« first day (1428 days earlier)      last day (3746 days later) » 

19:00
@NikiC I envy how much you've absorbed in your lifetime.
@AndreaFaulds yeah, probably not. The RFC is the way in the middle.
This adds further evidence to my multiple persons theory
One of the people making up the consortium referred to as "Nikita Popov" is a physicist
Nikita Popov is PHP's Satoshi Nakamoto :p
to make it worse, it's actually Nikita Popova
Nikita, wunderkind, the next edition.
I'm just waiting for his first book tbh
"Why Stephen Hawking was an idiot"
19:05
@Leigh :O
@Leigh it probably is already a trademark owned by Glenn Beck
Hey @NikiC, I might have found your Facebook profile.
Not going to link it, though.
not creepy or anything
Yes, I feel like a stalker now. Sorry.
It's also quite mean of me to keep up the whole "not a real person" thing. I realise you almost certainly are a real person.
Quick question: how can I add a regular expression character like \t to HTML with php. My goal is to add tabs when text is copied to a word processor.
19:12
wat
@AndreaFaulds There are really a lot people with that name on Fb… how can you be so sure?
you can print "\t" for tabs, yes
@bwoebi I'm not going to answer that.
I like to think this is Nikita youtube.com/… :D
I just wondered now how there's no single one with the name Bob Weinand on Fb :-D // Didn't know that I have such an unique name^^
19:16
@bwoebi there's nobody with my name either
probably because I've never had an account there
Or maybe you can't search them...
me neither, but somehow I expected to see someone else with a Bob Weinand name on Fb.
@webarto right, google and facebook, like there's something that's not searchable
There's one Robert if that counts :P
no, that doesn't count^^
19:19
I keep getting suggested Lester Caine by FB
@webarto My name is really Bob, not Robert.
I swear they're reading my emails or something
I heard once you get to talk to him in person, he's actually quite articulate ;D
@AndreaFaulds Yes... or if you searched, etc.
nah, I'm just kidding, he's a fucking mentalist.
19:21
@bwoebi Sure thing, Bob.
Haha. ... :-)
@webarto Dejan sounds like a kind of mustard
It's Dean, kind of gay...
19:24
I'm very hungry.
my name is unisex, I get female titles all the time, I was also called Leah the other day
Princess Leigha?
pretty much
I did have my hair up
was it last year or the year before we all changed our names to something female sounding?
I remember Toni Ferarri refused to participate
As always... partypooper.
I think last year, Sir.
19:44
@Leigh huuuch?
@bwoebi I think it was before you were a regular here
back when hakre and friends were still around
For the rest of my life, I will remember what #php done for me ... http://t.co/ZFa9Z4qQFF
evening :)
@JoeWatkins that's really deep.
@Leigh by that time I already was here.^^
@Leigh First time here 12th April 2013.
@JoeWatkins good job it'll wash off... right
I guess it is ... life changed for me, overnight, I don't have to worry about anything at all, because of strangers, most of whom I will never meet ... I hope in 20 years I can look down and remember ...
it will not ...
19:49
@Leigh I think that's more something permanent.
hmmmm, what changed overnight?
@Leigh he got overnight a crucial few thousand pounds…
hmm ... I am not sure about the kerning in that picture
<- bad person
@JoeWatkins sucks man, I have had to do 6 months rent twice in 3 years :/
can only imagine what it's like with kids draining your savings
19:52
terrible (phone camera with no flash) shot and bit sore ... bit bloody too which is why no flash ...
cute kids, wink
let me know if I can help with anything that doesn't involve money, paying girlfriends half the rent, her tuition fees, and my own rent and debts :/ had £300 left at the start of the month this month
thank you :)
also, a hug at phpnw if you like being encapsulated by bear-like people
19:55
hehehe
I'll take it :)
anyone ever used bamboo ?
found it somewhere this morning, on a tweet I think ... never heard of it ...
/me wonders if they have anything travis don't ...
sure, part of the atlassian stack
oh is it
we tried a big integration of jira, bitbucket and bamboo, and we didn't really get along with it
we're using phabricator and git, and that composer script that lets you host your own repos, but not the fancy new one ...
If it's just build testing I'm not really interested.
20:00
I don't want to cast a shadow on it with just a single experience, but the guys who set it up for us said it was painful, we're still using jenkins
Automatic code quality reviews and perf tests would be interesting to me.
phabricator isn't very clever actually, no analysis at all ...
you can get single user licenses for all (or nearly all) of the atlassian products for $10
it's got an auditing thing, but you have to choose to use it ... nobody really does use it seriously ..
if you have the server resources for multiple JVM apps, you can get a fully integrated stack to play with for pretty cheap
20:02
ah ... now was it a java dev that tried to setup the stack ?
nope, we're a PHP shop ;)
and our sysadmins are kind of language agnostic, which mean, bash
and perl
lol language agnostic
so this explains something maybe ... java things are hard to setup, even if documented will use unfamiliar terminology ... opengrok is really hard and I do consider myself a java dev (don't tell anyone)
everytime I engage one of our sysadmins I am overwhelmed with worry and dread ...
they are ... not good ...
how much harder is it than... carve off a vm with 4 vcpus and 4 gb of ram, give JVM 3gb, run a test app with next-to-no usage
ours are pretty macgyver
which flavour and version of the jvm is a stumbling block if you have no idea what apis are being used and what provides them and which is stable on your os ...
20:05
so, what you're saying is, we need all of these tools, but written in PHP
@Sparatan117 yea by agnostic I mean, they don't care about what language you use, it's meaningless to them :D
we might follow the same path ... lets say hippy is finished ... in 5 years "installing php" won't even be a thing, you will have to choose between as many implementations as we do for java and between as many versions too ... that's worrying ...
apparently nobody else is bothered ... it's a "good thing" ...
honestly, I hope in 5 years PHP is not my job :/
I could deal with telling people how bad they are at PHP, at an oversight level, maybe
trying to edge my way slowly into infosec though
I'm excited to see what it will look like in 5 years actually ...
Maybe this is bad ediciate, but I would kinda love to see PHP be able to take a python approach and remove brackets and semicolons mandatory usage
I would really hate that ...
20:08
@Sparatan117 you're allowed to dream ;)
@JoeWatkins fyi I created a mirror of libjit on github so you can use their shiny interface for browsing the tree/history etc and where I will be putting any fixes I make to it, I've given you and @ircmaxell commit access to it so we can keep everything in one place
@JoeWatkins why's that?
@DaveRandom almost want to say something about libgit on jithub
@DaveRandom ah awesomes
@Sparatan117 it would be a kind of deranged visual basic ...
I don't like languages without semi colons or brackets, for the same reason I don't like to read text without punctuation ...
oh god, imagine if statements without the mandatory parenthesis, and without mandatory braces
barf
20:11
/me shudders
I'm not saying they're bad, but sometimes they're not necessary
ex. $c++
although " if(condition) : " always seems to cause trouble...
if $a < $b {

}
How do you feel about that?
@LeviMorrison @Leigh was sick, and it made me shudder when we started to think about things like that ...
if $a
  print $b
looks cleaner...
20:13
i'm sure you can come up with something more ambiguous
@Leigh Yeh and VB, with parens around arg lists for fcalls seemingly at random
and Sub and Function being different things... wtf
oh holy fuck... nested ifs...
I don't like clean, I like punctuated and familiar ...
if $a if $b if $c ...
@LeviMorrison reinventing Go?
20:14
@Leigh that's where it becomes a problem
@JoeWatkins but clean = easier to read -> easier to debug
@JoeWatkins and unambiguous
@FlorianMargaine did Go ever actually take off
@Sparatan117 sorry, in this case, I think some strict formatting rules make things easier to read - we've been spending years discouraging statements without braces
ha, you think debugging is done by reading ?? I don't, I think that's rarely the case .... var_dump is not a debugger
@Sparatan117 seeing the number of testimonials I see quite often, yea
20:17
I think an RFC for mandatory braces around all control blocks would get more support than an RFC for removing mandatory parenthesis
@Leigh what about

if ( $condition ) do_something( $var ) | return $condition;
@Sparatan117 completely horrible
I have literally no idea what that would do
me neither ... it's awful ...
ie

if ( $condition ) { do_something ( $var ); return $condition; }
20:19
| ?
@Sparatan117 sorry man, I'm sure in your own mind you have a good idea, it's just not nice for the rest of us :p
@Sparatan117 Sounds like you want comma expressions
(which PHP does not currently have)
| just an idea in order to pipe it together
but | already has a meaning
20:20
which makes it really confusing
lol just an idea ... calm down
we're calm ... we're discussing your idea ... 'tis all good ...
Let's add comma expressions! The AST patch allows us to do anything yay
we're all calm, lots of people here have experience with how language syntax changes can be disruptive
although I worry about adding more symbols... we already have the confusing => and -> which most people have trouble explaining to new developers
20:21
hmm ... it wouldn't be adding, it would be re-using, unless you have another operator in mind ?
I'm all for adding meaningful symbols.
Is there a plan to add an stdClass literal? I.e. {}
well he's right, we do try and stay away from adding new operators unnecessarily
but the point remains that it's still unclear, not to parser, but to another human being ...
I've heard talk of object literals @FlorianMargaine
dunno if useful ...
Honestly, I'd be okay with adding some unicode operators like
20:23
@Sparatan117 lets consider your new developers, and the fact they now have to learn an additional syntax for what a block might look like. Sorry buddy, but I think your suggestion adds a lot of complexity for not much real-world gain
Well, we pretty much have to use arrays when you want some kind of map, where I think objects would be more appropriate
@FlorianMargaine I think there will be a conflict with $foo = new {'test'.$name};
@LeviMorrison π, τ, Σ, θ :D ?
Oh right I didn't remember that php used braces for that
@Leigh I mean it's not really a big thing, but more along the lines that if you can remove some of the cumbersome things to type, it would help to write code faster... not that hitting the space bar is any faster in python but still
20:24
@Leigh Probably none of those except maybe the :D operator.
@FlorianMargaine also for "text {$foo['key']} more"
:D makes comments bold
also, @FlorianMargainem you use object literals in JS because you do not have php-style arrays =P
I'd be okay with and too.
@tereško there's now conflict there, obj literals wouldn't use new
20:25
@Levi I want λ
HL3 confirmed...
@teresko true.
I showed my gf my ":D" face, she winced :x
@FlorianMargaine To replace the function keyword, you mean? Or something else?
For functions yeah
Only for anonymous ones though I'd say
Lambda for methods doesn't make sense
20:27
so the only thing I can really think of that you would use an object literal for is like some kind of configuration map ... right ? I mean what other kind of object is required before a script is even executing ?
For classic functions... Why nkt
@Joe yup.
I don't know what stdClass is for otherwise..
I like the syntax of stdClass to reach properties, I don't like its syntax to create them
okay so, then ... why not go the other way, I mean for a configuration map you want to initialize objects and make many many allocations and whatever ... what about a tuple ? this could have a tiny overhead, not have the complexity of an object and not require it ...
an object isn't just an object, it's a few zval* arrays, a couple of hashtables (all initialized), and a bunch of other crap ...
tuple it is then
I just don't like the fact that for key/values, you always need arrays
with string keys
arrays dont require string keys ?
you want string keys right ?
no, the opposite :P
20:31
show me
I want a symbol key, like for stdClass
it'd help just for IDEs
show me what you'd write in code and how you would expect to use it ?
$foo = { bar => 'baz', baz => 'bar' };
$foo->bar;
yeah they are string keys though, but I see yeah ...
kinda like JSON but... yeah
20:35
I'd prefer some sort of set, list of tuples ... to a whole object whose function table will never be used, nor will most of the other stuff ... that's a new thing so I wouldn't shoehorn it into an object ...
I dunno what the other ideas were about it, there has been internals discussions about it ... possibly even patches, not sure ...
maybe someone should have a go at that ...
volunteers ?
yeah I'm not against having a pure data "object"
people will ask why not an array ....
I don't have a good answer for that ...
do you ?
just for the fact that key strings are awful for any IDE
other than you like it better ...
@tereško It's ${!${''}=('test'.$name)}; :P
20:39
@FlorianMargaine for an ide that doesn't matter a single bit
it should not be difficult for any ide to detect a constant array
yeah I don't really see why it matters ...
well, I work a lot with drupal
where arrays are used everywhere
and not having autocompletion for keys... well, let's say it's a pain.
@FlorianMargaine an object notation would not change anything about that
hmmm, if we treated arrays as only integer indexed until the first non-integer key was added, we could get quite a big speed improvement right?
emacs has autocompletion of keys (string autocompletion, not semantic autocompletion), but not xdebug :(
20:41
@Leigh that's what phpng does.
@NikiC it would. Using stdClass today is a PITA, because writing them is awful
hooray, I had a good idea
@FlorianMargaine I'm referring to IDE autocompletion
@Leigh [but it needs to start at zero, not random integers]
@JoeWatkins Do you plan to work on return types today?
20:42
If it could deal with your object notation, it could also deal with array notation ;)
@LeviMorrison tomorrow, not much of today left for me ;)
@NikiC well.. IDEs have autocompletion for symbol keys, not for string keys
@FlorianMargaine IDEs don't care
@bwoebi sure, although binary chopping an array without hashing would still be faster than doing it with string hashing, but 0-indexed and sequential keys is obviously fastest
20:42
they do
@FlorianMargaine but it has to detect the symbols in the same way as it has to detect keys in arrays though ?
right now, symbol keys autocompletion works, not key strings completion
although, that kind of depends on it being sorted
@JoeWatkins yeah but if you're in quotes, IDEs don't trigger the autocompletion
@Leigh eih, we do integer hashing if it's an integer, we don't hash it's string representation. (or more precisely: directly apply the mask on the integer)
20:43
@FlorianMargaine If that is the case, then it is only incidental, not for technical reasons that would be changed by a literal syntax
Also I know for a fact that PhpStorm has completion for array keys. It's just not automatically triggered
this seems like a good reason to encourage the developers of the ide to change something ... if we want to add a new type/syntax then we need a positive reason that benefits us directly ... not possibly some users who may or may not use an ide possibly ...
@bwoebi hmm, what if all string hashes had the high bit set, and integer indices below that high bit could be literal
@NikiC how is it then triggered?
indeed, makes sense
If I wrote an RFC to add unicode operators like , and would you vote for it? Why or why not?
20:45
is there a way to create an object on the fly currently that can have methods created and then unset the whole thing once you're done with it?
@LeviMorrison I would vote against it
@Leigh if, if, if. Too much checks, not worth it.
I would hate that ...
@bwoebi Ok, I'll take your word on it, you've obviously done far more experimentation on it than my conjectures :)
unicode operators or variable names are a giant pain in the ass for anybody using a standard keyboard
20:46
@JoeWatkins btw this is the fix I eventually realised for the whole thread init problem, I'd appreciate you confirming that it actually makes sense/fixes the issue without causing more issues. I'm guessing the reason they don't use the proper one-time init is because it doesn't exist until Vista - we obviously don't care about that but... meh
it seems obvious, but because I cannot type those characters ... yeah ^
those are only convenient to people on speed-typing schemes where you can easily access all those symbols
I've worked with scientific code that has greek variable names all over the place and it's no fun
@NikiC but then that just discourages the idea if someone wanted to build a new idea of using PHP to do it... and instead using something like Ruby or Javascript (ew) to do it
@Leigh not experimentation, but generally. It'd allocate far too much memory if there's one integer key and 1025 string keys.
@bwoebi how come, aren't the keys in a hash table a fixed size?
20:48
@DaveRandom minutes from bed time, I will look in the morning ...
no worries :-)
(although also softcore)
:-P
(msdn before bedtime can cause nighmares, probably)
@Leigh well, I mean you'd then allocate 4096 Buckets instead of 2048.
Sounds likely
> minutes from bedtime

that explains why you hate everything... ;)
20:49
drove many hundreds of miles today ...
Went to the shops then?
@Leigh there's a lot of potential to optimize memory usage of current (phpng) hashtables. but not big impact on performance and requires more complicated code. Currently packed and unpacked arrays are mostly isomorphic.
@DaveRandom something like that ...
we could make packed arrays literal zval[] arrays, but as said, that requires more complicated handling
Which reminds me that I need to look into why SplFixedArray is still slower than arrays in PHP 7.
The good news is that they both got faster.
20:51
I'm probably confusing myself. Like I said (I wasn't being sarcastic) I take you guys words for it, you know better than me
@LeviMorrison I'd assume that it would be even slower (relatively speaking)
I think it's just the object overhead of SplFixedArray
I'm not a fan of splfixedarray in any case
Because a) it should have been implemented without the Fixed part and b) has weird issues around nesting iirc
All SPL structures are foobar, I think.
/me sleeps nn
20:53
Or all SPL, really. Well, minus spl_autoload_register ^^
Iterators are pretty good.
@NikiC and the spl_autoload_register thing anyway shouldn't have been spl_* prefixed^^
Far above the rest of the library.
@LeviMorrison true.
@LeviMorrison they are better than the rest, but they are still needlessly complex and in parts hard to understand
I remember that someone in here had some serious problems understanding why you need to new RII(new RDI, RII::LO)
20:55
You'd prefer the simpler hasNext and next version?
Oh, that you mean.
not to mention the whole implementational stuff. Like weird behavior when you don't rewind
I'm okay with requiring the rewind.
and the weird method forwarding. like, just magically forwarding all calls to the current element.
Not my favorite thing, but understandable.
really, I think new RII(new RDI, RII::LO) is the only particularly useful part of spl iterators
that's the only one I use with some regularity

« first day (1428 days earlier)      last day (3746 days later) »