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11:00
not sure actually waiting for address
@JoeWatkins monring
@crypticツ I think this will become a tweet :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum it's doing a lot more than just calculating the numbers, the important bit is the difference, the same amount of work spread across more than one thread can be more efficient than on one, if you do it correctly ...
@JoeWatkins If its at their communal office it'll be town quay. If so, you're more than welcome to park at my place. It's a 6 minute walk in a straight line from there.
Can't imagine why it wouldn't be if he's making you come to Soton
11:06
sweet
god my internet is doing my head in ...
11:20
Also, @BenjaminGruenbaum there's something about 40 that puts it under quite a lot of pressure for some reason ...
[joe@fiji php-src]$ time php -dextension=pthreads.so fib.php 30 1
832040
real    0m0.474s
user    0m0.766s
sys     0m0.002s
[joe@fiji php-src]$ time php -dextension=pthreads.so fib.php 30 0
832040
real    0m0.738s
user    0m0.734s
sys     0m0.002s
then - this needs your down and close and then del-vote.
@Joe it's not just 40, try 41,52 etc
It's an exponential algorithm using this implementation
yeah I know, I mean upwards of 30 it goes downhill, whether you use threads or not ...
Yeah, but it's absurdly slow, I don't get why
Same fib40 in C should be 600 ms
yeah
don't really have anything illuminating to say other than you don't really do this in PHP at all, I used it because it puts a silly amount of pressure on php ....
> * real 1m33.009s (roughly equivalent to one year)
look at how much you are really executing ...
php needs a way to inline functions ... it really does ...
I wish facebook had written hhvm for everyone rather than just themselves, they've done the hard work but one of us is going to have to do it all over again ... pointlessly, with much less resources and probably less knowledge ...
^ this is actually my problem with hhvm, just because anyone can use it doesn't make it for everyone, with the billions of investment they had - because they wrote in php at first - they owed it to the community to do a good job, rather than concentrating on me me me ...
11:34
Yeah, you don't really do this in PHP. No one uses php for speed. That's not what it solves.
that's right, but none the less, even something that you cannot intuitively thread (search so for java questions about threading fibonacci sequencing), if you think about it you can still shave a big chunk of operations that take 700ms or a minute and a half ...
It's pointless though, that's the point of big O notation.
8*fib(n) is as complex as 1000*fib(n) is as complex as 0.1*fib(n)
It doesn't matter, since when you increase n even only be 2, it makes it meaningless.
yeah like I said I only used this as an example because it puts it under pressure, in the real world they'd be database queries or API requests to something or something that you do actually do with php ...
Which puts the bottleneck at the blocking I/O
I mean, there is no reason I/O cannot be done asynchronously. Users don't even have to know
When they do mysqli_connect_db it doesn't have to block, and it doesn't have to tell you it didn't block. It doesn't have to run in a thread at all.
Good luck with leaks though.
11:41
well not always ... you know the amazon web services (product advertising api) still serve up xml and nothing else, and many many affiliate marketing programmes have copied (even down to the actual markup that amazon uses) ... even parsing json, a much nicer format can still be a headache if you have 100 documents to parse - not download, but actually parse and manipulate into a usable collection ...
make 100 nonblocking downloads and you still have to parse 100 documents synchronously ....
@Glavić one more dv please so we can delv it.
I've said before, this barrier doesn't exist in my mind, it's not either or, real performance comes from using everything in the toolbox, not picking a non-blocking model over a threaded one or a threaded one over a non-blocking one, but if necessary or beneficial - and it usually is - to deploy both ...
@hakre: I have DV'ed everything on that link ;)
@Glavić just referring to your it's open to veryone :D
11:52
Anyone familiar with git branching? I thought branches were separate, but when I create a file in the branch then switch to the master one, the file exists in master too
dupe with highest voted dupe, it's the correct pointer
did you git add ? and I think commit to the branch too before switching back to master ...
@JoeWatkins no I just ran touch, ahh it's because the file isn't managed by git yet?
think so yeah
disclaimer: I am terrible at git, never forget the day I merged master into 5.4 on git.php.net ...
haha, ouch
11:57
its quite easily done actually
who knew, but git pull == git merge && git fetch
I wonder if there's a repo called "mother"
plenty, but why do you wonder that ?
Well, whoever grabs it is a mother forker
12:03
I got my carousel in the end Joe. It's messy but its to be expected as my first.
Updated a bit to make it clearer
FTR try expanding the grey li and scrolling down
Anyone ever had an abstract class implement an interface, and for child classes to extend the abstract class, so a constructor implementation can be forced?
Basically, forcing class members to contain the objects passed into the constructor (so all child implementations have access to these, like a Validator, for instance)?
@crypticツ are you still about?
yep @DaveRandom
12:18
I didn't get that. What do you mean "force constructor implementation", @Jimbo
@crypticツ So is the plan to have a drop down with a set of refresh interval options and, presumably, one of those options is "off"?
@AlmaDo Define a constructor in your interface. Abstract class implements the interface, but also defines the constructor implementation to place constructor parameters into class members. Finally, any class that extends this class has their constructor sorted for them, which of course they can override if they like, unless the parent is marked as final...
@DaveRandom yeah it will have 0 which would be off, and then 10 numbers at different intervals (which can vary according to config file)
it will default to off
@Jimbo no, I understood that. didn't get - why?
@Jimbo constructors don't belong in interfaces
12:21
interface Obj { public function __construct(SomeClass $class); }
abstract class AnObj implements Obj { public function __construct(SomeClass $class) { $this->class = $class;  } }
class ConcreteObj extends AnObj { /** Constructor already sorted, no need to think about it **/ }
@crypticツ OK, and those values will be in seconds presumably? Also, presumably you would want a localStorage setting for it?
@Jimbo How can interface define constructor? You don't expect constructor to be called explicitly.
Being created is not behavioral.
If you find yourself needing construction explicitly you're not abstracting correctly.
@Jimbo interface + __construct() = E_UNSTUCK for me..
@BenjaminGruenbaum What if you want your class to ALWAYS have a validator of a certain interface?
12:22
@Jimbo Yeh that's totally wrong. There's a good reason that constructors are not subject to the same overridden signature rules as regular methods
@DaveRandom I can store them in seconds, right now just rounded up to nearest minute, but seconds would be more accurate. Basically the 10 items will be multiples of the cache TTL. So if TTL is 120 secs, it will be 0, 2, 4, 6... to ensure update is only done when you know there will be a new cache file available.
You can put some default validation in an isValid() method in the abstract class and leave the class specific validation in the child class?
@BenjaminGruenbaum What if you want any child classes to always have an instance of ValidatorInterface passed into it?
@Jimbo tell us what was the initial goal
12:24
@Jimbo that's not behavioral either.
@Jimbo declare custom instantiator?
@Jimbo Create abstract base class or inject respective property?
Okay, someone wants a class that: 1) generates some data from it's input 2) validates it 3) writes it out to a file. So I've split that up into a Validator, a Writer and a Generator
@crypticツ Well that's fine, you can have the config file define them in minutes and then just <option value="<?= $val * 60 ?>"><?= $val ?></option>. Either way I can do the * 60 in JS, I don't really mind, as long as I know what. My personal pref would be to have the option.value be in seconds though
I wasa just going to make the Generator NEED the Validator in it, then I can put isValid in an abstract class to check for values that must always be there
12:25
@DaveRandom yeah I'll just go ahead and the value in secs and the option label in minutes
@Jimbo That's fine, but it's a property of your concrete implementation, not the interface
@Jimbo pass the validator in the constructor through DI?
Use a factory when creating?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yep
@crypticツ Coolio
Well I wanted to say "You MUST DI a validator in here"
@DaveRandom What if all concrete implementations should have this validator to adhere to what I want?
Someone else creates a new class, they extend the abstract, boom - they already have a validator and setters / getters for stuff that must be there
12:27
@Jimbo Then mandate it in the factory interface
@DaveRandom Ahhhhh, nice, the level up from the object
@Jimbo why?
It's a tool, if someone doesn't want to have a validator why make them?
Either the validator is part of the writer or it's not. If it's a part of it, it shouldn't be exposed to the outside or it should as little as possible.
If it isn't a part of it, it should be accessed in another component and not belong in the validator.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I was trying to adhere to SRP with the validator being separate (being agnostic to the data being validated)
@Jimbo great, if it's being separate why are you making it part of the writer?
(Just to be clear - this is all theoretical - in practice apply SRP when it's useful)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm not, I'm trying to DI it in so that the isValid() call of the generator (not writer) calls the validator
If it's a MarkupGenerator (god forbid), a CSSValidator can be passed in. If it's a number generator, a RangeValidator can be passed in (both validators from the same interface). I just wanted to enforce that
12:37
@crypticツ question
what is all the hype behind this pony thing?
@Ocramius yes
I tried to watch an entire episode
@Ocramius =oO
I almost had to puke - I still don't understand it
there must be some kind of weird attraction for developers towards rainbow dash
I just don't understand what it is
@Ocramius just to annoy those who dislikes ponies :p
12:38
it's cutesy, it's funny, it's awesome, there is singing and so much more
uhmm
and I still almost had to puke :D
just make sure it's like that
Rainbow Dash would approve =oD
lol
the mystery stays hidden...
you need to watch every episode to understand. I actually watched the movie before I watched the actual show, and did a 3 season marathon one week.
o.o
and survived?
12:48
i.sstatic.net/1Gl5B.jpg?x my MLP artwork I bought when I was drunk at a art show =oD /cc @Suhosin
notice Rainbow Dash is in protective sleeve >.<
@crypticツ I like these
@crypticツ you painted that?
@AlmaDo oh no, I bought them from the artist at an art show I went to
@crypticツ then it's terrible :p
I'm a famous ponyhater
I bought Rainbow Dash first with cash, but then spent the rest of my cash on alcohol and then went back to buy the whole set at that point and had to use my credit card =o(
12:53
don't drink alcohol then :p
I have no self control. The last art auction I went to I spent $160 on a sketch, it turned out to be the highest paid item at the small event...the ATM was just so close =o\
alcohol was involved with that as well
@crypticツ I bought a $600 life-sized Sweetie Belle plushie
No alcohol involved
^ =oO
less shocked about the price =oP
@Suhosin pic?
@crypticツ Dont have any
then according to the internet it never happened =oP
12:56
@crypticツ I'm not keen on putting pics of my stuff online, its one of a kind so could identify me :P
googling 600 bucks worth of ponies
I think we sold one to a slaughterhouse once for that price
no joke :X
@crypticツ There may be pics of her online
Doubt there are many life size Sweeties :P
/me actually had horses and ponies
real ones. god I hated them so much.
12:58
Why? :(
@crypticツ Not gonna confirm or deny any of them :P
Because you don't want to wakeup every second night because a horse ran away or made some mess somewhere or got stuck somewhere >.<
horses seem to be engineered to be stupid
frikken weird animals >.<
13:01
@crypticツ She's smaller than that, proportionally (foal-sized)
But not by a awful lot
13:20
shit day ...
@JoeWatkins what's wrong?
stupid car failed MOT (safety test required by law), rear antirollbar isn't even connected to the car on one side, went to get part and the dick head behind the counter ordered it wrong so when I went back to get it, it's not there ...
What a bell end
so annoying, but not only annoying, super disruptive, I could have taken it back to get the test sorted today if he hadn't fucked up ...
am supposed to be driving 200 miles tomorrow ..
it is a single stupid bolt ...
bugger ...
duct tape!
13:25
think the mot tester will notice it ... can't use car it's not legal ... it actually ran out on the 3rd, but I didn't notice until yesterday afternoon ...
shit my old car's bumper was nearly falling off. I duct taped it up, used the fancy decorative duct tape from the craft store. =o). My mom was ashamed of me =o(
Police in the UK are really strict on the road
morning!
@JoeWatkins Are roll bars checked in an MOT? I though it was just stuff that's common to all cars?
antirollbar = the thing that stops your suspension from flipping the car when taking a corner at high speed. i.e. not a roll cage.
13:38
Anti-rollbars are common to all cars nowadays
Have been since the 50s/60s
I'm trying to run a unit test in PHPStorm with PHPUnit, but it's not finding mysqli
My test is namespaced, and I'm using \mysqli(), so my namespacing is correct
PHPUnit_Framework_Error_Warning : mysqli::mysqli(): (HY000/2002): No such file or directory
@Webnet Post the actual line.
$connection = new \mysqli(self::$dbHost, self::$dbUser, self::$dbPass, self::$dbDatabase);
Actually - "HY000/2002): No such file or directory" is a mysql error not a php error.
I see... it may be because I'm mapping my result to an object that it can't find
13:45
Nope.
If you're getting an error when trying to create the mysqli object, it's almost certainly PHP not able to connect to the database.
yeah antirollbar .... this is just my ford focus run around ...
I might have found the part somewhere else ...
@JoeWatkins Peter offer to cover petrol or anything?
he didn't actually, not so bothered about that for tomorrow ...
@Danack - I've now verified that my server is running and I'm able to establish a connection with this configuration
the misses managed to get the part of the shelf somewhere else and is on the way home with it, so should be able to get the mot today, I know the guy doing the mot, he only wants a minute with it ...
13:54
@JoeWatkins Hmm, I would've expected him to. When he asked me to come to London he covered my train fare. Maybe it didn't cross his mind.
Did you find out where?
my fault I should have looked, when I looked at the miles to Southampton yesterday something told me to just check ... lucky I wasn't pulled over ...
I didn't yet, he didn't reply
@Webnet have you tried var_dumping() self::$dbHost, self::$dbUser, self::$dbPass, self::$dbDatabase ?
where it's failing in the test?
Yes
Those values are what I'd expect them to be
Can I xdebug unit tests?
Yes, that works fine. Tbh if you're sure everything is setup fine, maybe just try running the unit test from the command line, to make sure that phpstorm isn't fucking something up?
e.g. php vendor/bin/phpunit -c phpunit.xml
@Danack What about "PHPUnit_Framework_Error_Warning : mysqli::mysqli(): (HY000/2002): No such file or directory" made you think it was a MySQL error?
The HY000/2002 part?
14:05
@Webnet the way that every google result for that is "php can't connect to mysql"
yum. Jasmine Oolong tea... So good
@Danack I see.... that's odd because I use the same connection details in MySQL workbench and it works fine...
@JoeWatkins He can be slow sometimes but he will, even if its later tonight.
@Webnet one possible random thing - you're not using 'localhost' as the servername are you?
Yes
14:09
@JoeWatkins You'll be here most likely. The offices are just before Terminal 2
that is not always good. Even if this doesn't fix your problem your should use either 127.0.0.1 or ::1 if you're using ipv6.
localhost can do weird shit.
@ircmaxell Releasing your inner brit?
nah, just tea is good... So been drinking more of it lately
Next time you're in London be sure to pop in to the twinnings shop if you haven't before :)
will do
14:13
@Fabien cool ... I'll let you know when he gets back to me .. part's here ... afk
@Danack - Gotcha... I fixed the db connection, I'm still seeing the same error. I think it can't find the mysqli class.
well, that was easy ...
back to MOT shop in an hour, all sorted :)
It's problematic that it's not showing me the full error
#0 [internal function]: PHPUnit_Util_ErrorHandler::handleError(2, 'mysqli::mysqli(...', '/Users/me/Pr...', 16, Array)
@Fabien peter just emailed, wants to meet at audiolock ...
Yeah
Same office
You can park at mine and walk there, saves you a couple of quid for parking and the potentiality to get lost. Do you know what times you're around?
14:22
Give this comment thread a read: plus.google.com/+AnthonyFerrara/posts/583MpJjajvh
@Fabien 2pm
@ircmaxell you have a duck on your head ...
so I have been told :-P
@ircmaxell I liked your video regarding password hashing, it was very clear and easy to understand how fast brute force can be
14:25
:p
Should make it a new Hat on SO
@Fabien awesome!
duck-hat, excellent ...
That's a seagull.
Juvenile probably.
arg, compression on G+ sucks
yeah some sort of feathered flappy thing ...
14:26
reload the profile, and you should see a new image
yeah is scone ...
I'm going to email you with details Joe. Let me know if it doesn't arrive.
cool, ta @Fabien
@ircmaxell the responses to your comment read like the responses to any other technical subject where the commenters miss the point of the comments you are making .... "yeah, but we don't understand what you are saying, so this video is still good, leave him alone" ....
> Still a very good explanation for beginners.
indeed, the first half of it is pretty good
why should a beginner need a different explanation to anyone else ... they miss the point I think ...
14:30
the last 2 minutes are what I took issue with :-D
I'd watch it, but it will take me one hundred years to download it probably ...
a thought just occured, I'm meant to be doing phptownhall with sara and phil tomorrow ...
woops I forgot about that ...
lol, and I just got LTE on my phone, 40mbps download :-D
@JoeWatkins Have fun with that! I'll watch it...
we won't get that for many many years I don't think ...
4g is going to be 16mbps at first
ok, shower time. UPS will get here while I am in the shower... I know it
WTF
Guys, I have 3 nested IF statements (because each one throws a different exception if false)
Got told this, genuine opinions appreciated on it:
"i just remembered my C professor who said that nesting conditionals are considered a bad form, because it makes the code harder to read"
14:38
8-9pm eastern time
is this 1am ?
user895378
@Jimbo I never nest conditionals. It's unreadable and hard to test.
@Jimbo yes, a c professor will say that ...
user895378
Using nested conditionals is not writing readable code.
user895378
(IMO)
14:40
bit big that actually
^ needs some more DVs
user895378
@Jimbo gimme a paste or something and I'll show you how I would personally rewrite it
@rdlowrey gist.github.com/J7mbo/8317804 <-- and I thought that was nice code
@rdlowrey yep, although there is a reason that nesting is supported, you don't nest 15 code paths, but nesting 3 ... I dunno if that's really so bad ...
user895378
> If you need more than 3 levels of indentation, you're screwed anyway, and should fix your program. -- Linus Torvalds
14:42
They tend to say 3 is the limit right, "magic number" and all
user895378
class
    -> method
        -> conditional
user895378
So if you nest you've automatically broken that.
@rdlowrey Linus codes in C :P
user895378
I know. But I apply it to PHP. It makes for supremely readable code if you don't nest conditionals.
yeah, but it still stands I think, though I wouldn't say that class / method are included really, when you look at a method you know you are looking at a method and can see the boundaries of the codepath easily ...
14:44
@rdlowrey Sometimes nesting conditionals is a lot more readable than not doing so.
@BenjaminGruenbaum code or it didn't happen.
@Ocramius sure
@BenjaminGruenbaum Seen the code above? I wrote that aiming toward readability....
@Jimbo no, was busy
Anyone would give me a hand with this error? "Fatal error: Uncaught exception 'OAuth\Common\Http\Exception\TokenResponseException' with message 'file_get_contents(openapi.etsy.com/v2/oauth/request_token): failed to open stream: no suitable wrapper could be found' "
user895378
14:46
@BenjaminGruenbaum I've never seen that to be true.
malformed url @samyb8
@JoeWatkins it's when trying this library, the ETSY example github.com/Lusitanian/PHPoAuthLib/blob/master/examples/etsy.php
if(age > 18){ // @Ocramius
    if(gender === Gender.Male){
         serveBeer(); // chauvinistic example fo' sure
    }else if(gender === Gender.Female){
        serveCocktail(); // sorry for non PHP var names, PHP names suck
    }
}else {
    serveChocolateMilk();
}
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'd choose hot chocolate in any case :p
if(gender === Gender.Female || name === Jimbo) { /** I'll have a £10 cocktail thanks }
14:49
@samyb8 print the url, either it's a malformed url, or the error is correct and you are missing a wrapper the library uses, I assumed you weren't missing wrappers because that would be obvious ...
user895378
@BenjaminGruenbaum See above ^ ... No one in their right mind would argue that the first one is more readable
@Fabien nothing yet, try [email protected] there might be something wrong with [email protected] ... ( I don't mean me, I mean the email address )
@BenjaminGruenbaum Realistically for me this would look more like:
if (age <= 18) {
    serveChocolateMilk();
    return;
}
if (gender === Gender.Male) {
    serveBeer();
} else {
    serveCocktail();
}
14:50
if (age <= 18) {
    serveCholocateMilk();
} else if (gender == Gender.Male) {
    serveBeer();
} else {
    serveCocktail();
}
@ircmaxell Sounds like "I had nothing clever to say"
@rdlowrey Well, I think stylistically mine is much nicer tbh... maybe my inexperience is the reason for this
@LeviMorrison @ircmaxell that was an example... add another case in the else.
@LeviMorrison nice :-D
And ircmaxell's example is great too.
user895378
14:50
@Jimbo Not remotely.
@rdlowrey woah that's crazyu.
@JoeWatkins $url is not printing anything....
user895378
Yours is unreadable and provides massive cyclomatic complexity making it more of a PITA to test and more error prone.
@samyb8 I meant the url being passed to that call to file_get_contents
@rdlowrey same Cyclomatic Complexity
user895378
14:51
@LeviMorrison Well ... I also am very much in favor of single-entry/single-exit to from functions. I try to avoid early returns like that.
@JoeWatkins Sorry I am being slow and still composing and working at the same time :p
afk, off out ... back soonish ..
@Fabien np
@rdlowrey Contrived example is contrived. I bet I could come up with a better way to serve beverages if that was really my job ^^
@rdlowrey cyclomatic complexity is a horrible measure for actual code complexity in practice, it's a nice measure for pointing out potential problems but it's not an absolute measure by any means.
@JoeWatkins mmm not sure where to check that url passed.... how should I check it?
user895378
14:52
:)
@BenjaminGruenbaum sounds like fuel for a blog post ;-)
@rdlowrey Ah come on it's not massive complexity. I understand in larger codebases where yours would be much more preferable... but with the one I showed you it's pretty clear isn't it. Still the same complexity with testing
@BenjaminGruenbaum @ircmaxell's is much better. By returning early, you can even make it shorter
and avoid the else checks
user895378
@BenjaminGruenbaum maybe, but a well-named method is far more readable than if(){ if() { if() {{}}}
Sent now @JoeWatkins
user895378
14:53
1 min ago, by rdlowrey
@LeviMorrison Well ... I also am very much in favor of single-entry/single-exit to from functions. I try to avoid early returns like that.
@ircmaxell Sounds good.
polymorphism > if/else
$customer->serveDrink()
@rdlowrey you can turn that around
14:54
@Gordon When appropriate, it's not always more readable.
"success" condition is at the end. All others are secondary paths
@ircmaxell being a pedant here, being served a drink and serving a drink is not the same thing :P
I personally go with early returns all the time. Also prevents a lot of fake coverage
@rdlowrey of course, I'm not making an arguement to prefer nesting, I'm making an argument against this absolute rule.
Yeah it's more $waiter->serveDrink('beer', $customer)
14:55
@BenjaminGruenbaum hence why I'm against that type of object modeling ;-)
@Gordon I think misko made a demo of a software written only via polymorphism :D
user924016
Hey guys =]
@ircmaxell :)
@Ocramius yes, a calculator
user895378
@BenjaminGruenbaum There are places where I will nest them, of course ... e.g. very tight loops or when performance is very important. I'm not advocating unquestioning dogmatic adherence :)
14:56
if(age > 18){ // @Ocramius
    if(gender === Gender.Male){
         serveBeer(); // chauvinistic example fo' sure
    }else if(gender === Gender.Female){
        serveCocktail(); // sorry for non PHP var names, PHP names suck
    }
}else {
    if(favoriteColor == Blue){
        serveJuice();
    } else {
        serveChocolateMilk();
    }
}
@ircmaxell i would be interested if her opinion stays the same in regards to physical security (like TSA, police, etc..)
user895378
@Ocramius But it also adds to the cognitive load required to understand your code.
You might argue this isn't very elegant, but I bet any of you non-programmers can read that a lot more easily and it's perfectly clear what it does.
@CarrieKendall I'm not ;-)
@BenjaminGruenbaum and also the tightest of possible coupling...
user895378
If a function has only one possible return point it's very easy to follow the path of code execution and know exactly what the possible results are.
14:57
@rdlowrey that's php being bad and not inlining, not agreement with what I said.
user895378
@BenjaminGruenbaum You're right about that. Which means I disagree that it ever makes sense to nest conditionals :)
user895378
if(age > 18){
    doWhatYouNeedForAdults();
} else {
   doWhatYouNeedForKids();
}
@ircmaxell So what? Tight coupling isn't always bad. It's just generally bad. Plenty of times I prefer clarity over decoupling things - especially in code that is very unlikely to ever be extended.
user895378
^^ So much more readable. How anyone could argue otherwise is totally beyond me.
@BenjaminGruenbaum let's stop dealing in hypotheticals, because that code you show is a bad example, and is likely to change often
14:59
@ircmaxell Yeah, agreed. It's also not a real coding problem.

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