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21:00
@tereško Is that video supposed to load that slow or is my connection crap atm?
@PeeHaa your connection sucks
view source
you can get mp4 file from it to download
Yeh good call
Ok, so someone generated a 5gb db of hashes in an attempt to beat hashguesser. Awesome!
21:04
lol
It's so obvious, but I don't want to say anything. :-D
@ircmaxell I just figured how to beat the clientside by monkey patching the encryption library functions - totally missed the point in that :)
So cute:
HHVM enforces (but does not require) strict type-checking in method parameters, as well as return values all the way down to scalars, optimizes the op-codes and caches php at the machine level, and enforces typed arrays/collections and offers immutable object properties. Just to name some. On one hand, if those things don't matter to you, then HHVM is not for you. If they do matter to you, you will know what those things mean, and you'll understand how those features bring PHP ever so closer to being on par with many compiled languages and environments in terms of performance and stability. — Michael J Mulligan 4 mins ago
> Then, we generate a hash with a private key that doesn't leave the server. When you enter a guess, the browser hashes the guess with the public key (seriously, just read the source), and if it matches, considers you to have found the hash. Then, the server re-verifies with the secret key. If both match, it's considered a valid guess and the result is saved.
@MichaelJMulligan except that it doesn't... — ircmaxell 11 secs ago
ssssssshhhh
:)
That's a boys dream you just shattered :(
:-D
21:25
2 messages moved to bin
@ircmaxell Did I say something wrong? I just facepalmed again about the lounge…
I'd just like to add to what Chris said, and note that unlike PeeHaa, @ircmaxell is a complete PHP noob with no php experience whatsoever. — Benjamin Gruenbaum 10 secs ago
What is with these chat names.
Why would you even name a room that.
I already backed away from that thread :P @BenjaminGruenbaum @Chris
@Charles no idea…
21:30
@BenjaminGruenbaum lol nice
I remember when I first started coming to this site, encountering people like tereško or Raynos, they seemed to have this pissy edge that I just didn't understand, and they took such a hard line on every subject, I thought they were being jerks on purpose. ircmaxell would weigh in, and I'd just feel.... so angsty. Like a teen, rebelling against The Man.
@ircmaxell <3
Then, I realized that this is science, and my attitude was not only completely, utterly stupid, but also harmful to myself, and only myself.
@Chris @Raynos likes to make a lot of statements about things he does not understand particularly well.
You're not engaged with him often, but he is one of the people spreading the most FUD I know.
He knows his craft well enough to talk expertly on the kind of subjects I was dealing with as a relative newbie
21:32
I didn't like @tereško initially, but he's kind of the opposite of that.
It took me a long time, and a lot of mockery from him, to understand for example why mootools is not the best library evar!!11
@PeeHaa BTW congrats on the recent PHP gold
@Chris you're talking about someone who believes an appropriate response to a server side code error is a server restart, and that in order to write fast code in JS it has to be coded in C.
He just hates on a lot of things, he hates jQuery for example - like really hate it. One time John Resig came to the room and shut him up real good :D
Oh, I don't mean to place them as peers as far as skill level goes. But their approach has a similar flavor: derision. Now that I've picked up some more chops, I realize that the derision is probably warranted.
@ircmaxell when 11 months are recent :-)
21:33
Thanks and ^ :-)
@bwoebi it's the most recent badge he earned
no?
As far as his more broad place in the programming community, as you say, I don't interact with him often enough to know
oh, wrong sort order
:-)
21:34
yes, it's not class you should sort by :-)
Strange thing is it was sorted the same way for me?
@Chris derision is never warranted, and teresko got a lot better at not doing it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Holy god, if you have a linky to that I would like to see it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum link to bookmark or GTFO
in JavaScript, Feb 19 '13 at 16:12, by John Resig
bad uses of JavaScript existed long before jQuery ever came out - jQuery being popular doesn't stop bad devs from existing, the only thing that stops bad devs is good education, which is why I've written two books and am working at Khan Academy
21:35
:)
OP delivers
@BenjaminGruenbaum I draw the line between hating jquery and hating people who know only how to use jquery. There is a major difference
@BenjaminGruenbaum I disagree. I think being a dick is not warranted, but the approach that tereško takes can be exactly what some people need to get rid of their illogical dogma
@tereško Raynos doesn't. Over the last year and a half, I've been hearing time after time how awesome he was in the JS room - and then seeing him make a clown out of himself when we interact
Bug report I just received: "During reading, #5 and #6 seem to be reversed "
^ you all have as much of an idea as to what the hell that means as I do
Just last week he commented on something related to an API issue that relates to promises which he doesn't understand at all and never really used but often talks about.
21:38
/me recognizes a sore spot when he sees one, and backs slowly away
This is like... from the day before yesterday :D
petka_ is Esailija, the other people in the chat are kriskowal, domenic and a bunch of others.
Anyway @Chris , my whole point here - is that you should never take what someone tells you without a grain of salt. No matter how 'scary' they seem.
.. which reminds me taht promises-aplus.github.io/promises-spec is on my "read later" list
My point was: having someone aggressively challenge your dearly held notions can be an effective way to make you seek better understanding, if only to justify your position
And in that sense, teresko and Raynos have had similar influences on me. fin.
@PeeHaa , how was the lecture ?
@tereško How was yours? That speaking thing you were trying to put together the other day... did you wind up skipping out, or did you just wing it?
21:44
naah .. I gave up on it
since I wasn't actually scheduled for this week, there was no pressure
but I am up for next round
I think I am gonna pick the "Practical use of neural networks in web applications" .. or something along those lines
:( Two more upvotes to #2 position: stackoverflow.com/a/23641033/538216
I got a downvote and the other guy got an upvote
21:59
You're clearly missing the < 5.6 mysqli variant
And why do you use the old join()? It's called implode().
22:13
@tereško ooh, we do that at tipranks, we we're a practical use case of neural netwroks in web applications I guess.
22:29
@bwoebi Other languages call this join and split not explode and implode.
Other languages.
@bwoebi This is non-trivial.
is a call_user_func_array not trivial?
@bwoebi If this language ever tries to remove them I'd be pissed.
@bwoebi It doesn't work.
Go ahead and try it; I'll wait.
@LeviMorrison call_user_func_array([$statement, "bind_param"], array_merge([str_repeat('i', count($ids))], $ids)); < doesn't that work?
22:31
It's because bind_param takes things by reference.
And no, it doesn't work.
Each variable inside of $ids explicitly has to be a reference for some reason.
I thought call_user_func_array preserves references?
But $ids doesn't normally contain references so it doesn't pass them.
You have to either go through the array and rebind them all by reference or make a new array that takes them via reference, etc.
It's horrible.
Ah, I supposed now that $ids were an array of references.
Yeah, fortunately that is rarely the case.
I hate references.
So yeah, ...$ids is definitely the best option here ^^
hehe
I like references, whenever they are the right tool to use.
22:39
@tereško Meh. Lots of talk about dicking around until you finally find something useful. I doubt that approach would work with a (tight) deadline tbh
@bwoebi This was not the right tool ^^
@Levi But I don't understand why call_user_func_array complains when the parameters are not references. When I'm using call_user_func_array, PHP, trust me, I know what I'm doing...
@LeviMorrison for bind_param? no.
@bwoebi call_user_func_array isn't the issue; it's bind_param.
both are.
Well, it's the interaction between them.
22:41
bind_param is badly and call_user_func_array suboptimally designed.
bind_param requires references and call_user_func_array only passes by-ref if the array entry is a reference.
I wonder if we could change call_user_func_array?
I personally think this is a bug, at least.
I think for call_user_func_array it shouldn't be a problem, it isn't a BC break.
I also think it used to work; let me see if I can confirm that.
bind_param… no idea. But I think we could use might be by ref arginfo
Ah, in PHP 5.3 it broke.
It worked in 5.2: 3v4l.org/Oc8P3
22:45
I thought in PHP 5.3 only good things happened ...
I guess the question is: was it intentional?
find the commit which broke it and mail him.
that's the only possibility to get an answer.
Ugh, I don't even know how to start with that ^^
Well, … me neither. There are, I think, git tools to facilitate that, but with that I can't help you either…
The older it is, the harder it gets to find it…
@Levi github.com/php/php-src/commit/… (found via git blame search)
> Jani Taskinen authored 7 years ago
^ who the hell is that!?
okay, quick google search says he quit 7 years ago and doesn't want to be bothered with php-src anymore.
so you have anyone to ask… feel free to ask others e.g. in irc if that should just be reverted. (only that what causes call_user_func_array to trigger that error)
23:11
@bwoebi Go to Credits page, 2 matches.
/cc @SecondRikudo :D
He deleted himself from master ... sniper php.net
jup
@webarto White power! No, wait, the other thing...
@bwoebi It was a major pain but basically I figured out why call_user_func_array doesn't do I want.
Even if it did send things by-ref it would be done on a copy.
so the original doesn't get modified.
@LeviMorrison That is and always has been a bollocks API and I'm somewhat loathed to do anything to make it easier to use because I'd rather see the API itself die a horrible death, but I agree the cufa ref bug sucks balls. That said, there's no longer any point in fixing it because of splat
@LeviMorrison Could be solved by making cufa 2nd arg PREFER_REF?
user924016
23:28
nn
23:56
@LeviMorrison FYI it never actually worked as expected, it just didn't complain about it: 3v4l.org/5I1N0

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