioGort ouch :(
^^ because E_RETARDED. (more specifically, doesn't demonstrate effort)
0
A: Break on NaN in JavaScript

Sanal KSame problem I had,I solved it by using Number()

And a really stupid answer.
=.=
@webarto Hey I know ... use Monads =D
user652649
04:32
morning
gist.github.com/rlemon/7914903 if it hasn't already been posted.
1 message moved to Trash can
@rdlowrey I'm not sure; the pre-commit hook is client-side.
It appears to use UTC, yes.
I guess I could alter the BC Break Thursday commit hook to do the comparison to UTC +/- some hours.
@Wesabi morning
> In strict mode assigning to NaN throws an exception.
But who would do that?!
How I know the commit I'm going to make tomorrow is a good one:
$ git diff --shortstat
 12 files changed, 348 insertions(+), 1746 deletions(-)
Check out that insertion/deletion ratio.
04:47
@Jack lol
@LeviMorrison What's that, a reduction in code?
It's all in PHP.net code, mostly CSS.
It does have a few regressions, but not approximately 1400 lines of code worth to fix ^^
I'd appreciate it if you could browse around leviathon.homenet.org and give me some feedback.
Yes I know. This code is just an example so you can use isNaN() too. — hicurin 2 mins ago
Lies! You didn't know =P

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