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user924016
00:21
Have a nice one
user924016
nn
WTH is this PHP_CEO nonsense?
00:38
@Fabien haha
HIPHOP VM WHAT IS THAT SOME SORT OF VENEREAL DISEASE YOU GOT WORKING AT RAP GENIUS
noight all
Night @PeeHaa
00:50
@Fabien Only one of the greatest Twitter accounts ever
01:33
Evening my fellow egg-eaters.
So, I was having a look at reflection, and came up with this: Currently, the getClosure method is individually defined in ReflectionFunction::getClosure, and ReflectionMethod::getClosure, with no abstract or base implementation in ReflectionFunctionAbstract.
My idea is, move getClosure up into ReflectionFunctionAbstract to favor polymorphism. The only issue, is that the signatures vary; the ReflectionMethod implementation takes an $object parameter to which $this is bound. However, this can be mitigated with providing an optional $object parameter (defaulting NULL) in ReflectionFunctionAbstract.
@DanLugg I was actually just lamenting the fact that I am neither a plane nor a gun.
In the case of a reflected global function or static method, a value of NULL for $object would yield the same behavior as currently. If an object is passed, a $this reference is injected into the scope of the closure anyway. In the case of a reflected instance method, however, passing an object works the same as now, however omitting (or passing NULL) the $object argument results in the reference being set to the same as the result of getClosureThis
@cspray I glued wings to my arms and a rifle to my legs. I dunno what I am, but I'm definitely the implementation of madness.
Basically, the behavior is similar to creating an un-bound closure (one with no $this reference) from any function or method, and then simply calling Closure::bind() to bind it to the $object argument.
@cspray ^^ thoughts? (I take it you and I are the only tumbleweeds at the moment)
I'm trying to think if there's any actual problems with this; the only one that comes to mind is that some goofballs have tested $this === null in order to determine whether the method is invoked in a static context.
But then again, using such practices; I think you're open to accept the consequences.
01:58
@DanLugg To be honest I'm not familiar enough with the ReflectionFunction and ReflectionMethod APIs to provide any meaningful input. Most of my uses of reflection have been of the Object and Class variety.
02:12
@DanLugg So what does it solve?
@DanLugg you don't know people
@Jack It solves the need to perform conditional type-checks in order to call getClosure off a reflection instance.
if ($reflection instanceof \ReflectionFunction) {
    return $reflection->getClosure();
}
if ($reflection instanceof \ReflectionMethod) {
    return $reflection->getClosure($reflection->getClosureThis());
}
^^ no good
/* @var $reflection ReflectionFunctionAbstract */
return $reflection->getClosure();
^^ better
@andho I know that if you're doing that you might not think you deserve the consequences, but the same can be said about people who don't lock shared resources.
That doesn't do the same thing, in the case of \ReflectionMethod you're not binding it to anything.
02:27
@Jack How do you mean?
$reflection->getClosure($reflection->getClosureThis()) !== $reflection->getClosure();
So what you call better is also different.
@Jack It would be the same if the default behavior on NULL passed (or omitted) were to bind to the result of getClosureThis; which is what I described above.
Just for clarity, I'm recommending this signature: public Closure ReflectionFunctionAbstract::getClosure ( [ object $object = NULL ] )
I agree with @DanLugg
There is no reason to have a getClosure(void) method at all
hmm?
getClosure(object $object = null) should do
02:32
As a pseudo-userland implementation, in ReflectionFunctionAbstract:
public function ReflectionFunctionAbstract::getClosure($object = NULL) {
    $closure = $this->createUnboundClosure();
    return $closure->bindTo($object);
}
public function ReflectionMethod::getClosure($object = NULL) {
    return parent::getClosure($object ?: $this->getClosureThis());
}
@DanLugg ^ that
did you miss the null check in ReflectionFunctionAbstract
No?
bindTo accepts NULL, IIRC
Yeah
In any case, that's just goofy sorta-pseudo-code, illustrations sake; I reckon it's rather clear now what I mean.
Well, it seems reasonable ... why not write it up in a bug report :)
02:36
I'm thinking so; however I'm kinda compiling a list of things that could be carefully implemented without knocking things around in ReflectionFunctionAbstract and derivatives.
I dunno if a bug report would cut it.
In that case, perhaps an RFC is a better idea.
besides, it's not a bug per se
^^ yea, that.
@andho That's irrelevant.
Well, I was thinking this is in the scope (especially with other minor additions/fixes) of an RFC.
02:38
Irrelevant, because bug reports can also ask for feature request, etc.
@Jack it is when it will be closed as "This is not a bug -.-"
@andho You obviously have never used the bug report tool =p
there have been cases of the sort where feature requests or pointing out quirks are closed as not a bug
Either way, the bug-report approach, I've seen too often, result in nothing happening; literally. It goes unassigned and unnoticed for ages (if not ever)
@DanLugg You have to talk to the right pple.
02:40
Maybe that's changed in recent times, not sure.
@Jack Oh, no doubt.
And we have at least three php-src devs in this room :)
Well, I'm thinking I might want to whack together a patch myself to make it 3.5 ;-)
A patch in C? Nice!
Unless I can write it in C# or D ;-)
lol
Ehhh yeahno
02:42
Actually, I bet you could write extensions in D.
Wow, who would have thought php_reflection.c is almost 200kB in size ... =/
Yea, it's a big file.
Monolith
The other little gem I want to introduce is this: public static ReflectionFunctionAbstract ReflectionFunctionAbstract::createFromCallable ( callable $callable )
A ReflectionFunctionAbstract static factory method to take the "fun" out of making them from callable.
To turn any callable into a closure?
02:43
To reflect any callable, however with both additions you could essentially do that.
ReflectionFunctionAbstract::createFromCallable($callable)->getClosure();
Sounds like fun.
Actually, I was doing something nifty the other day; creating closures of methods bound to a clone of the object from which they came, so it freezes the state.
$reflectionMethod->getClosure(clone $reflectionMethod->getClosureThis())
It didn't end up working out for what I was doing, but it was neat.
I think Freud would have loved Reflection :)
The constructor for ReflectionFunction could be overloaded, me thinks.
new ReflectionFunction([$object, 'method']); to name a silly example.
02:54
But... wouldn't that yield a ReflectionMethod?
Binding that to anything will probably not do anything, though.
@DanLugg Why would it?
Wait, maybe I'm not understanding; overloading ReflectionFunction::__construct ?
Yeah, current it takes mixed $name
Which can be a string or a closure.
Right.
So, easy enough to add array
and with array, string and closure ... you get callable isn't it.
02:56
So, of what type is $r if I were to $r = new ReflectionFunction([$o, 'm'])?
The constructor of a class always returns that class .. not sure what you mean.
Exactly, a callable of the structure [$o, 'm'] denotes the method m on object $o. It wouldn't make sense to reflect that as a ReflectionFunction, but instead as a ReflectionMethod.
So overloading ReflectionFunction::__construct doesn't quite work there.
Unless you mean to do away with ReflectionMethod altogether and just have a single ReflectionFunction type to cover all callable types.
Wait, so what would ReflectionFunctionAbstract::createFromCallable() do?
It would return either an instance of ReflectionFunction or ReflectionMethod, doesn't matter because the return type is ReflectionFunctionAbstract
A parent class that's aware of its descendants? Hmm.
03:00
Well, it is and it isn't.
Nothing about the signature denotes that it's aware of it's inheritors; it returns an instance of itself.
For an abstract class, I don't feel that would be the right thing to do.
I get what you're saying, thought about it myself. I personally think, however, that this is such a limited scope (we're not introducing new function types anytime soon, so far as I know) that it would be suitable. The function signature still denotes that it is unaware of it's inheritors.
It seems that @rdlowrey made a Git booboo ;-)
user895378
Yeah, I've been trying to fix it without rewriting history for like three hours but it's just a big mess now
Oh dear =/
user895378
03:03
And no one has been around in #php.pecl to help :/
user895378
Basically I realized the problem as soon as I pushed a few hours ago and tried to fix it with revert to avoid wasting other people's time.
user895378
Then it just got messy :(
Yeah, revert should add another commit to negate the previous ... not sure how that goes for merge commits, though.
user895378
Yeah, it's the merge commits that makes it a nightmare
user895378
So I'm just giving up at this point. Hopefully someone with force karma can come along and fix it.
03:06
These are the times when you need one of those virtual screens that shows the tree structure and you just prune that damn tree in the air like a boss.
I would probably draw it on a piece of paper.
@rdlowrey I wonder if git cherry-pick would have worked out better in this case ... it won't matter now, of course :)
monring gentlemen
03:23
Your avatar looks scary.
hehe..
do u want me to change it?
no, that's all right; i'll keep my eyes closed.
haha..to keep ur eyes open, il change it later
04:05
@Jack it's exactly the same
I've never tried :)
why the hell some local accountants send me invitation to their LI circles
I wouldn't be surprised if it was one person who made it by mistake or for some other reason, but > 5
:-S
Competition.
in stupidity?
in general.
04:14
booooooooooooooooOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOoooooooooooooooring
Boring is watching a man trying to kill an elephant by shooting cotton buds at it and then burying it using a teaspoon.
Derp
I am not bored, for I am watching Worst Cooks in America while rather tipsy and/or drunk.
I am also in the review queue. Perhaps this is not wise.
Meh, @MadaraUchiha still needs 200 votes to be in the top 10 for moderator nominations.
What's the worst that could happen? Failing an audit? :)
@Jack Been there, done that, voted to re-close.
04:27
morning
@happy (new GreetingFactory(TIME_ZONE_MORNING))->greet();
@Charles ;)
I just came back, I was in inside go-karting with friends
a circuit of 375 meters and a top of 53.1 km/h and an average of 40.6
04:57
Gautier Serre (born in 1984), better known as Igorrr, is a French composer and multi-instrumentalist known for blending many styles of music in his albums such as electronic music, breakcore, Baroque, Death Metal, Trip-hop, etc. Biography Active since 2005, he started out with his first self-produced demos, Poisson Soluble in 2006 and Moisissure in 2008, a reissue of these two demos was released later on the label Ad Noiseam in 2011 as a double CD. After these first two releases, Igorrr released his album Nostril in 2010 to critical acclaim. The magazine Les Inrockuptibles listed N...
^^^ This gentleman, is probably insane.
m59
m59
05:13
Hey guys. First of all - Joomla, second of all, I need to pull off something like this:
class Foo {
	public $bar = someFunc();
}
And Joomla is equivalent to "good morning" ? :)
m59
m59
Joomla is equivalent to: I'm about to have to ask a question about doing something ridiculous.
Also, good morning =D
I don't see how this can be done without the constructor
You can't define a property as an anonymous function in the definition of a class. You need to either make it a real method or do it in the constructor.
m59
m59
sigh. I think I'm going to have to modify Joomla then.
> The name is a phonetic spelling of the Swahili word jumla meaning "all together" or "as a whole". It was chosen to reflect the commitment of the development team and community to the project.
^^ So... kinda?
05:23
That's way more deep than I expected.
m59
m59
Actually, thank goodness I just threw in a constructor and rolled with in and it worked.
@m59 Wait, if it's a public property, why not just assign it after?
$foo = new Foo; $foo->bar = function () {};
m59
m59
I don't touch any of that. For some reason I was thinking it didn't actually use the class at all (just reads it as text)
wat.
I smell an X/Y problem.
m59
m59
Yeah, I know.
05:25
What're you trying to accomplish?
m59
m59
It isn't. The file is read/written as text in other place and I got hung up on that.
But that wouldn't make any sense then if I'm trying to use any variable in it now lol.
I need to use an environment variable to set one of the values is all. Using the constructor was my first thought but I was thinking it was going to break things.
E_NO_COMPRENDE
m59
m59
php wrote a class file
then is using that class
Generated class?
m59
m59
but the file it wrote is wrong (has a static value and needs an environment variable)
if that's what you call it =D
05:30
I think I'd need to see what you're doing to understand what you're talking about.
m59
m59
It's just a config file, man. Nothing complicated. I didn't do it anyway, Joomla did.
Oh, lol. This is Joomla. No wonder I have no idea what you're talking about :-P
m59
m59
writeToFile("class Foo { public $bar = 'whatever' }")
Yea, gotcha; code generation.
m59
m59
Just knowing how the file is created, I felt like I wouldn't be allowed to use the constructor (and it's not documented)
but yeah, that was silly.
05:33
For an incredible kludge, you could make it generate a callable array, pointing to a public static method somewhere (or just a global function)
$code = "class Foo { public $bar = ['Super\Duper\Kludge', 'doStuff']; }";
m59
m59
but all that is Joomla core.
And?
m59
m59
I don't want to touch it =D
*shrug* The converse of "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" is, "if it don't work, break it"
Jes
Jes
Hi room
Good morning
How to access a std class attribute
05:43
morning @Jes
m59
m59
$doYouMean->likeThis
Jes
Jes
$this->user->guid does not work returns null
^^ Weren't you asking this earlier?
Jes
Jes
stdClass Object
(
[_name_] => User
[guid] => 447229
[name] => nwe user
[username] => [email protected]
[password] => c064b80e5ad253fc251601b24f966560
thats the array n i want to access guid
@DanLugg been trying to do it but no luck... i
How are you accessing that object?
@Jes Is that $this->user?
Jes
Jes
05:47
@DanLugg $this->user->guid
The user object is $this->user, correct?
m59
m59
@Jes he's asking what you var_dumped to get that
^^ this
Jes
Jes
$user = $this->UsersEntity->validateUser($email,$password);
pr($user);
Uh. So, it's $user? Have you tried var_dump($user->guid);?
Jes
Jes
05:50
yeah
string(6) "447229"
i get this
whats that string(6) how to avoid that
@Jes Listen carefully. Learn PHP.
Are you using a framework to develop something?
Jes
Jes
yeah
i am forced to use CAKEPHP
i have to
:14796317
Okay, that's fine; but the problem is you first need to learn PHP sans-Cake.
Jes
Jes
ok ..
CakePHP is useless if you don't know PHP. And ... well, CakePHP is pretty fucking useless.
I'm not trying to be rude.
Jes
Jes
05:56
i will learn php
hi everyone
Jes
Jes
@DanLugg reading head first
@Jes Okay. Well, personally, I don't think the Head-First series is any good. But everyone learns differently, so maybe it's alright for you.
Jes
Jes
@DanLugg what would you suggest?
I couldn't suggest anything off-hand.
05:58
can i ask which php framework performs well: YII or Laravel? and which is much easier between the two.
Frankly, just learning programming fundamentals and concepts as a whole is beneficial; any language.
@Vainglory07 Laravel makes pancakes better than Yii, and Yii stole my car, so I have a bit of a prejudice. However, Yii is beautiful in the spring and summer months, so sometimes it's worth it.
m59
m59
If typing domain.com takes you to www.domain.com is that a dns thing?
It's been a year since I messed with that stuff and have possibly forgotten everything.
Jes
Jes
to understand and if i m not bothring u could you tell me the about string(6) "447229"
is it the index ?
m59
m59
@Jes what do you want??
echo $user->guid
?
Jes
Jes
whats string(6)
is it the index value?
m59
m59
06:02
You don't know what a string is?
That's the length. It has 6 characters
Jes
Jes
i m sorry i know i m being stupid but trying to understand
good morning
m59
m59
type(length) value
@AlmaDo good afternoon here :D
@AlmaDo mornin ... mornin all
06:09
1 message moved to recycle bin
please, keep in mind room-11.github.io/#dont_1
hi, @Mr.Alien
@AlmaDo Hello, how are you doing?
hm.. I'm happy because I have some things to do. Actually, it's implementation of my own idea. Only sad is that I can't discuss that with someone :\
@AlmaDo ohhh, confidential stuff huh, so no more managing people, enjoy...
@Mr.Alien no no no. not confidential
than?
06:13
I've asked here, no one replied :p so I think it will be really hard to find someone who's familiar with concept good enough to see weak/strong sides of my idea
aaaah... ok ok.. Google may help you
I'm not good in that too (well, not good enough to be sure)
@Mr.Alien google can't
its really tough to get through when minimum info is available...
@DanLugg thank you for your insight..ive tried YII also but i find it hard. While laravel, i havent tried it
@Mr.Alien from that area :p google is giving me links to my own SO's comments (even not answers)
that's why I doubt google will help. In any case, I'll try
06:17
It's about what?
I want to implement closure table tree traversal structure in PHP with emulating double-linked index structure
ok that bumped over my head.. ;)
so quick to find, quick to add, quick to remove (nodes/full subtrees), quick to restructure (i.e. moving one subtree to another node)
quick to traverse, find ancestors, descendants e t.c.
I've dealt with basic sql, max to max joins.. they are enough for me to develop erp systems..
but price for that is memory overhead. Which I want to reduce by storing integer pointers to nodes in separate double-linked indexed hash
that I was :p asking here if I can improve something or may be whole concept isn't good
06:23
@AlmaDo I don't know if it will help, but I heard about Bloom Filter which can be used for fast and memory efficient search (probabilistic)
no, it isn't only about search. It's about dealing with hierarchical structures. And permitted operations includes restructuring which should be as fast as possible
it's will be hard thing to put all those requirements into one solution. I would think separating into multiple components will help to maintain complexity and efficiency.
no, the idea is to use one data structure. It shows very good results in SQL - but there are some issues with implementing it in native language (at least, lack of indexing which should be implemented natively)
06:37
Morning Geeks
Though this is a question on html, I hope answers here as there is no activity going on in html room
@AlmaDo 'sup .. i herd u liked double linked indexed hash? :)
@Jack no, it's a.. manner of speaking. not real DS
I have text box in an html
by 'hash' I mean that arrays are hashes in PHP
now, I have the html source and I am parsing it continuously
06:40
@AlmaDo i noe :) what's that idea you wanted to discuss?
and to emulate indexing in closure I'll need to create double-linked array (i.e. keys->values & values->keys where keys = ancestors, values = descendants)
@Jack are you familiar with closure table concept?
@AlmaDo You mean the hierarchical table design?
yeah. (finally, someone knows :D )
If i type any text in the text box, I want the value of the text to be populated in the value field of <input type="text" value="need_text_here_when_typed_in_textbox_dynamically">
Yeah, it's featured in SQL Antipatterns :)
06:42
html input tag without posting or before clicking any button
@udaysagar Ehm, why do you want that?
@Jack the thing is - I want to implement this in native PHP. Have two problems. First, lack of indexing (in SQL sense). And I want to avoid O(n) scans in closure table. So building double-directed (huh, sounds better than double-linked) array will help here
You can get the value of an input box by ... asking for its input value :)
@Jack yep. but it's pattern - not an anti-pattern :p
@AlmaDo Well yeah, it shows the ailment and gives the cure at the same time :)
06:43
second problem would be - how to store integers in PHP's array
Hmm, hierarchical structures in php are imo still best done with arrays tbh.
@Jack yes, but what if altering structure is permitted?
and I want to achieve fast re-structuring on the fly
You would have to give a more detailed example I'm afraid, it's a bit vague at the moment.
closure table will deal with that in one moment (literally)
hm.. well, example is simple. I have tree with some structure. From it I'm creating my CT (closure table). I have two arrays. First - "useful data". It's indexed as id => [data keys and values]
Second is my closure table
Right, so you're keeping the CT lean and put all the heavy stuff in the other table, indexed by id .. okay
06:47
original tree has structure like [id=>id#1, parent_id=>pid#1, useful_data_and_keys]
i.e. my input is "original structure" (classic tree with id and parent_id, it's not recursive) - and I'm building CT
yeah, adjacency list.
the thing is - is SQL that CT has two fields: ancestor and descendant. And it can be indexed easily (it's SQL). But in PHP I'll have to create index myself. Because if I will not, I'll have to search in my CT via full array lookup (equivalent to SQL full scan)
Indeed, and building that index is somewhat time consuming :)
so idea is: store "2 copies" of CT. First is array ancestor->[descendants] and second is array descendant->[ancestor]
But ... do you need to load the whole tree in PHP or something? What's the use-case here?
@AlmaDo Yeah, that's what I would do, probably.
06:51
use-case is to load whole tree and provide full stack of operations above it (i.e. search & restructuring). Time does matter, memory does not (but if can be optimized - then should be done ).
Morning
hi, @Leri
Hi, @AlmaDo How're you?
@Jack bad thing is that I'll have to manage two structures then
@Leri happy, have things to do & think :p
and you?
Pretty much the same.
06:53
@AlmaDo Necessary evil I'm afraid; this is what MySQL has to do internally as well.
Oh, when did you become room owner? Congrats.
Oh yeah, Alma Do became Alma Do.
@Jack yep. And that was my worry. However, it won't increase big-O estimation (2 structures means doubling of operation count and 2 is just constant)
Indeed, it will still be O(lg n) for search, if you ignore the index building :)
@Leri ehm.. prev. week
06:55
aka last week :)
@Jack no, I'll not ignore it. I want to estimate that overhead too
@Jack look at this question-
I have sent a text box in email and it appears in the received mail. Now when I type some text in the textbox and reply back, I get everything except the text that was typed in the text box. How to preserve the typed text while sending reply.
bad thing begins with trees that has too many descendants in node. Because CT design itself will store full list of descendants for node (no matter what level it is)
congrats @AlmaDo
@udaysagar Why do you ping random people? Just ask and if someone wants answer, s/he'll. If @Jack does not want to answer, he won't despite you ping him or not.
06:58
i.e. if we have balanced B-tree it will be awful
@Leri It's okay, I replied to him before :)
@Cecil thank you
welcome :) @AlmaDo
@udaysagar this is a form inside an email? that's not very well supported actually.
@Jack Oh, I was just explaining general rule. :)
06:59
kay :)

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