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22:02
@ircmaxell Just noticed again today regex is still not a safe parser (at least not against inputs like string(5) "int(8)" in that case) That's why hand-written token by token parsers are much better....
@bwoebi yeah, I know :-D
@ircmaxell We all like parsing regex with HTML...
@Shog9 So you're okay with leaving the current question as is, i.e. don't delete it once we're done?
@LeviMorrison AWESOME
But the current answers would have to be removed though, isn't it? Otherwise edits on answers would have to take place at two locations.
22:05
@ircmaxell I'm glad it came from the Ruby folks.
^^
+++++++++
I've opened github.com/Room-11/Room-11.github.io/issues/15 so we can remove a pin and not forget about doing it
user895378
@LeviMorrison Oh I can't wait to read this.
Does that need revising considering the purge?
@rdlowrey s/read/watch/ (it's short)
22:07
Morning
Hello @PeeHaa
@Fabien I'll rearrange the owners to keep it in sync for the sake of sanity but I'm pretty sure everyone can keep commit access, we're all mature adults
(mostly)
heh something of the sort.
@DaveRandom Created this room to concentrate our efforts.
Mysql is throwing a "too many connections", and Apache is bugging out (on a client server, not the one I work on). He says, "Meh" and restarts the server. 4 hours later, it happens again. We're running a couple of instances of Drupal on this server, and there is a known issue with Drupal doing this, related to its cache mechanism.
Other developer tells the boss about this... he says "Meh" and restarts Apache.
Then leaves for the day.
Reason #23,048 why I really, really want to find a new job, and soon. There's nothing worse than spending years gaining knowledge and experience, only to have it casually disregarded by someone from a completely unrelated field.
22:11
Reasonable.
We do need to think about people in another field when we need to interact with them, though.
@Chris I feel your pain :(
At least they didn't just 'up the connection limit'.
user895378
Shared-nothing strikes again ...
We would have had to present extremely compelling evidence, and endure a fairly heated conversation to get him convinced of the need to alter a server setting, even if that is what should be done. He's a network/PC admin guy, so he considers that his field. I try not to bring up my degree in Networking & Communications or my Cisco & Microsoft certifications too often.
He's just trying to do a good job, but so are we :\
I dunno about 'good' so much as 'under the radar' job.
This is a non-profit, so the fact that I'm getting paid something depressingly close to what might be minimum wage very soon makes it all harder to swallow. If I'm going to be a peon, I can live with that. But my student loans say I ought to at least not qualify for food stamps.
22:18
Get another job.
> Something is technically wrong.
>
> Thanks for noticing—we're going to fix it up and have things back to normal soon.
twitter ...
Could somebody please point me to the start of the room 11 massacre? I'm scrolling like mad, but I cannot find the start of the thing
That reminds me of that Programming Sucks article... hehe, some guy is sitting in an office shitting his pants, watching an error log explode.
(but he's probably getting paid more than 50k a year, so eff that guy)
22:20
tnx
@Chris Aye. Sometimes the field we work in is about opportunity and luck.
@Chris How much are you paid, if not a secret? (Around)
@Fabien btw you are my cocking buddy
@webarto 14.2x an hour. We get a 3% raise each year
22:20
@Danack oh man. better cocking even it out.
@bwoebi link to feeds?
@Chris Is that $, sorry, not getting the 14.2x part. I quit after I got 3% :P
We also get 40 hours of sick & 40 hours of personal per fiscal year, and aggregating 7.x hours of vacation time per pay period. Health insurance. They try.
@PeeHaa It all happens not long before the wall of removed owners.
$14.20-something an hour, like 14.27 or some such nonsense
22:22
anyway, bed time
@Fabien A even more scrolling :P
I made more framing houses before I went to college :(
@Chris It doesn't make sense that some asshole from Bosnia is paid more than you.
So... if there are no jobs around you, look for remote, enjoy.
@Chris I get a little less than you per hour on a straight conversion, but being in the UK the value is more. But things are more expensive here too. So balances out again.
22:23
As people have mentioned in here though. "You don't get what you're worth, you get what you negotiate".
I am very conflicted about all of it. I would never be happy working for a big corporation. I like startups and small teams, but I have kids. I played that game for 2 years after school, first year was 70k, second was 20k, that was 2008. Clients dried up, money failing, losing our house, car repoed... all that. So I took this job,
I know too much about their budget here. We're paid from some city money, my fellow developers do project work for other non-profits. Other departments have semi-annual fund drives. So resources are all very, very thin. If I asked for a raise, they would simply, and honestly, tell me they can't do anything.
@Chris I prefer to know as little a possible about how much money the company makes or other people around me. I've never known it to make me anything other than more miserable. :P
Ask me again when I am on + £40k though :P
@Fabien It's not people, it's me. :P
My problem with that 64 bit support RFC: I have no idea how good 64 bit support really is. The advantages are nicely listed in the intro... What are the downsides of it apart from a slightly bigger memory usage? \cc @NikiC @ircmaxell (?)
@webarto I'm still waiting for you to millionaire it and hire us all.
22:28
@Chris We pay our part-time student programmers more. If you don't find the work fulfilling you really should find a new job.
@bwoebi in reality, the performance of most aspects stays the same. The only areas where performance may be hurt is in very large structs (where the increased pointer size causes the struct to overflow the page boundary)
@Fabien I'm still waiting to say "Bingo" :P
lol
and it's not slightly bigger memory usage. It can be significant in places
1bit is not much more in memory usage, but a carefully placed 1 bit increase can wreck performance ^^
22:29
@ircmaxell never more than the double. And usually I expect it to be drown under other types of fields in structs?
@Chris is that pre tax or after tax? I worked for that much, but without any insurance or anything.
@bwoebi yeah. Every pointer doubles. The rest stays the same
@ircmaxell what's the cost of that memory increase?
At least with phpng we have a lot less pointer usage...
@bwoebi in terms of speed? not a hell of a lot in most cases. Since memory is operated on in pages, unless the added memory causes a struct to cross pages (or be allocated to a new page where in the old it was on the same as another)
you can get reduced L1 efficiency due to the larger data sets
but PHP uses a large enough working memory that I would be surprised if that was overly significant anyway
so, there are basically no downsides?
22:31
@Chris I had to read up on what that actually was. I always forget you people basically make entire houses out of matchsticks.
the last time I looked at the patch it was stupid, so there's that downside ... stupid patch ...
@ircmaxell means that the vote should be more like about if we're happy with the API changes?
the types stuff was pretty incoherent and inconsistently deployed
@bwoebi there can be significant performance costs. But can does not mean are.
test it
@JoeWatkins #define STUPID
22:33
@bwoebi the vote should be everything
the types stuff
@webarto Pre-tax. I've worked for that much too... when I was 19 and didn't have 30k in student loans, and kids :p
@ircmaxell yes, sure, but I mean what has the biggest impact on the vote…
ok I've scrolled all the way through it I think. And sorry all to bring this up again (some people have actual jobs :P ): @ircmaxell what's the goal of purging the room owner list
looks better now
22:34
I don't think I'll vote there, I'd just like to know at least what's even going on there.
Semantical macro renamings
don't see the point in any of that
@Chris You could say I took your job, but let's say we're on same level, you should get more 'cause you're American.
@PeeHaa cut back significantly on the number of owners. Simple as that
@JoeWatkins such as?
zpp clashes with ng
@ircmaxell Z_STRLEN => Z_STRSIZE … we all abbreviate in PHP it $strlen or $len, but does anyone here really use $strsize or $size!?
22:35
@ircmaxell I doubt it was done "just because" :)
@bwoebi that's important. Because the data type of the returned value can change. Which can result in segfaults. So it wasn't an arbitrary break, it was done so that it breaks to help find where needs to be fixed
@PeeHaa it wasn't
@bwoebi size_t is the data type. which is why it was changed to size
@ircmaxell actually the compiler should warn you then?
@PeeHaa Hating on repwhores -> Uncontrollable chat -> Concerns over number of room owners -> purging of room owners -> PeeHaa turns up.
it looks pretty tidy now I think otherwise though ...
@bwoebi I can tell you first hand, having worked on that patch (hell, it was my idea), that no, it wouldn't warn in a lot of cases. There were more segfaults than I could shake a stick at before renaming
22:38
@ircmaxell that's an implementation detail, we don't have macros called ZVAL_ZEND_VALUE_STR_LEN
it seems like a change that we could do without ...
@JoeWatkins fair point. But it wasn't arbitrary
@ircmaxell then the RFC should state that instead of "should be replaced with a corresponding neutral keyword", which doesn't explain at all why it needed to be renamed.
@Fabien :P I've been waaaaaaaaaaay too busy today to properly find out what the drama was about this evening
I had a choice, and I made it to rename. It was the lesser of evils. And others who contributed and actually ran the code agreed, because they realized that it really did help
@PeeHaa Aye. You must be close now. - To the end of the busy period.
22:39
you don't like it, and want to second guess it? Then you should have contributed
otherwise, to sit here and armchair quarterback isn't right
I think +1 for ng I'll go ...
@ircmaxell hey, I have no problem with that, it just didn't make sense to me at the first look. And so it probably doesn't to others.
Since when is NG vs 64bit a problem?
Just because NG doesn't support it doesn't mean it can't support it.
@bwoebi and I've explained the rationale. And you continue to tell me (and everyone else that contributed) that we're stupid for doing it
huh ? @LeviMorrison
22:41
1 min ago, by Joe Watkins
I think +1 for ng I'll go ...
?
I just said ng clases with the S because they used that too, doesn't really matter ...
oh just because we are already set to change things like headers/types etc there, so less impact if we do at same time no ?
@ircmaxell I didn't? I just told you that the RFC wasn't helpful at explaining that. You explained it well.
Well whatever the problem (yes I can make an educated guess) the amount of room owners was not the problem. With some exceptions most owners didn't abuse the ownership. $0.02
@PeeHaa you're right.
but I decided to cut down significantly. I'm definitely open to adding more back, but want to let things settle before we revisit that. And see if we actually need them.
I just saw Dmitry voted against it… mhm?!
22:43
@bwoebi Zend doesn't want 64 bit support.
@LeviMorrison why?
Look at all Zend employees: they are all against 64 bit (as far as I could find)
@bwoebi OMGS, IT'S SLOWER! WE CAN'T HAVE THAT!
@LeviMorrison stas is in favour of it?
even if shown to be negligible...
22:44
@bwoebi Ah, forgot he was a Zend employee.
@LeviMorrison he's not
@ircmaxell fair enough
He used to be, at least.
@PeeHaa it was the easiest thing to do. And I agreed with Gordon that we really don't need 2 dozen owners. If we get proven wrong, then great! if not, then great!
@ircmaxell I just thought so, he's having an @zend adress
22:46
@PeeHaa Basically the number of room owners was making it difficult to administrate the room during a crisis. We have those rarely but owners shouldn't undo the actions of other owners during a crisis.
@ircmaxell gigantic 2% in worst case. I'm impressed. LOL.
I'd say that's the 'straw that broke the camel's back'
@bwoebi 2% matters on a large scale; perhaps at Zend's scale I don't know them well enough.
@PeeHaa who would be the exceptions that abused the rights ?
@LeviMorrison If you look at ircmaxells link, it's the worst case with Hello World apps. Usually there's nothing measurable for everything else.
@bwoebi and 2% faster in best case
22:48
@ircmaxell I don't get how that can be faster...
isn't it an irrelevant test if no caches are loaded ?? that 2% could literally be anything couldn't it ?? that's nothing like an accurate number I don't think, if we can reason that in the real world, there is only negligible difference, then one test doesn't disprove reason, especially an irrelevant one ...
It's probably just jitter, honestly.
@bwoebi No, you misread that chart. HelloWorld is 2% faster than the 32 bit variant
@ircmaxell oops. As I said already:
27 mins ago, by bwoebi
anyway, bed time
nite bob
22:50
@bwoebi 1) jitter is a significant factor. 2) some 64 bit operations are faster than the 32 bit variant due to being native in the CPU
"Merge strategy" voting option shouldn't exist.
good night
It should get merged to master, no and ifs or buts.
well ...
it'd be nice if all this work would amount to something tho right ?
by saying ng, I'm saying lets gone on with 6 really ...
if we allow ourselves to start talking about 5.7, it will already exist ...
22:52
I want a PHP 5.7
that's another year we have to listen to "not until 6" ...
I want more time before 6.0
I'm out, laterz
meh. I prefer e.g. PHP 6 in December 15 / January 16 and no PHP 5.7 instead.
Question about return types (and other type-related RFCs) -- why are primitives routinely left out of the equation? Specifically, why not allow int, string, or bool?
22:53
if we decided to start developing 6 tomorrow we'd still have a year or 18 months ... that's long enough surely, it'd be nice to get some kind of commitment that we are moving forward
concentrate on one thing, not on two at the same time.
TTYL, @ircmaxell
I think 18 months are pretty enough.
@Chris because the rest of php doesn't support hinting for those types
@Chris Because 'scalar' type hinting as it is known by is widely controversial.
22:53
@JoeWatkins small majors. No need for these massive beasts that will take 10 years for people to adopt
Scalar, there's the word I was looking for
So by introducing it into an RFC means you have to fight that beast.
Night all
If you can avoid it then that's really beneificial.
@tereško I know @bwoebi has been dicking around in the past for one
22:54
@LeviMorrison Ahh. Gotchya. Does the structure even exist, really?
@Fabien night
@ircmaxell As far as I see we're actually planing mainly major internal changes.
@Chris What structure are you talking about?
nite @fab
22:55
If it were not controversial to typehint scalar types, would it require much change to type handling? Phrased another way: could it happen trivially, if not for the opposition?
it's not as simple as you think
I think nothing :)
someone will now post a link to nikic's blog ...
as if by magic ...
@ircmaxell But major internal changes still take much time. And there are already a few non-invasive things like engine exceptions, named params… so… that are things which break not a lot BC, so actually not a major problem, I hope.
@Chris Here's the main question for scalar type hints:
function foo(int $i) {}
foo("1"); // valid?
I think I have discussed this somewhat related to autoboxing scalar types
trvially it can be done in ten minutes, but actually finding the right implementation not so simple ... the correct patch exists I think in ircmaxells last attempt ( I think last one that was compat with zpp )
Thanks for that link, Joe.
I think I favor strict type hinting as an option. People say "dynamic types are one of PHP's biggest strengths", to which I mentally reply: it is? Maybe for some use cases, but I often find that I write more code to deal with possibly unreliable variables than I would if I could just lock it all down. I would never presume to say it is easy, why don't you dummies just do it -- that core code remains mostly voodoo to me
That said, I would like to tell my instance of PHP, sometimes, to just forget that whole dynamic type thing
well, today, in 2014, we have to ask what you mean by strict typing ... thanks hhvm/hack ... strict typing is not what you see going on there, I dunno what you're seeing going on there ...
For me it's simple: if I declare a type it should be strict. If I want the dynamic part of PHP then I won't use a hint.
No issue.
23:01
yes, it should be that simple ... but hhvm have made a terrible mess of things ...
and they are calling it statically typed
@LeviMorrison Yep
so now that phrase lost it's meaning ...
Alright, time to go home, eat dinner, etc. Might be on later; don't know.
See you guys!
I like ircmaxell's cast proposal, too, but I am an admitted fanboy of his :p
later @LeviMorrison
23:02
lata @Levi
> Strict weak type hinting
this one
> By the way, this proposal would be very similar to how parameters for internal functions are parsed.
if you want php to make sense, it has to work like that ...
My coworker and I are in total agreement on this: If we could autobox a String, we'd make a box that implemented all the inconsistent string functions so we could stop thinking about haystacks. function (String $myString) { return $string->toUpper(); }
Which we can kind of do, but you'd have to pepper your code with new String('gah!');. Spl has boxes, sort of, but IIRC that stuff is all experimental.
You mean $string->to_upper() right? ;)
It depends on whether you're a terrorist or not.
lol
@Chris really ?? really ??
I just can't believe that's really a problem for anyone ...
23:09
It isn't a problem, it can be annoying. I am confident in the fact that I have company on this one.
if you really thought a consistent api would help you to move at a fast pace, or sleep better at night, you would be doing it ... would you not ?
there are several ways you can introduce your own API, afterall, you're a programmer ...
You would not ever see me list that as a top thing I dislike about PHP, even though my personal list is pretty short. I love PHP. It is my favorite language by a mile.
this is something people like to whine about, but logically, there is no problem there ...
And as I said, I could do that with my own classes today, but then all scalar variables would have to use new or a factory or something, blech
And yes, some people make a mountain out of that molehill
I can think of ways to change paramter order, extreme ways, but you'd only have to do it once, surely if you would sleep better at night :D
there's one ...
23:13
You fixed it the wrong way around :P
Bwuaha, we talked about doing that very thing today and decided our lives are too short :p
well I wasn't serious :D
:-)
I think, and I'm speculating on behalf of people who have a lot more passion about that particular issue than I do, that the frustration is set on top of frustrations that a lot of developers have with their own work. Most big projects I've seen are a combination of planned features with a whole bunch of tack-ons and oh-yeah-shits stacked on top of it.
en.reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/23qp9g/… <- why it's not a problem ... I'm in the category who doesn't remember, clearly ...
23:15
When your deal with this in your own code base to any degree, it is frustrating and it is all on you, but often fixing it is out of reach. And then you find the same thing going on in the language itself, and the reaction is OMG RAGE
@JoeWatkins Snap.
if people around you are writing bad code .... you may strike them ...
don't get seen ...
but there's not much point blaming anything that seems pretty irrelevant ...
Reading the article that reddit was in relation tp (servercheck.in/blog/php-it-doesnt-have-be-bad-experience)
> Though you can use type hinting in PHP for non-scalar variables (objects, callables, arrays, etc.), and type hinting for scalars (string, int, bool, etc.) will be included in upcoming releases
stopped reading ...
lol, noticed that :)
I don't really welcome the thought of a strictly typed language, even as an option
I welcome the though of hiinting in certain places, but not in general, on all member variable or global scope (argghhhhh) variables ...
because ... well ... why bother with php in that case, even if it's just an option, it's one that will be used ... so then a little while later, all frameworks, probably including extensions, will become strictly typed, php is only the extensions it comes with and code you can download and once all that is strictly typed, we have a a strictly typed language and I see no options ...
23:28
Slippery slope arguments are seldom convincing. I don't think the whole world would rush out and lock it all up like that if strict types were an option. Especially if it were as Levi said: If I hint, strict. If not, dynamic. That seems like the best of both worlds, especially if I can hint scalars. Then, if the inconsistencies in string or array functions bother me bad enough to inspire motivation, I can box the scalars and that's that.
okay
real world
<?php
class Framework {

	public Something $member;

	public function setSomething(Something $member) {
		/* ... */
	}
}
?>
how do I work with that code, at all, without writing strictly typed code, only ?
where's the option ?
hinting scalars was a cool idea
yup
The "optional" argument is always tricky, because once a big library starts using it ...
but it changes the nature of the language to do much more than hint for input/output for functions, to hint on member variables we are removing the dynamic nature, no two ways about it ...
also, as a programmer, it's question decision to make ...
class Framework {

	public Something member;

	public void setSomething(Something member) {
		/* ... */
	}
}
is valid java
If you don't want to work with strict types, why are you constructing your classes that way? If Drupal decides to implement strict types through hinting, then yeah, Drupal now exists in that world. But I am not convinced that this would impact the language as a whole. Just earlier, we were talking about how important BC is because of all the many, many uses out there that don't keep up on adoption.
I need to know the same things, if I both know and need to care that much about types, why on earth am I using a dynamic language
23:33
If everyone were using big frameworks, it would be easy to BC break, because we'd only need the big frameworks to move along with the versions and everyone is all set.
Like, the two arguments, juxtaposed, seem to contradict one another.
@JoeWatkins Perhaps it's like natural languages ... people are afraid it takes them a long time to become proficient at another one.
I, for one, had to face objective c ... though, luckily I've had some C/C++ exposure
That is a huge reason. I know PHP well. It is easier to want the language I know to implement a couple of specific features than it is to completely abandon it for a different language that has those handful of features that I want, but I generally don't know a damn thing about it.
Lazy? Absolutely.
Programmers are lazy :p
Yeah, that was going to be my point before my mind was sidetracked :)
@Chris Yaaaaawn.
To be frank, what an IDE like Storm offers me in terms of static code analysis makes up for most of the "drawbacks" of dynamically typed php.
23:36
@Jack I had to work in VB .net for embeded devices on a project... yikes. Yikes.
I'm surprised that anyone would want to embed VB
I "embed" VB once in a while when I'm in Australia :)
well I believe in the right tool for the job, as much as I like to fuck about with php, it's not always the right tool for the job, and if you're writing the kind of code that requires such strict typing and you are doing it with a dynamic language something is kinda wrong ...
Hmm, is Python strictly typed?
there is almost no difference between modern php and modern java ...
I mean to look at ...
^^ That
Well, Java has inner classes ... hehehe
23:39
I would never say use java, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do ... even if it's java, or something else, maybe C#
And PHP looks like you can make more money with it.
again, very little difference between C# and PHP, C# does weird things, also you'll have to sell your soul ... but very similar too ...
What web language has strict types, is free, and is readily deployed on cheap hardware? I guess I've never sought any other tool because PHP is always at least adequate, if not the best.
I think we should hint scalars and also, we should have scalar methods, and I'd quite like for that to be magical somehow actually
well what do you mean web language ?
what kind of things do you write ?
there's no better web language than php
fact
Well, as we discussed earlier, I've been in this industry for about 7 years. 2 working for startups and using anything and everything... whatever the startup has already or has the resources for, and then 5 years working here. Here, we do everything web-based. Everything. We've got point of sales systems that are web based, we're running a radio station off a web-based system, accounting, member management, everything
So, if someone said to me: I want a web-based system that does X,Y, and Z, I would default reach for PHP because that is what I know, AND, I don't know of any alternative solutions.
23:44
Hey, some people use Haskell for web .. :)
if you need to hint for the types of your html elements, then you're barking mad, use php for the things it excels at (let's be blunt, serving templates, requesting apis and 10 second admin scripts), use something actually capable to write backend systems, make nice simple API's from your stable, strictly typed, super fast ... backend services ...
Okay... then I guess I have no idea what "something capable" would be. Suggestions? :)
Nah, PHP is capable.
well PHP is capable to a point, so long as you have the budget if you are really successful, because there's only one way to scale ...
So you write your backend services in ... ? :)
23:47
I've never not been able to accomplish what I wanted to accomplish with PHP. Any suggestion that I have ever had, or anything we've talked about here is me coming from the perspective of, "I've struggled with this or that concept, and it seems like it would be better/easier if...".
That is, many times, possibly an XY problem.
with something that doesn't have such high demands, you have more room to get something really good going, both from a developers perspective and from the investors, because you have more time on your middle of the road hardware and more profit in the first year because less hardware required when you meet targets ... also, php under pressure doesn't behave so well, you will find problems that weren't there before if you get what you aim for ...
I use Java or C#
night all
Java more preferably ...
Some of our backend systems are written in Java .. I'd have no idea what to do when the author quits =/
read it ...
if you don't understand it by default, I'd be surprised, really surprised ...
23:49
... and then head for the pub.
^^
nite @PeeHaa
g'night PeeHaa
@JoeWatkins I know, I'll survive .. I just don't like the prospect ;-)
Also, that would mean I'm the only developer left in our online team lol
Though, there are some Java experts left wasting their time on Android >D
I am pretty accustomed to being the only developer. As I'm dusting off my resume, I am realizing that I need to brush up on team coding skills, which is difficult without, you know... a team.
I need to get involved in some open source projects, I think.
23:51
@Chris Yeah, OSS more or less effected my team coding skills :)
I think lots of people don't realize the language they are crying out for is java, I am by no means a fanboy ... at all, I'll avoid it long as I can, prototype absolutely everything in PHP (this is the main reason for the existence of pthreads, why I started work on it at all, so I could prototype more where I am comfortable) ... but PHP isn't there yet ... it looks set to get there ...
OSS also made me embrace Git, which then proceeded to strangle me back at times ...
I don't like git ...
also, I'm terrible at it ...
If I were going to develop an Andoid app, I'd do it in php/html/js, then use Phonegap to make the app-y goodness. Maybe I'm too loyal to PHP. I always viewed it like this: I started later on my career than a lot of my peers. So I need to be as much a master of one language as I can, rather than a jack-of-all-trades
The concept or Git itself? @JoeWatkins
user895378
23:52
@JoeWatkins I think that largely the people crying out for Java are the ones who only know PHP ...
@Chris you're mad
@JoeWatkins Have you tried using a gui for it? sourcetreeapp.com
No no, don't do Phonegap please
@Danack I haven't, I don't mean phone gap in particular, I mean this ...
@JoeWatkins Wah?
23:54
PHP has visible limits, do not ignore them, you can afford, definitely, to know a little bit less about the quirks of some frameworks while you give yourself a reality check and learn at least one other language, because you will require it, you have already required it if we are discussing it at all ...
shrug lol, I don't develope Android apps, so it isn't really something I've extensively considered. I was just making the point that I am trying to focus my skill set to try and make up for the fact that as recently as 8 years ago, I was hitting nails in with a hammer, whereas other candidates for jobs were graduating college or already working in the field.
@Chris :) I'm only telling you this because I know you will hit the limitations of such an approach pretty soon for most serious work.
my skill set couldn't be more focused, but it's a skill set molded by the real world, because I couldn't get by ...
In fact, I've taken a small project like this to toy with Android :)
I don't think they're smarter than me, or more capable, I just did stupid shit when I was 20 - 26 years old and drank and fucked around and put myself into this position where I'm 5-6 years older than my skill-peers in the field.
23:57
how old are you ?
34
^^ + 2
I say "skill-peers" meaning people who are at the same skill level as I am.
I am 30, I think most of us are around that age ...
I've been messing around, hobby level, with computers since age 15. But you, Joe, for example, know more than I do. I wasted so much time when I was younger :(
23:58
we won't have a stupid shit competition, but I'd win that ...
I never finished high school, I haven't been in full time education since 14 years old
user895378
@Chris If it makes you feel better I'm 31 and never wrote a single line of real code until I was 22 and didn't start doing it every day until I was ~26
yeah people learn very quickly when they actually do ...
I've been coding since I was 12 ... but never bothered to improve my skills until I was 25 or so

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