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22:00
@BenjaminGruenbaum I wouldn't, I'd use a struct for that. Where I pre-define the fields into a class
@ircmaxell what do you mean by struct? You'd write a C module for that?
user924016
most, sounds like a quite uncertain number =]
Can you show me the code?
class Person {
    public $name;
    public $profession;
    public $country;
}
22:02
The field names are not known in compile time.
@BenjaminGruenbaum that's my point. I say that's not a valid program, and re-engineer the problem
user924016
cast it and cash in
@ircmaxell it's everywhere though. When you perform a MySQL (or any DB really) query, you get back an associative array if I recall correctly, not directly an object (I might be completely wrong here, never had to write performance sensitive code in php).
@BenjaminGruenbaum that happens in C. Not in the user-land
Yeah, but let's say I want to write my own DB driver in PHP, on top of its TCP functionality.
Or, just need to read a CSV whose fields the user determined in an admin interface, if that use case sounds crazy.
ThW
ThW
22:07
I prefer arrays for generic handling (if i know nothing about the data structure) and classes/data objects for all other stuff
PHP does not use internal classes, so there isn't a performance difference @BenjaminGruenbaum like there is with JavaScript
so it really doesn't make a difference
@ircmaxell that's not the point I was trying to make though.
The obvious implementation, which you'd see in PHP and in JavaScript when people write code, is a for loop that assigns data to members of a new associative array (object, in JS). Right?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Sounds like array_combine to me
@cspray I'm trying to make a point and keep getting side tracked, that was just an example problem, but sure, it looks like that's what array_combine does, sort of.
However, in JS, the for loop implementation is significantly slower than the fastest one, because, well.. it has a for loop and it creates an object whose type is not obvious, and while v8 can unroll loops and extract hidden classes, it's not good at doing both at the same time.
So the fast JS solution would be to write the code of a function that creates that type of object when we get the fields and then eval (in JS, Function(..)) it.
Which is a technique that maybe, a 100 people are aware of.
Which gets me to the actual point, although JavaScript engines have a JIT , most people who write libraries for Node still revert to C++ for performane because they don't understand it very well. The point is a JIT is hard for the users too, especially in a language as dynamic as php.
can someone confirm this problem
I got a down vote because apparently the problem doesn't exist
and I have been trying on 3 different browsers
and even on private browsing
22:15
@BenjaminGruenbaum the jit doesn't sound very effective does it ?
@JoeWatkins it is very effective here, it can produce a 100 times speedup, the problem is people don't know how to write "jit friendly" code, which is actually a thing in a language that's that dynamic.
why should there be such a big difference though ?
Because it'd store it in aligned memory (like a C struct) instead of a hash map.
this is a tracing one or a function one ?
That's v8, you can actually observe that here - jsperf.com/caching-object-properties-with-prototypes/3 I wrote that just 2 days ago for this dude writing a CSV library in Node.
The newer the v8 and the bigger the fields are (it's just 3 here), the bigger the difference gets.
22:19
I used firefox
there's no jit here right ??
still the function one is fastest
There is :)
oh ... I didn't know ...
The point is, the average user would not utilize that technique in the first place.
@BenjaminGruenbaum and many (including me) would argue that it shouldn't matter in most cases. Because unless that's in a hot loop, the readability loss is going to more than outweigh the performance gain
ThW
ThW
TraceMonkey?
22:21
@ircmaxell the use case was deserializing millions of objects, which is a hot loop. For a library that performance gain is important.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh, and I'm not saying it's wrong to do here. I'm just saying in general I don't want developers to do things like that. If all for loops are deconstructed like that, we're in a shit load of trouble
Which is why for example, Bluebird promises (written mostly by a JIT aware developer) are two orders of magnitude faster than Q promises (whitten by a JIT unaware developer mostly) making them feasible for actual use.
@ircmaxell it's not the deconstruction that's making it fast, but I totally agree. You shouldn't rely on that behavior, but remember the alternative.
user924016
Wouldnt a developer optimize when they are in need of speed?
@RonniSkansing most developers think they need speed, and optimize prematurely. And you wind up with a non-performant ball of crap as a result
I'd much rather have JavaScript code that looks like that than have to write code in C which would introduce a lot more overhead. The fact you can get the same performance is amazing, and really nice.
22:24
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'd rather have normal loops, which then can get identified as a bottleneck and be abstractly rewritten to be better performant
I agree that the average user shouldn't care, but for libraries - having the abilities is great.
@BenjaminGruenbaum IMHO: if you ever write that code first, even for a library, there's a problem
user924016
What I was trying to say was, if a developer needs more speed, they would invest time in optimization.. so maybe they do like Benjamins says first, but maybe they do not need to worry about such performence specifics first case.
@ircmaxell we'd all like to have a magical JIT compiler, but there are hidden assumptions in that loop I'm not sure you'd be able to JIT reasonably, everything in the array can actually be a getter that mutates the array, everything change etc.
user924016
anyways nn
22:26
@BenjaminGruenbaum no, what I mean is, write the code first cleanly. Then run it and see if it's got acceptable performance. If not, profile, see where the hot spots are, then refactor.
@ircmaxell if you're writing a library people will use extensively, performance like this matters, this very same trick caused a 50% speedup in the JavaScript Node MySQL driver about half a year ago. I agree that it should not be your 'go to'
@ircmaxell /me mumbles something about "uniformly slow code".
@BenjaminGruenbaum that never really happens. But even if it was more-or-less, there are still areas you can tell could be improved...
nn @RonniSkansing
@ircmaxell sometimes, like with Bluebird promises, there was no way to go about it other than a rewrite. The very architectural assumptions were not aware of the compiler, which doesn't matter idealistically but did in practice.
@BenjaminGruenbaum and what you wind up with when all you think about is performance is a steaming ball of cat piss. That doesn't work. But it doesn't work really fast
ThW
ThW
22:30
lol
@ircmaxell fwiw, Bluebird provides the best stack traces (by far), has the most extensive test suite, and is the most debuggable by a long margin, the code base itself is also pretty readable.
@BenjaminGruenbaum because perforamnce isn't the only thing they were thinking about
as I said during the size_t crap in internals. Performance is a goal. It's a priority. It's not the biggest priority, nor is it the only priority
I'd like to think I helped there, I always push for better debuggability. However, performance was a primary goal.
Oh of course, my whole argument here can be summed up to:
- A JIT is great, but it shouldn't be anywhere near a priority for PHP now, there are much more pressing concerns for PHP imo.
- One of the only reasons I believe it's great in an IO bound environment like a PHP server is the fact it lets you write modules in native code.
- Which, isn't simple at all in a language as dynamic as PHP, since it would require developers to be very aware of how the JIT works.
When you're writing code for a website that has dynamic pages but is not very intensive in its frequency of updates for most content - a jit wins you nothing since most of the data is served from a cache anyway.
For example, for a site like Stack Overflow where the vast majority of visitors are not logged in and are just vieweing static pages to read a question and answer. I don't think PHP would perform any worse or better than C# currently does.
Most PHP powered sites, and websites in general are like that, that's what PHP was born for, and that's the case PHP should aim to solve better.
Making stuff like WordPress go faster and more usable from the PHP perspective is oh-so-much more important than a JIT imo.
Especially since there is more probably more WordPress out there than NodeJS, RoR, Yesod, Revel, Gorilla, Grails,and ASP.NET MVC combined.
I know the emphasis isn't really on WP. But WP :(
I don't like WordPress any more than the next guy, but that's (content management systems that are DB centric, can can utilize a cache) the use case PHP should be better at. Stuff people here worked on like a consistent hashing API, generators or a solid debugger is a lot more useful than a JIT for that use case IMO.
Let's face it, if you're writing a stateful socket heavy app, chances are you probably shouldn't be using PHP anyway, just like I wouldn't use Node for a cms centric news website.
22:42
I think a persons own interest is a big factor though.
More motivated as such
I agree, they're a big factor in determining the direction of an open source project, but in terms of usefulness...
I'm drinking a coffee.
ThW
ThW
My wine is empty.
Said coffee is approximately 45% high-octane rum, 25% Bailey's, and 30% coffee.
Rum blech.
Baileys is fine going down.
22:52
Kraken rum. It's good. Even if you don't like rum.
ThW
ThW
Last order, time to go home ...
Friday is shaping up disappointingly :-(
Only 6 minutes left of Friday for me
5 hours 6 minutes here
5 hours to bring it back then
ThW
ThW
22:55
Already Saturday
Woman issues, I think my whole weekend might be shot
Where are you @ThW
ThW
ThW
Cologne, Germany
Ah. 1am?
ThW
ThW
Yeah
Last call already?
22:58
So you have 100 issues @DanLugg?
lol. Yes. Yes I do.
ThW
ThW
@DanLugg Not in the tourist area
(actually last count was abou 73792, but close enough)
@ThW Ah. Gotcha. Not much later than 2 around here (Canada)
As @ircmaxell will probably attest, places in NYC sometimes go to 4
I miss it there :-(
ThW
ThW
In Cologne, too. but not all of them.
And Cologne is a little smaller then NYC
23:15
Goal was 1 mill, now at 2.9 mill. New goal 5 mill.
Amazing that people will donate but VERY sad that it has to be done through donations.
I got a new idea for a website...
RefundStarter
Exact same as kickstarter but if the investment becomes worth a lot then the investors get their money back.
Like Oculus rift, which was kickstarted for a fair whack of change then sold for much much more.
pissing a lot of people off
@Danack @JoeWatkins Yes, this is exactly where I got my avatar, as attributed in my StackOverflow profile.
However, I didn't find a direct link to that specific photo on the flickr account so I just linked to the person.
That is many kittens.
Yeah. You can understand why I just linked to the account ^^
@DanLugg 4? 6 in mant places :-)
I remember when the 24 hour law passed in UK. Like anyone needs to be drinking till that early in the morning :P
23:27
@Fabien s/till/start
heh
23:42
someone knows how to run a node server in a laravel application ?
I need to make a node chat
that runs with a laravel apatche application
:)
please help
or any good angular laravel chat references?
hi ,anybody is there?
yes
I need answers to my question!!

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