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14:12
@Jimbo As long as you don't cast it to a string
@cspray Why would anyone do that? Does casting to a string hit __tostring()?
Hello
@Jimbo It does
And the same reason you would cast any object to a string :)
@cspray You know, I've never cast an object to a string. I have implemented \JsonSerialize, which is technically for a string... albeit a json one...
(with that argument of json still being a string, I'm still adhering to the websocket RFC when I pass in a json string as the topic) :P
@Jimbo You never use __toString to allow for easier printf debugging?
14:22
@Danack Nope, if I'm ever logging, I just sprintf("Error: 'error string', data: %s", serialize($data));
Actually just yesterday I was trying to choose between seralize, print_r with true as the second param and another for logging the offending data
Good afternoon everyone
Eh, I don't do it a lot but there have been times where I have. Just wanted to point out that particular object's __toString is funky at best
So I just met @JoeWatkins
Nice guy, think I talked his ear off though :P
14:45
@Fabien I don't know why, but I have always imagined @JoeWatkins being from Yorkshire. Is he?
@bwoebi what's it with PHP and Ponies? =P
user895378
morning 11ers
@rdlowrey morning!
@rdlowrey -to-the-
@rdlowrey howdy
15:00
@Jimbo Kent. :P
Morning @rdlowrey
I set a cookie within a script. Then I run another script that unsets that cookie. However, it isn't going away. So I opened up the Dev Tools in chrome and looked at the results of the deleteCookie.php page. Under "response cookies," it lists the cookie name and then deleted next to it. But when I go into chrome and settings and look at all cookies, this cookie is still present and hasn't been deleted.
why?!
What steps did you undertake to "delete" the cookie?
Adding a "/" did the trick
apparently it wasn't working because I only specified the name of the cookie, the content and the time. When I put "/" as the fourth parameter, it worked!
15:07
And now you are 100% sure you know how cookies are "deleted"? :)
Eh, not really. In another part of the website, it worked without the slash.
He's now an official expert on deleting cookies!
What's the cookie for?
To not show a little notification bar on the top.
cookies are deleted when they expire.. so setting the expire time to a past date 'deletes' it.. not sure what trick adding '/' does..
15:13
Also cookies are set upon page refresh/next page.
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute you mean adding '/' as in the root domain instead of the current?
if you're on www, you would end up with two cookies, one for root (/) and one for www if you check using a cookie checker plugin in the browser..
So, did you really delete the cookie then or did you just set another one for a different domain? :)
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute seen this?
43
Q: javascript - delete cookie

kennedyIs my function of creating cookie correct? and how do i delete cookie at the beginning of my program run? is there a simple coding? function createCookie(name,value,days) <script> function setCookie(c_name,value,1) { document.cookie = c_name + "=" +escape(value); } setCookie('c...

^ why doesn't this become a onebox... hmm https messes with it. >.<
15:19
Opinions on using a configuration file rather than class constants?
@reikyoushin No, will look at it in a second.
Also, I am currently on localhost. But I am sure I'd face problems as soon as I upload to a server.
good morning
> visited 1337 days, 1334 consecutive
Congrats
cool! since mine broke, i stopped bothering with the consecutive thingy
user895378
15:27
@Jimbo if a value can possibly change (configuration) it's not "constant" so class constants should be out of the question for config-type things IMO.
user895378
@ircmaxell I actually checked your profile yesterday to see if you'd reached 1337 consecutive. How cool am I? ;)
lol :-P
user895378
@Jimbo Beyond that, I try hard to avoid exposing class constants unless they're intended for use by third-party code because like it or not all class constants are public. Because you can't make class constants private they're a part of your public API. Once they're available you can't trust that users aren't relying on those constants in their code. Think long and hard before using constants/class constants because you've instantly added a point of BC failure.
I'm not sure if chocolate is always around when I am trying not to eat it or it's just always around.
user895378
I find myself using private static $FAUX_CONSTANT = 42; when I want a "private" class constant.
15:31
lol
I have no idea what I am doing when it comes to XPath, but if anyone does. Do you know why this is only returning one node? $xpath->query("//div[@class='content']/text()[contains(.,'cv-pls')]") If I remove the text search it will return nodelist of all divs with that class fine.
@rdlowrey Thanks for the info - you're right on the BC and public stuff. Config file it is. Although technically, anything can change in the future - hence we use interfaces sometimes just in case.. Therefore we shouldn't really use class constants should we (unless the constant is a numeric constant that is proven by math / physics etc)
@rdlowrey needs a screenshot.. it's a once in a lifetime opportunity. :P
I have a datetime column in mysql. When I use $date = date("m-d-Y H:i:s"); to insert the date and time into the db, it inserts it as 0000-00-00 00:00:00. WHY?!
user895378
@Jimbo Well it's not a "shouldn't" ... it's just that you shouldn't use them unless you're prepared to treat them like a public method in terms of BC support. I also emulate Enumerables with a class made up entirely of class constants. For example ...
15:34
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute why don't you just use NOW()?
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute $dateTime->format(DateTime::ISO8601);
Saw date() on PHP website, so I used that instead.
user895378
class Status {
    const OK = 200;
    const NOT_FOUND = 404;
    const METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED = 405;
}
user895378
^ Using class constants to fake an enum
Ahh, okay
Easy to add to as well
15:35
Don't even know how "now" works
is now() all i do?
@AGirlSaidMySmileIsCute it will insert the current datetime into the field
<?php
$dt = new DateTime();
echo $dt->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');
?>
what about the format?
user895378
The point is this: constants are great but only if their values aren't expected to change and only if you're okay with having them be public.
@crypticツ do you have an idea about this? hahaha
15:42
you guys are great
@reikyoushin finally I can take PHP seriously =oP
@rdlowrey don't forget 418
the more I look into this PSR HTTP interface suggestion, the more fishy it looks.
Too much magic for the first iteration IMHO.
The __toString() issues, the factories and even fluent interfaces in the specs.
Sounds that more wants to be done than it needs to be done.
That normally does not turn out well.
then say something
I will later strip the interfaces down and draw a picture.
15:57
PHP is at least 100x more awesome after seeing that @reikyoushin
user895378
@AlmaDo E_TOO_MUCH_TEAPOT
or should I say, 20% cooler?
function ifsetor(&$value, $default = null) {
    return isset($value) ? $value : $default;
}
Useful or something I don't know about why its bad?
Why not just use the ternary inline and avoid the expense of a function call (and confusion of having to look at what it does)?
references, it's bad
15:59
How expensive is it and what's wrong with references? (googling atm)
user895378
references are the devil
@Fabien Can't tell you in cycles but >0.
15
Q: Why are references rarely used in PHP?

Alexander CogneauI have some C++ knowledge and know that pointers are commonly used there, but I've started to look at PHP open source code and I never see code using references in methods. Instead, the code always uses a return value instead of passing the reference to the variable to the method, which then ch...

@Fabien Why would you ever use $someVar = ifsetof($otherVar, 'Not Found'); over $someVar = isset($otherVar) ? $otherVar : "Not Found";?
It's not massively less verbose, it makes less sense when reading code and it has the overhead of a function call.
I haven't. I was just curious about the function. And now I am learning about evil references.
16:03
References aren't necessarily evil, they're just situational
Honestly, I think references are bad because it is an extra hurdle your brain has to leap over when reading code. While I understand that sometimes you need references most of the time you don't.
@Suhosin Nobody uses isset on variables - the target is an array, in which case things can get quite verbose
not to mention it couples code together, and removes the ability for the engine to manage memory in a clean way
I couldn't live without foreach($items as &$item)
That too. For me personally though if it makes the code harder to read is reason enough ;)
16:05
Though even then I'd suggest not issetor, but something like using array_get($array['super']['nested'], 'key', 'not found') instead - for two reasons: a) it will not create a dummy null value in the array and b) it will throw an error if ['super']['nested'] doesn't exist (usually you're only unsure about the existence of the outermost index)
@Fabien hm.. may be because C++ "reference" has nothing to do with PHP "reference" ..
user895378
@Danack I don't really get why you can't just do the following. Locking is something you have to do for data integrity:
user895378
session_start();
$var = $_SESSION['myVar'];
session_write_close();
user895378
If the speed of the IO is too slow then people shouldn't be using the file handler.
user895378
And again ... sessions were never intended for lots of concurrent access to the same session data (hence the locking). This is the sort of thing that's much better addressed with websockets and/or local storage. Trying to hack sessions for concurrent access to state is like bolting on an engine to a horse-drawn carriage. Sure, it'll make it usable for a while longer but you'd be better off to just purchase a car.
16:11
@NikiC agree
user895378
sessions === inter-request state
sessions !== simultaneous request state
@NikiC Cool thank you :).
@AlmaDo Not that I really know either.
16:29
Some time ago, there was some discussion of a short object syntax, along with short array syntax, does anyone know what happened to that?
@Leigh I thought (object)[] is that short object syntax? =P
1 message moved to Trash can
:D
Also hiya all again
@Leigh it was turned down, because PHP is not javascript
16:45
from phpinternalsbook:
> Resources are covered in the Resources chapter (which doesn’t exist yet).
^ that made me smile :-)
everytime I order something from Amazon, I forget to order something. I always try to remember before placing the order. And I can never remember. I'm in that moment right now :-D
@ircmaxell did you ever get your phone?
yup, love it!
awesome, we must get @CarrieKendall one soon
yeah, the Nexus 5 is really quite good
@ircmaxell Seems like pretty poor reasoning
What we've come to expect I suppose.
@Leigh I think that it is largely sound reasoning, in that {}-objects in JS are mostly equivalent to []-arrays in PHP
@NikiC I don't think "we shouldn't have this feature in php because another language has it" is sound reasoning not to have a feature.
17:10
but in PHP objects are not arrays, and they have different semantics, so being able to create both should be trivial (without weird casting hacks)
@Leigh PHP arrays work differently from JS arrays and JS objects... it's a completely different system.
@ircmaxell Little reasons to use (object)[] over [] in PHP
disagree, pass-by-ref semantics for one
@BenjaminGruenbaum What's your point?
@Leigh What would you accomplish by {} objects in PHP?
17:11
@ircmaxell that much is true
But still I don't think it's a sound idea to use PHP objects as dictionaries ... just like it is a bad idea in JS (but they don't provide proper alternatives before Harmony)
@BenjaminGruenbaum ease of use when working with json :)
I'll buy that
@NikiC userland Maps exist.
Just like you don't use the language basic collections for everything we don't either.
17:13
@BenjaminGruenbaum ArrayObject?
wtf does $constValue = $this->entity::SOME_CONSTANT not work?
@Gordon the thing to the left of :: needs to be a variable or a string, not an arbitrary expression
and because PHP
@Gordon you need $this->{entity::SOME_CONSTANT}?
get_class($this->entity)::SOME_CONSTANT works :P
@bwoebi nonono, native JS arrays are object, in fact the definition is rather funny - an Array is an object with the array prototype that has indexes. Indexes are keys that convert to Uint32. Implementation wise - it'll use native arrays or hash maps depending on how sparse the array is.
17:15
@Gordon $obj = $this->entity; $obj::SOME_CONSTANT also works
annoying
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh? You have a link for some reading?
@Gordon As said, it's ambiguous with $this->{entity::SOME_CONSTANT}
a really good watch, if you've never seen it before
@NikiC reading of what? A Map implementation? A Set implementation?
People who use {} for maps in "serious" code shoot themselves in the foot. There are so many security considerations these people overlook.
17:20
@BenjaminGruenbaum How you implement proper maps in JS that don't go crazy if you add a property named __proto__ or something like that
@NikiC first of all, __proto__ is not hard to take care of, you just don't allow for properties that are in Object.prototype in your 'get' function. For example github.com/petkaantonov/DataStructures.js/blob/master/src/…
@ircmaxell Don't think I've seen it. But seeing "ICs" in the preview sounds intriguing, you know how much I love polymorphic inline caches :)
lol, it's really an awesome insight into how v8 optimizes objects, and arrays and a bunch of other stuff.
@BenjaminGruenbaum what do you mean by "not allow"? so that key just isn't supported?
17:23
@NikiC either that, or just append @ to keys when fetching them if they're in object.prototype
@BenjaminGruenbaum Ah, so basically that's just a complete HT reimplementation - well, I guess that is one way to solve the problem ^^ And likely JS is fast enough to make that less than a order of magnitude slower than a nice C implementation
Good evening ladies and germs.
Hello @MadaraUchiha
You've been busy.
Very
I'm getting discharged soon, got a lot of loose ends to tie :P
All those witnesses...
discharged -_-
17:27
@Fabien I'm not really sure how to say it in English :P
@NikiC it's about as fast as native :)
In Hebrew we say "משתחרר" (Mishtachrer), which means getting released, but it doesn't sound right
End of your contract?
@MadaraUchiha discharged is the correct term
Seems unusual to me. You get discharged from a hospital. Not work.
17:30
Is __call always called or only if there isn't existing property/method?
@webarto The latter. only for methods, not for properties :o
Thank you very much.
@Fabien But you get discharged from the army as well (Honorably discharged or dishonorbly discharged)
Yeah, that :) Sorry, confused with __get __set
It makes sense as in it get the point across, it's just not typically the word used.
17:32
@Fabien not work, millitary service
Oh I didn't know it was military related.
do you guys know what the rule on meta is with very old i want to bring up again?
@Fabien I serve in the IAF, finishing in about a week :)
user895378
An error message I've never seen before:
user895378
> Notice: Indirect modification of overloaded element of ... has no effect
17:47
I've seen that one before. I forget what it means though.
@rdlowrey For some reason I remember coming across one of those a while ago but I forget what I was doing
Probably doing a modification to an array reference inside of a loop or callback...
Or maybe a property or something.
user895378
Yep trying to increment an ArrayAccess offset: $session['test']++;
Ah, yes, that's right.
I think that's why I gave up trying to use ArrayObject and friends...
user895378
I haven't ever really had much use for those sorts of things but I was trying to be "user-friendly" with something and got that. I think usually ArrayAccess is a bad idea for that reason. If you were silencing notices then behavior like the above could be a real problem.
17:51
Yea, and sadly there's too many people doing that
Our codebase was developed in PHP4 with warnings and notices turned off.
We're moving to 5.5, so I turned them back on.
oh lord
My error handler prints a giant red box on the page.
I loaded our website front page and told my boss "every one of those is a potential bug." Jaw, meet floor.
Thankfully 95% of them are undefined indexes, ereg and /e regex deprecation notices.
So, easy.
That sounds like the last codebase I worked in...
My sympathies
Except the part about going to 5.5 :(
It could be worse. It could be some of our backend purchase order code.
user895378
17:59
@Charles I fully expect your keyboard to be snatched by a marauding goto T-Rex.
It uses three different tables to store three different states of each line item...
And moves records between them.
Instead of, oh, I dunno, a freaking status field.
user895378
wow ...
Completely procedural copy and paste crap.
@rdlowrey Oh no, this is a completely different type of spaghetti. www_html/foo.php will likely use shared_code/templates_www/foo.php but also for some reason it'll use shared_code/includes/foo.php as well despite the one in shared_code/includes being only ever used in that one page so why is it even broken out into its own thing to begin with and why does it belong in the directory for code shared between frontend and backend and oh gods why.
I have properly chastised the previous team and they fully realize how much they used to suck.
I keep asking my boss to put a time machine in next year's budget so I can fix this stuff properly.
user895378
On the bright side, given your status as Bringer of True Enlightment the previous team probably assumes that you are the greatest programmer of all time :)
user895378
So there's that consolation.
18:05
Na, they think I'm passionate but bitter. They're right.
user895378
You should introduce them to @teresko ...
Yeah, I've got nothing on him.
@ircmaxell is pretty much required too
18:22
evening ...
I spent 6 hours driving today ...
Yuck, I hate that.
twas horrible
I was thinking about doing that
oh it wasn't enjoyable driving, it was motorway driving stuck in traffic
that sucks
I was thinking about driving up to Canada for the night, to photograph the Aurora tonight, but going to be mostly cloudy, so not worth it
18:31
that's worth 6 hours in a car, definitely ... or at least it would be if you could see it ...
@ircmaxell Yea, I'm like 45 minutes from the border now that is definitely something I want to go see with my wife
@JoeWatkins if it was supposed to be clear, I'd be driving right now
but driving 6-7 hours for a "chance" is eih
so I went to meet the guy who made me an offer the other day ... got lost, @Fabien rescued me, haven't got full details of the offer yet but looking good, and they are fine with me taking on other work too, and didn't argue about rates ... so I get to look for even more interesting stuff :)
that could be awesome, or eih
I tell ya, job searches would be easier if I was interested in writing code :-D
18:41
I think I'll make it awesome, it didn't take long to get some pretty interesting offers and this way I don't really have to choose one of them ... plus, the people who need lots of [interesting] programming are generally startups ... statistically, they mostly fail, so its a bit of security too ...
@ircmaxell I could probably do with putting a bit more thought into the things I write (who couldn't), however it would be like some sort of mental torture if all ever did was think about programming something ... it'd drive me mad ... totally mad ...
I love writing code
I hate writing code that I don't care about
oh I c ....
urf, I have to go out again in the stupid car .... back soon chaps ...
enjoy
> This question was caused by a problem that can't be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was solved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.
This looks nice
user924016
Helloo =]
18:54
hey @RonniSkansing
user924016
@PeeHaa =] hope you are having a great day.
It was meh. Spent a good hour looking at some html/css page somebody in the office created and writing down which parts were retarded of the half page. It's amazing how bad half a html page can be
user924016
hehe yea
anyone else asks me to go out today and I'll harpoon them ...
@JoeWatkins I'm sure that when I was in the neighborhood you would come to the pub :)
19:02
:)
Hi all. Complete StackOverflow noob here :)
Hiya @Complete StackOverflow noob :)
user924016
Hi
@WildcardSearch Nice profile intro. If I were you I would drink a lot
Ow wait I already do that ;)
lol
I am still getting my profile info sorted . . . :p
19:12
Well FWIW you at least have a decent question/answer ratio :D
So, welcome! :-)
lol
0 questions / 1 answer :D
hehe
welcomez
tyvm
/me tries slash me
/me failz
/me lols @ noob
omg
runs away
19:18
/me slaps @WildcardSearch around a bit with a large trout
Yay, we have a "it's a typo" close reason now! Booo, they took away "minimal understanding" and SSCCE. :(
@Ocramius Using <sup></sup> and doing them manually ^^
yeap, saw
thought he had escaped the slap-fest by leaving IRC
:p
19:27
nice way of doing that - (it will help reducing my parenthesitis) (really (I mean seriously))
@Ocramius Except this is not a large work; the PSR is quite small (though bloated still)
@LeviMorrison yes, I just like the explicitness of it
had a lot of discussion with matthia verraes about that as well
I think the suffix is a necessary evil
@WildcardSearch never!
@Ocramius I'll agree it is evil, but disagree on necessary ^^
:D You guys are fun
19:33
@rdlowrey Meh. I think sessions are just storage, and although you would want locking most of the time, you don't always. btw there's already an example of this in ext/session. Which is probably a good example of application level logic that shouldn't have been in the php extension.
user895378
Oh no ... because I think the session upload progress thing is a terrible hack :)
Sure is!
user895378
In any case, that's my two cents. If you can improve on the existing thing then go for it.
Will do.
laterz-- gotta get some work done
19:36
http://php.net/images/noscript.jpg ummm why is this in a <noscript> block at the top of every page on php dot net
@eevee OMG YOU FOUND THE PONIES! Added that less the 60minutes ago... :)
@JoeWatkins are you home?
@Fabien yeah
took many hours
I was worried you would forget the pass code and not have your mobile to call me
@Danack that is so epic
that totally happened ...
19:44
I hate it when people describe stuff as 'unprofessional' - but that is seriously unprofressional.
someone was at the door and remembered the first two numbers and i remembered the last ...
team work ...
Lol figured it out then?
Lucky lol
@Danack it's still awesome
@Danack about the session stuff ... I'm not saying it wouldn't be great to have lockless sessions, I'm saying they cannot replace the default ...
19:47
> but that is seriously awesome.

FTFY (ffuuuuu stupid quote)
P.S. ping (do you have desktop notifications on?..)
user895378
^
THE PINGING
mutes computer
user895378
@Danack @Danack @Danack @Danack @Danack @Danack @Danack
user895378
Oh wait ... sorry ... got confused and thought it was Friday for a second.
19:49
@rdlowrey it is friday somewhere
@JoeWatkins Yes, totally agree. The ext/session should be left as it is (or possibly even have the session upload stuff removed) and shouldn't have even more options added.
where you gonna put upload stuff instead ?
And if anyone want to do (crazy) application level customisation of how the data is locked, they should do it in their application, not in core php.
user895378
Here's a question: if it's possible to get session upload progress then why is it impossible to respond to a request with Expect: 100-continue headers?
@JoeWatkins In the data storage (i.e. redis) so that other applications can update it.
19:50
@rdlowrey it is impossible to respond with expect headers?
user895378
@ircmaxell Impossible to respond to, not with. I haven't seen anyone succeed and I don't think it's SAPI-specific.
hmmm, a server issue perhaps?
@joewatkins was it a productive meet, also talk at all about meeting in London instead?
user895378
@ircmaxell If a client sends Expect:100-continue the web SAPI will send 100 Continue before your php script ever sees the request.
user895378
You have no opportunity to respond and are forced to wait until the entity body is uploaded (which is a violation of HTTP/1.1)
19:52
You sure it's the SAPI? and not the front-end server?
Does it even reach the web sapi or does Apache respond on your behald?
user895378
That's why I was asking. I don't know if it's an SAPI limitation but I've never encountered one where you could do this.
user895378
I think it is a web SAPI limitation though.
@Fabien yeah it was, since it took me so long to get there, the requirement for me to come in has been dropped until the offices are somewhere bit closer ... I should know in about a week when we'll be starting and how long I they want the first part to take ... which will probably be wrong ... they want to do short term contracts based on hours, for some reason - their choice and I won't argue with hourly rates :)
user895378
> Upon receiving a request which includes an Expect request-header field with the ‘100-continue’ expectation, an origin server MUST either respond with 100 (Continue) status and continue to read from the input stream, or respond with a final status code.
19:55
Went to Google SAPI and it autocorrected me to sapiosexual :-/
(Server API)
@JoeWatkins the other bonus is you can keep an eye out for other potential work if you wanted. Takes a little pressure off
@rdlowrey Seems to work correctly for me on nginx. curl -H "Expect: 100-continue" asm.test:8080/continue.php'; + echo $_SERVER['HTTP_EXPECT']; gives "100-continue"
@Fabien yeah I plan to do that, give it a try anyway ... I believe most freelancers do ...
user895378
@Danack That's not the part that doesn't work.
19:59
the final response code bit ...
user895378
@Danack You have to have the ability to send an actual response before the server sends the client 100 Continue

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