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00:12
Well, pretty much every function necessary to manage streams effectively has a note that goes something like this:
> Note: <function> will shit the bed on Windows if used on a pipe stream from proc_open
So... yea. Fuck.
Why doesn't PHP give a shit about Windows?
^^ Serious question.
@PeeHaa When I hover the last "Request token", the right-most part of the tail on the "t" still has white showing through.
@DanLugg Yes I know. That comment would have been even better with a fix / solution ;)
@DanLugg n00bs
No idea what causes it
00:18
@DanLugg If we did what I think we should do it would probably work better on Windows than on Linux.
I blame font awesome I think
user895378
@DanLugg Because Windows doesn't give a shit about PHP. That's the bigger issue. Windows (historically) doesn't help open source people.
@PeeHaa Use PNGs like a real man.
@LeviMorrison What's that?
@DanLugg The only two commands I know in photoshop are crop and resize :P
@rdlowrey No, it is the antithesis of most of the community surrounding PHP's development and proliferation.
However, that doesn't change the fact that it's popular.
00:19
@DanLugg Reimplement on the CLR.
user895378
Or fix it.
user895378
That's how most progress in PHP happens. Things improve and get fixed when someone needs the functionality.
@LeviMorrison There is an implementation now, since they have the DLR.
@DanLugg Doesn't count; that impl has horrible parity with Zend and they've added tons of features.
And by horrible I mean horrible
Ah, you want a OP for OP code reimplementation?
00:21
I've seen lots of people lobby for three things:
1. AST (check)
@rdlowrey Hmm, this has to do with handles and sockets. What're you doing for the next couple weeks @rdlowrey?
;-)
2. JIT optimization (check)
3. Portability (check - sort of; it's more portable than lots of other software but maybe not quite as portable as current)
It also has a built-in extension system already.
We can use libraries written in other languages really easily.
There are tons of benefits.
user895378
@DanLugg ;) Believe it or not having truly cross-OS proc_open() pipes would be really helpful. It's something to aim for as a bugfix ... unfortunately I won't have time in the next couple of weeks (and I'm pretty unfamiliar with what happens in windows).
@LeviMorrison Yea, DOTNET stinks.
@rdlowrey I can give you a short rundown: the shit don't fucking work
user895378
@DanLugg You might be able to wrangle @DaveRandom into working on it :) He did the windows implementation for SSL/TLS peer verification.
user895378
00:24
The good thing is it would definitely be a "bug fix" and not a new feature so as soon as it was fixed it could be shoved into the next set of releases.
I'd very much like to get my hands dirty and play with the source, but I haven't the time myself, and wouldn't wish such a task on someone who wasn't already undertaking it.
I'll have a look myself when I have some time to do so.
@rdlowrey True dat.
The biggest reason not to reimplement the engine on top of the CLR is that you'd certainly have a lot of unintended BC break that could be devastating to adoption.
hi guys
And that's a legitimate reason ^^
how do i create and access a mysql database on my desktop?
well, i mean how do i create one
00:26
@LeviMorrison So what would you propose be the implementation approach?
user895378
@DanLugg If you spend any time on it, perhaps look into how it would need to work from a windows perspective in C. Don't worry about the php-src end of things as other people can figure out those details.
@rdlowrey Doesn't matter, I've been reading lxr too much to not want to change what I'm reading.
user895378
Maybe find some useful links on the intarnets about process pipes in win.
Soitainly.
@DanLugg If we were committed to it we could just take the time to make sure we get really good parity.
00:27
@LeviMorrison I mean, if not reimplemented in the CLR, then how would you port it to .NET?
It would be a good opportunity to move tests to something that other impls can use.
@DanLugg I don't really care about .NET, honestly. I care about the CLR.
Sure we'd maybe get some good stuff from .NET but it's the underlying platform I care about.
Well, the CLR is .NET in a manner of speaking; one side of the burger.
.NET is really just the CLR and mscorlib
Everything else is just Legos
There are other things that run on the CLR these days besides .NET though.
Not many, but some.
Hmm, not aware of anything; or are you meaning stuff like Mono?
IronPython doesn't really use .NET itself; just the DLR.
You can use .NET from IronPython though.
00:31
Ah, I see what you're saying.
Same goes for the other Irons; .NET assemblies can be loaded and invoked from languages through the use of wrappers, etc.
IIRC, the DLR runs on top of the CLR anyway; so it'd really be Iron* -> DLR -> CLR
The DLR is just a big ole' marshaller.
I think the CLR is a really good platform. The DLR is a really good idea but I'm less sure about its usefulness/reusability.
I've spent several hours researching the CLR, several more researching the DLR. I need to spend more time researching to make stronger statements.
Why not leverage the existing facilities for for a dynamic runtime, mostly necessary to PHP?
@LeviMorrison I've spent a lot of time exposed to it, just because of C#.
However, I don't know intimately detailed my understanding is; it should probably definitely be better than it is.
Basically, why not use the DLR for a PHP implementation -- what do you think the negative outcome would be?
@DanLugg I think the dynamic parts of different languages are different enough that it would probably be hard to have a good, agnostic DLR. That's what I'm thinking.
It's not that I think the DLR is bad; it's just less proven.
No I gotcha, and also not necessarily geared toward the same dynamic specifics of PHP.
From what I've found, the only really good, viable Iron* implementation is Python which piloted the DLR.
00:38
What else is there? I know IronRuby
And that project has been pretty much abandoned.
IronScheme was abandoned before it began.
PowerShell 3 (which I know nothing about) uses the DLR.
Well, Lisp apparently turned into the Scheme project before it was started.
@LeviMorrison Yea, until then it just made judicious ludicrous use of Hashtables.
(Not certain about that, but I'm pretty sure it did)
So we have 1 meta-language that runs on the DLR and Python, and two known projects which have failed (Scheme and Ruby).
>.<
00:41
@LeviMorrison lol, even still, it's heavily leveraged in C# and VB.NET, since .NET 4.0 at least
How much of that was technical and how much was just project/funding issues? Hard to know.
C# doesn't use the DLR, does it?
Yeop.
@DanLugg Where
Through the use of dynamic
> ... The DLR introduces dynamic objects to C# and Visual Basic in Visual Studio 2010 to support dynamic behavior in these languages and enable their interoperation with dynamic languages.
Ow wow I have never seen this github.com/Lusitanian/PHPoAuthLib/graphs/traffic before
stats more shiny graphs \o/
00:46
So, I suppose it's more of a compatibility feature to keep interop with statically typed languages, but it's exposed to C# all the same.
how are you, guys?
user895378
@Alfred fine, thank you.
I hope I didn't interrupt you.
I am having basic array problem in PHP
0
Q: PHP: array_push in loop results only the last record repeat

AlfredI thought I have some basic PHP skills, at least enough to do the development for simple applications, but I found myself to be stuck with very basic array operation problem. I have results of curl operation set on $results variable. For easier code, (blame me it is too primitive.), I have used ...

On a less .NET related note: who else is drinking beer because they like to pretend that being 1/256th Irish is discernible?
@PeeHaa That redirects to github.com for me :/
00:50
ow must be a private thingy
I think my array problem is really straightforward and basic, any suggestion, guys?
I am inserting record into an array in a loop, but I only got last record repeated n-times where n is the size of an array as you guess.
@DanLugg I too am drinking beer but has nothing to do with my level of Irishness
@cspray lol, "state of Irishness". My Irishness is mutable.
@Alfred Your "real output" is what should be expected. Not sure what the actual problem is here
Also, everybody who knows anything about PHP realizes that $arr[] is adding an element to an array. If they don't know that you probably don't want their help anyway
01:26
Blech, I hate authoring JSON.
01:47
Thanks for your reply, @cspray
I was way, will check the answer in more detail and will get back to you.
@DanLugg The other big obstacle is that how many php-src contributors do you think know how to code in a CLR language or are willing to learn? It would probably limit the number of contributors we currently have.
02:03
I got an answer from my question, blame my ignorance! Thank you for your patient support!
02:13
Can someone pls confirm or deny this for me? php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.decon.php#76446
> The fact that class names are case-insensitive in PHP5 also applies to constructors. Make sure you don't have any functions named like the class at all. This has bitten me a few times.
<?php
class Example extends Base {
  function example() {
    echo "This gets called";
  }
}

class Base {
  function __construct() {
    echo "Not this";
  }
}
I think it's a relic of pre 5.2 or maybe 5.3; not sure.
Can't test atm.
@LeviMorrison I get "This gets called"
Running 5.4.26
Hello ... My question is regarding, how to pass form values to email template: stackoverflow.com/questions/22461625/…
@bwoebi ping
morning room
@LeviMorrison That sure seems legit :) and confirmed with PHP 5.5
Thanks for checking, @cspray and @Jack
It's definitely an old behaviour :)
02:23
I'm pruning up the comments on high-comment pages; that one seemed legitimate but was unsure if anything affected its behavior.
Like Java but without overloading heh
How will I know if I have the privileges? heh
About once a month I go through and prune 2 or three of the pages, but I'm not familiar with some of the functions at all so its harder to know good from the bad.
@Jack Can you log into master.php.net/login.php ?
If so log in, then go to php.net and you'll see some tools on each note.
Yeah I'm logged in ... because I see "edit" link.
But there are no tools in the comment section.
Yeah, definitely don't have that :)
You don't have the tools next to the vote and names?
No, but perhaps that's karma related too?
Maybe; you are sure you are logged in?
Edit and Report a Bug show up regardless of log-in status.
Well, on master.php.net I can edit my user account, so I'm pretty sure that I have indeed logged in.
Ahhh
hard refresh did it :P
02:30
^^
Prune away!
Almost anything that is a reply to someone else should be deleted.
I suppose I'll just start with the negative votes heh
Most code dumps should be deleted as well
Negative votes are usually deleted but I have reset the downvotes on 2 comments that were actually really helpful.
You won't have karma for that action; if you find something with downvotes that shouldn't ping me with it and I can reset its negative vote count.
Sure :)
okay, negative votes done ... starting with the highest ones that don't make sense heh
On the pages I've listed above there are a lot of 0 score comments that nobody has really looked at.
Oh, anything dealing with PHP 4 can be deleted as well.
Knock Knock !!
02:34
Wow, comments from 13 years ago!
Yeah. Some of them are actually good too ^^
How does the ordering actually work?
Is it time + upvotes?
It's based on a few things:
- total score (upvotes - downvotes)
- upvote/total vote ratio (+10 with -0 is better than +25 with -15)
- age
It's a nifty little algorithm, honestly.
Does age make it count more or less? :)
I suppose less? heh
More, actually.
If something is around from 13 years ago and we haven't deleted it that says something ^^
I probably need to lower the weight of that option, though. I've seen some odd places where it overrides where I wouldn't guess it to.
02:45
Yeah okay, it could go both ways :)
Age = authority :)
o.0 it's already only 2% compared to other things (link)
@Jack Found an interesting PHP type oddity: php.net/manual/en/function.implode.php#104568
lol
Because strval(false) == '' :)
Yeah; it's just funny that true gives '1'
You'd expect bools to behave similarly ^^
Yesterday we discussed this: $a = null; echo $a[1]; /* no notice */; $a = []; echo $a[1]; /* notice */
Yeah, thanks PHP.
02:56
Surprisingly, that behaviour makes this work too: while (list($key, $value) = each($array)) { ... }
As I found out this morning hehe
Thanks for helping with this. I go through this list about once a month and prune up 2-3 pages off the list (except I don't touch curl-setopt)
@Jack What's the value of array, there?
@LeviMorrison It's just an array.
Regarding the curl_setopt(), I have to make changes to that page soon because of the fixes I've pushed :)
So how does that tie in with the null var subscript?
@LeviMorrison Aha! Glad you asked.
At the end of the array, each($array) returns false ... and then list() will dereference that value to get the [0] and [1] subscript.
It currently does this without a notice.
Interesting. As an aside, I think that construct is evil ^^
02:59
I've used that construct a few times, actually :)
It's nice when you're looking for it.
Inferior Iterator abstraction ^^
hehehe
It was only today that I found out how list() really works.
user1642018
hi all.,
After it sets all the individual variables inside the list() construct, it will set the "current value" to be whatever the outcome of the rvalue is :)
So (list($a, $b) = false) === false :)
user1642018
i have lowercase base64 encoded string is there a way to get back original string i.e. base 64 decoded ? base64 is case sensitive.
03:02
Not sure if ^^ compiles, but you get the point.
@AMB You're screwed.
Because lowercase base64 is not a thing.
user1642018
@Jack how about i write a code which will try to uppercase each string and try to decode untill i get the string in desired format ? much like bruteforcing ?
Yeah, good luck with that :)
user1642018
@Jack i learned that hard way.
user1642018
i know the original format.
user1642018
digits.digits.digits.digits
03:04
If you don't have checksums, you'll never be 100% sure.
user1642018
okie.,
@Jack Sometimes people ask me why I think we should eventually remove references in PHP; I found an example: php.net/manual/en/language.references.php#87532
References are a delicious trap.
Also, wtf? php.net/manual/en/language.references.php#83737 This makes little sense to me.
03:43
@LeviMorrison I'd argue that we need lexical scope ;-)
Each of the $a's would be different.
@LeviMorrison Yeah, the first sentence is still okay ... it goes downhill from there.
Because 5.5 has collection types? =.=
Shut up :-P
I live in the world I want.
04:02
is there a way to tell if two arrays are the same, not if they're values are equal but rather if they are the same array
Okay Simba
eq is_same(array(1,2), array(1,2)) == false
is_same($arr, $arr) == true
Short answer: no.
Long answer: use a pin test, and ... don't do that.
Doing my job to free humanity of references.
pin test, meaning assign a random prop to a and checking for it on b?
Yeah
04:05
I dunno, references are pretty awesome sometimes. bool tryGetSomething($input, &$output)
Instead of using by-refs I prefer composed return value.
As in, returning an object/array to express a composite value?
Yes
Of course, that makes it not optional :)
Eh.. I only do that in private, I wouldn't expose that publicly.
lol, I relate to FBF too much, it's a bit concerning:
Guys, I have a website with two different CMS
One is plain HTML, another is the billing system called WHMCS
I want both to share the same SESSION, 'cause I set a session on HTML and it doesn't stick on WHMCS
HTML
print_r($_SESSION); = Array ( [tkval] => 48jEK8Xm7f5m [redirectproductpid] => 14 )
WHMCS
print_r($_SESSION); Array ( [tkval] => c7Brzy1qww6o [calinkupdatecc] => 0 [calinkupdatesq] => 0 [cart] => Array ( [user] => Array ( [country] => BR ) ) [Language] => brasil [uid] => 27 [upw] => 60dafaa05bca2fdc335640beb8202199fde50f30 )
I want "redirectproductpid" to be on WHMCS - see this question for more details about code stackoverflow.com/questions/22469721/…
would be real glad if anyone could help me :)
@Jack, @DanLugg - you guys around here?
Using

$sid = session_id();
echo $sid;

I got
HTML
5713b38fc2bc8dd52c6e95d2f6e76e72
WHMCS
5749488b7c0a434ef39eec39f059bc81
Could I assign a static session_id and try to set it to both?
Well, improvements!
HTML session_name
PHPSESSID (wich is default)

WHMCS session_name
WHMCSUMOiWKf9FCgH (maybe generated as some kind of token?)
04:31
Morning.
good morning
@Leri - Can you shine a light on my problem?
Meh, I don't shine.
Off to university. Later.
04:57
Since interfaces can't reliably document @throws in PHP, should we?
I do.
And what do you mean by reliably?
Well, there's no language check to ensure it
So, if you define an interface method with a @throws annotation, are you stating that the implementation will throw that type of exception from one of it's execution paths, or it can only throw that type of exception from one of it's execution paths?
Cause I'm thinking something like this:
interface TestInterface {

    /**
     *
     * @throws ShitTheBedException
     */
    function danceAround();
}

class Test implements TestInterface {

    /**
     *
     * @throws SlipInTheTubException
     */
    public function danceAround() {
        if ($x) throw new ShitTheBedException();
        if ($y) throw new SlipInTheTubException();
    }
}
Such that TestInterface declares it can throw ShitTheBedException, so you should expect it; as well, Test also throws SlipInTheTubException (since IIRC the docblock is inherited)
05:29
More like, it may throw that kind of exception.
Whatever exception is thrown in code that's called from that function is not documented.
At least, that's how I see it.
Right, so they don't aggregate in the docs.
I think Java (used to?) enforces this in the declaration.
What? Aggregation of throwable types?
Like, whatever you throw in the lowest piece of code you have "bubbles up"
Right.
05:32
But personally I think that gets very tedious after a while :)
I agree. That behavior is determinable without having to explicitly declare it.
06:20
@Jack pong
@bwoebi ohi :) hmm, i've sent out an email to the list already hehe
i want to poll your opinion on the array deref on scalars
lol, 3 mins too late^^
Yeah :) I dug up some bug reports that were scattered around.
Personally I would be okay to raise notices, but there will be breakage :)
Well, I have to agree with Nikita and Joe… why the hell would one reasonable person want to dereference bools, NULL, integers or doubles!?
Yeah, they don't (want to), I think.
But as you can see from my email, there's one particular scenario that's mentioned in the manual that would perpetuate it.
The combination of list() and each() ... =/
> Please send mail ASAP!
haha what a character.
06:27
erm… foreach!?!?
Obviously ;p
Always assume code from the manual is copied into someone's code :)
Hi all
1 message moved to Trash can
@PHPLover This is not an alternative SO.
but actually that could be an exception, hrm, hrm…
Please keep questions on the site.
@bwoebi I was thinking about that for a while, but we'd have to do some engine level stuff I think.
actually we just can deprecate that behaviour now and remove in PHP6?
Because list() is just a shortcut for assign x N + push rvalue into current.
and well… the list users then can use foreach…
yeah .. how would you detect that?
i mean, how would you detect that someone is doing a list() on each()?
06:31
deprecate it generally that list is used on a non-array?
or, do you mean ... deprecate all the scalar dereference! ?
yes
ah so
i have that patch actually heh
it's basically this which mostly fixes all the test cases more than anything :)
I could make it nicer by saying which variable type can't be used as array.
I just realize that deprecating makes not much sense when it's just a notice anyway…
but well, turn off notices and it works again
so why not for PHP6?
I'd be fine with 6
Change to fatal error lol
06:35
lol, no.
Okay fine, segfault.
When you say, "deprecate all the scalar dereferencing", what scalar types are you including in "all"?
no, you should insert some recursive file deletion…
@DanLugg all except strings and arrays
Ah, so numeric/boolean types.
06:37
And null :)
What about resources (lol)
Yes, those too
Hi all
can anyone help me in my issue I posted on SO?
@bwoebi Oh btw, what do you think about having array_key_exists() work on objects that implement offsetExists()?
06:39
Semi-related Q: type-casting in binary expressions of the operands, is dependent on the operator, correct?
binary expressions?
@Jack I'm off for now… later…
@Jack it'll never happen ... we're not allowed to treat objects as arrays ...
@bwoebi cya
@bwoebi Night
06:39
@JoeWatkins It already does.
@JoeWatkins ...we'll see about that.
The zpp format specifies "H"
@DanLugg no… off to school…
@bwoebi Ah, well, night for me. Have fun at school!
Is there someone who can help me in the question I posted on Stack Overflow?
that's HASH_OF, and that's true yeah, but in general the language doesn't treat an object as an array, if you hint for an array you get an array, hint for an object you get an object ... and changing that has been discussed ...
ok I'll wait until someone becomes free to help me
Oh wait, "objects as arrays"... I want the inverse. I'm drunk.
you couldn't just allow array_key_exists to use the interface unless everything could behave in the same way ...
06:41
I know ... I was just thinking, now that isset() and empty() call both offsetExists() and offsetGet() ... there's no wrapper around just offsetExists() :)
and that, is the thing that will never happen ...
But yeah, I agree that functions starting with array_ will likely only support real arrays.
^^ and that's a gosh darned shame.
The fact that array_key_exists() works on objects is ... hmm, well, unfortunate.
The abstraction of ArrayObject was clearly a bolt-on addition. It should have gone deeper imo.
Should I ask my question?
06:49
@PHPLover No, you're out of questions now; you've asked too many questions about asking your question. You'll get another 3 chances in 24 hours.
Mark (the time).
I'm on the John?
;-)
Whooooops.
That PHP-CPP looks really awesome!
Makes me wish I could program in C++
Hmm, haven't looked into it. All I know is it's been met with the same criticism that other meta-PHP's have been.
pointless
06:55
Yea, that criticism
pointless because ... ?
e_too_much_abstraction ?
because if I know C++ (I do) I don't need it, and am better off without it, if I don't know C++ (like you) then I can't use it ... so, pointless ...
there's no CPP language :p everyone write code in his own CPP language. And that curse is named 'macros'
Now, what would be nifty, is as @LeviMorrison and I were talking about earlier; a .NET implementation of PHP that runs on the CLR/DLR, and adheres to the wet mess of corner case rules that is currently PHP.
a more constructive thing to do would be get involved, why not introduce an internals API based in C++, there'd be no technical problem with that ...
06:58
I'm reading through the IronPython source, and it's remarkably clean.
IronPHP could be too ...
PS: already is an IronPHP (and a PHP.NET I think) but neither are strict implementations of the current pseudo-standard language.
HP declares 8th of April "Goodbye XP" day.

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