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00:02
am I correct in this situation? stackoverflow.com/questions/26747310/…
Sigh
I guess I do need to write a "MVC" blog post
@ircmaxell C'est la vie. C'est la PHP.
lo guys!
@reikyoushin hmm… you had some longer absence from that chat recently, no?
@bwoebi yeah, it's because i work on the day now, which is when everyone is asleep. >.<
00:07
@reikyoushin you have some exotic tz?
@bwoebi GMT+8, yeah, it's so exotic it bites.. :P
Wild, dude!
@webarto hello mister, been a while. :)
@reikyoushin well, when you then have evening, we're here too…
@reikyoushin XO
Is it snowing yet @reikyoushin ?
user1994804
00:11
Hey guys, I asked all this in the JS chat room and haven't heard anything there so I wanted to run it by you guys
user1994804
Copied from JS chat:
user1994804
Hello, Could anyone assist me with whats supposed to be a fairly simple AJAX modification?
I wrote a script that uses AJAX to retrieve some html from another page but don't understand where a URL is that's mentioned and essential to a help article
I don't understand a word you've said :-)
user1994804
Ok... I have a page which retrieves info via an AJAX call
00:16
Ok, we'll call it like that, next...
user1994804
and I've been reading about getting AJAX retrieved content indexed: developers.google.com/webmasters/ajax-crawling/docs/learn-more
user1994804
and to quickly get you up to speed
user1994804
Look under heading An agreement between crawler and server
user1994804
WTH is this Url they're talking about?
user1994804
My AJAX call has NO url that I know of
00:18
@webarto is that a joke? you know where i'm from right? haha:P
user1994804
Ive got more details
@reikyoushin I once asked a guy that lives in Miami... oh, the shame...
@YourAdrenalineFix another page is the URL.
user1994804
@webarto Do What?
user1994804
what "another page"?
@reikyoushin 1972 afaik :D
@YourAdrenalineFix I don't know, I've quoted your words.
if you're using AJAX it must point to URL (page)
user1994804
Stick with me @webarto ... Ive got a php script that...
user1994804
makes a simple AJAX request to another "file.php" on my server which file.php calculates a shipping cost
user1994804
and creates the html to display to the visitor
user1994804
00:23
That's it
user1994804
Even still using OLD school AJAX
user1994804
ie;
user1994804
if(window.XMLHttpRequest) {
xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
} else {
xmlhttp = new ActiveXObject('Microsoft.XMLHTTP');
}
user1994804
but nowhere in my code is anything I can relate to what is described inside the blue box here
user1994804
00:27
This is prolly stupid simple and Im way over complicating matters but I don't know how to apply developers.google.com/webmasters/ajax-crawling/docs/learn-more to the script that can be seen here classifieds.your-adrenaline-fix.com/…
user1994804
I don't "Get It"
I would say... ignore it...
user1994804
No no no...
There's no point to index shipping costs.
@AndreaFaulds I actually don't like by-value arrays.
Maybe it's my HPC roots coming in ^^
But I am definitely open to investigating immutable arrays.
I may propose static return types just so people will stop considering <return_type> "function" <identifier> "(" <parameter_list> ")".
00:53
@LeviMorrison I thought you said you don't like by-value arrays?
@ircmaxell It's people like you and comments like that which throw back the world permanently. If you see an issue, create a ticket. That's open-source. Not ranting "piece of crap" to every project that has its issues, with people like you guys Wordpress and Prestashop and every PHP-based forum in the world would probably already been deleted because "it's crap". You will probably also bash Laravel, right ? But anyway, I'll remove the project tomorrow, but I'll be quoting you and write an article about this. Thanks for making open-source such an annoying, unconstructive, bad place. — Panique 6 mins ago
@ircmaxell I'm seeing a diagnose here.
@AndreaFaulds I actually really like this. I would never use the 2nd parameter personally, but those who want to can.
@AndreaFaulds Doesn't mean that they might or might not be a better fit for what PHP needs.
@AndreaFaulds The question now is whether to use ... or func_get_args for BC with < PHP 5.6 in my polyfill.
01:12
hey guys
so i have a bit of a pickle
cucumber?
hah
I need to generate a unique ID for an invoice/orders table, but it also needs to be readable and friendly
in case a customer ever has a problem, and needs to read it out over the phone or something
so a full guid isn't an option
do you think just generating a guid, and then substringing the first 8 characters would be a good alternative, and still provide enough uniqueness?
[SZJI-7919]: Ticket Subject
@JoshBjelovuk Why not just do both? Use the guid and also create an invoice number unique to the client. 123-987 would be invoice 987 for customer 123
@JoshBjelovuk Mr. WhiteWolf, it's relative, but should.
01:16
whitewolf, haha! nice
Yes, that's what Bjelovuk means :)
yugoslavia ftw
yup =)
so @cspray, you suggest i use the full guid for the pk, and only provide the first 8 characters to the customer for their invoice id?
if it's not a secret you could just do {client-id}-{invoice_id}
plethora of options here
@JoshBjelovuk I'm saying don't necessarily try to make the PK you associate in the backend what you show the customer :)
@TheodoreBrown It satisfies both use-cases :)
01:21
I don't know all your reasonings for needing a guid
well, i just need an ID that is ensured to be unique
@cspray Access the invoice by link without auth?
@LeviMorrison By-value (copy-on-write) arrays are great. They have the safety of immutable arrays (no accidental spooky action at a distance), but the performance of mutable arrays. Sadly, objects can't be copy-on-write. :(
But from the surface it seems like {client-id}-{invoice-id} would provide plenty of uniqueness. Even with invoice-id just being an autoincremented number
hmm {client-id}-{invoid-id} sounds like a good way to do it
01:22
Yeah, no need to make things complicated.
client ID is currently a guid itself though lol
Why?
@AndreaFaulds "safety of immutable arrays" <- I don't buy this.
@LeviMorrison Huh?
I'm using a pre-existing framework for user account management and registration
01:24
I work with "unsafe mutable arrays" all the time, and the code is generally easier to write and faster.
Yes, but they're dangerous.
For some definition of dangerous.
In this context, how are they dangerous?
Anyway, you've given me plenty of good ideas, I'll figure it out from here, thanks!
@JoshBjelovuk Then I would probably try to get the opinions of somebody more familiar with that framework
No problem
1) You make a by-ref list, 2) You pass that list to some function, 3) You modify that list... oops!
01:26
Will do, cheers. =)
@AndreaFaulds ... that's not dangerous lol
That's the same semantics as objects, and I don't see anyone complaining ^^
@LeviMorrison Yes it is. It's too easy to do accidentally.
Eh... I think you care too much about the stupidity of programmers.
^^
You also don't have all those nice benefits of immutable or by-value arrays where you can avoid needing to do deep copies
Example?
Also, recent versions of minecraft took a huge performance hit when switching parts to immutable objects.
Of course, Java does GC whereas we mostly do ref-counting.
01:30
$new_game_state = $old_game_state; $new_game_state['player']->x = 7; /* touch some more of new state */ var_dump($old_game_state, $new_game_state); // old game state untouched
It's not apples to apples, but relevant.
@AndreaFaulds I don't see the issue here. Maybe reformatting would help?
@LeviMorrison You can't do this with mutable arrays.
You have to do a deep copy.
Okay, I have a LOT of complaints about that.
Firstly, anyone modeling game state as a multi-dimensional PHP array is asking for trouble.
user895378
lol
user895378
Depends on the game, I suppose.
01:32
Secondly, even if that's what you want you can just do a deep copy. We can easily provide a function for that.
@LeviMorrison Deep copies are not performant nor efficient with memory use
Third, I genuinely think making copies explicit is better than making references explicit.
Making copies transparent hurts performance and benefits, well, nobody.
Doing it your way is transparent copy...
Yes, you are "copying" it.
But internally, it's copy-on-write, so it's performant.
01:34
No.
Copy on write is not the same as not doing a copy at all.
Anyway, this is not necessarily what I care about.
It acts the same.
Propose an immutable Vector class and actually use it for several tasks.
Then rework the API, and re-examine where it stands.
MfG = Mit freundlichen Grüßen? @Gordon :-)
Then we can compare and choose between the two approaches.
Or, possibly, provide both.
Both mutable and immutable are imperfect, copy-on-write would be best.
01:37
Yeah, I don't see how you think that. Copy on write is the worst in my book.
@LeviMorrison Why is it the worst?
Because it takes away control from the programmer.
Does it? It's not much different from immutable objects, except it's more convenient to use.
Also, think of this:
Given a reference type, you could make a value type through controls and abstraction.
Er, sort-of. It'd be inefficient, you'd have to wrap it.
01:39
You cannot do the reverse without more language tools, such as & which is an abomination.
Not at all
Given a copy-on-write type, you can make a reference type with &.
That's exactly my point.
& needs to die.
Agreed.
@LeviMorrison Idea: add some sort of reference/pointer class.
Say it's called Pointer and, say it's generic Pointer<ImmutableVector>
It could pass through all properties and methods.
I'd probably call it Box<T> but yeah ^^
Or something like that
01:41
But again, that's more help from the language.
But you could do $a = new Pointer(5); $a = 7; and it's no longer a pointer
We should just quit and use another language /cc @rdlowrey
@LeviMorrison Eh, this is easier than making a value type of a mutable...
user895378
@LeviMorrison pfffffffffft tell me about it.
user895378
I'm so far down the rabbit hole at this point I'd be throwing away years of work (the sad part).
01:43
@LeviMorrison You know, generics wouldn't be hard to add to PHP...
@AndreaFaulds Okay, RFC it ^^
user895378
PHP has me in a real vendor lock-in situation :)
@rdlowrey Let's choose one together. How about C++14?
Generics might be a good idea, I'm not sure. By the way
I think I'd like to make using the generic version optional
01:44
Yeah, I think they'd be good but it depends on the cost.
Same with type checking for scalars.
So for, say, List<T> { ... } you could also just get a plain List (it'd make T be TYPE_UNDECLARED/mixed essentially ^^)
@LeviMorrison I don't think it'd be that bad... though it'd be slower than normal checks, possibly
Probably.
Hey, can generics in other languages require the type to be some interface/subclass?
Yeah, usually.
Hey guysssssssssss
Where is the errors here? pastebin.com/2gwAMTpv I couldnt find it!
01:49
Oh, aha
Instead of making it always default to allowing mixed...
Have type parameter defaults! :D
btw @LeviMorrison I thought Rasmus was just objecting to the 'static' return type, rather than the whole caboodle.
He's saying Foo function foo() is equivalent to C's Foo foo().
That's what he wants.
@LeviMorrison No that was Stas?
Trust me, Rasmus agrees.
He's mentioned it before; let me see if I can find it.
Oh don't worry.
I just thought you'd possibly misread an email.
01:54
I don't understand that inconsistency.

   public Foo function bar() { }

looks perfectly sane to me. PHP's syntax was very heavily influenced by
C from day 1. In C you have:

   static int bar() { }
class Foo<Bar T = mixed> {} :D
Er, oops, bad example
class List<T = mixed> {} would allow either $x = new List(); or $x = new List<int>();
class Foo<Bar T = Bar> {} would allow $x = new Foo<SomeBarDerivative>(); or $x = new Foo(); or even $x = new Foo<Bar>();
So class Foo<Bar T = Bar> {} means that new Foo() is by default of Foo<Bar> type?
@LeviMorrison Yeah
The type parameters would work just like function parameters, except you can omit the <> if passing none.
This is, by the way, not what Hack does.
Yeah, but their types aren't present at runtime at all. It's all in the type checker.
Anything works at runtime.
Technically :P
I don't think they have optional params though
This is all just ideas, though. But hey, maybe it's a good one. Not my immediate priority, however.
02:07
@AndreaFaulds Hey, we should add Immutable Composite Types.
@LeviMorrison I'd thought of allowing immutable objects before
I think allowing copy-on-write objects might be handy, too.
The latter actually adds a feature.
The former's mainly a performance improvement.
Anyhow, need to sleep. Night!
Good night.
I guess I am a bad person
@ircmaxell It's people like you and comments like that which throw back the world permanently. If you see an issue, create a ticket. That's open-source. Not ranting "piece of crap" to every project that has its issues, with people like you guys Wordpress and Prestashop and every PHP-based forum in the world would probably already been deleted because "it's crap". You will probably also bash Laravel, right ? But anyway, I'll remove the project tomorrow, but I'll be quoting you and write an article about this. Thanks for making open-source such an annoying, unconstructive, bad place. — Panique 1 hour ago
As I already told you :P
Sigh
I will write a response later
02:19
@Panique uhm... you are overreacting to criticism on the Internet. I recommend relaxing, perhaps by looking at a batch of cute kitten photos. — Levi Morrison 2 mins ago
Saw that
 
1 hour later…
@Panique first off, please don't over-react. This got off on the wrong foot and got out of hand. But please realize that open source isn't about "never having to accept criticism". Not everyone who has valid criticism needs to "create tickets" for OSS to work. I have enough experience in it to know that much. You don't find my criticism valid? Fine. No problem. But at least try to at least understand where I am coming from, and the points that I raise before you write me off as someone who "throws back the world permanently". — ircmaxell 5 secs ago
hopefully that will de-escalate the situation
03:44
@ircmaxell By the way, I have dumped Stas' emails to /dev/null; would appreciate it if you would tell me if he says anything worthwhile.
@ircmaxell answer deleted problem solved :D
04:11
Slow night.
04:23
hi guys
anyone can spot what I'm doing wrong here?
It's not inserting :/
05:23
morning
morning
Hello @theGreenCabbage
Working on developing a JSON api for some of my database stuff. Looking to add pagination and indexing on the return JSON data. Anyone have any insight to how this can be done?
@theGreenCabbage, What do you know about bandwidth?
@HendryTanaka nothing
geez...
I want to know how bandwidth work in hosting
05:29
Oh I thought it was in the context of my question
Are you trying to determine how much bandwidth you need to use?
No, I'm trying to create a synchronous website that will always update a table periodically every second to check some value(quiz website for my college project). I don't know how much I'll need. I've got 1GB for free, is it enough for a month?
I'm using WebSocket
 
2 hours later…
Wow, indexing and pagination was much easier than I thought
A simple where >= and LIMIT
Any simple way to filter SQL results by its datetime such as "within X months from today's date?
We know DateTime is an object...
I can think of some hacky way to do it, but I'm sure there's a function that can do it
07:42
posted on November 05, 2014 by kbironneau

/* by Pistoledev */

hi all!
Hi everyone.
just a question :
I use a php function (with pdo) which is called "getAllItems" (for example)
the function is a simple "SELECT * FROM myTable",
is it a good practice to return the "executed pdo statement" or should i put the results (foreach) into a php array i will return?
@user3002233 hi
by "executed pdo statement" i mean something like :
if($query->execute()){
    return $query;
}else{
    return false;
}
execute() will not return the results and $query will not contain them
for that you need fetch() of fetchAll()
07:58
:19793292 well, i will do a foreach on the result of my function...
this will look like :
$data = getAllItems($db);
if($data!=false){
    foreach($data as $d){
        //do some stuff
    }
}

is it correct this way?
why not use instead:
Morning @JoeWatkins
if($query->execute()){
    return $query->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
}
return [];
also, please try to avoid using == and != and instead use === and !== respectively
@tereško result of ->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC); is a php array with columns names too or not?
why? != !== !==?
08:00
try and see ... or read the manual
'0e1414' == 0 will return true, while '0e1414' === 0 will give you false
=== and !== will also compare the types , instead of attempting to cast the values
ok
but,
string 0 !== int 0 then...
'0'
wat
someone, explain this to him/her
I need to get on the buss and go to work
thx, cya
08:10
@tereško Could u tell me, what is your Twitter @username?
good meurning :)
@Naruto hi
So, anyone could tell me why it's better to use "===" instead of "==" or "!==" instead of "!=" ?
@Julo0sS read manual please?
good morning
okay, so "0"===0 returns false then... and true with ==
thx
08:15
@Julo0sS Hey, read the manual.
@Julo0sS php.net
@SergeyTelshevsky o/ ,lol you had the same link as me :P
@SergeyTelshevsky these examples are ok, no need for manual after this ;) the main difference is in the type comparison, this is all i need to know
@SergeyTelshevsky thx
@Julo0sS Ok. anyway. this is what you should read: php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php
08:33
is this code correct? :
function getvalue($db,$id){
		$query = $db->prepare("SELECT value FROM table WHERE id = :id LIMIT 1");
		if($query->execute([":id"=>$id])){
			if($query->rowCount()>0){
				$e = $query->fetchColumn();
				return $e;
			}else{
				return false;
			}
		}else{
			return false;
		}
	}
@Julo0sS exactly === is same as == but with strict typing
any "better way" to do this?
@Julo0sS Yes
@SecondRikudo hi Riku :D
function getValue($db, $id) {
    $query = $db->prepare("SELECT value FROM table WHERE id = :id LIMIT 1");
    $query->execute([":id" => $id]);
    return $query->fetchColumn();
}
fetchColumn return false if it fails anyway.
08:40
@SecondRikudo well, what if ->execute fails?
@Julo0sS Throws an exception.
and stops my php...
Which should be handled on a higher level.
@Julo0sS Not if you catch it...
If anyone could offer some expert advice on OpenCart admin isLogged() verification in here stackoverflow.com/questions/26752736/…, I would offer back rubs
@SecondRikudo so you mean that my function code should be surrounded by a try/catch?
08:41
@Julo0sS Not necessarily.
You should catch exceptions at the point you know what to do with them.
Also not to mention that the only reasons that can cause execute to fail in this instance you probably want to kill your application.
syntax errors, database connection problems, etc.
@SecondRikudo well, i have somewhere a function which writes something in a log. if i have an error somewhere, i write it there, BUT the application should not stop running
@Julo0sS So don't stop it.
Log the error and keep going.
Personally, I think that every exception should stop you app.
Exceptions should never happen
And if they do happen, you need to fix that right away.
@FlorianMargaine In practice too.
in php, exceptions are used for flow control
08:45
@FlorianMargaine If you use exceptions for flow control, you might as well use goto
That's basically what it is, isn't it?
if ($crap) {
    throw new CrapException();
}
else {
    throw new OtherException();
}
not really
:19793794 so,
try{
    //your code
}catch(PDOException $e){
    //handle
}
if ($crap) {
    goto crap;
}
else {
    goto other;
}
@Julo0sS Yes.
Exceptions should never happen, and they are not a replacement for proper control structures.
08:47
if ($crap) {
    return 'crap';
}
else {
    return 'other';
}
That's not what Exceptions are and you shouldn't bastardize them to be such.
damn! return is like goto too
(i.e. your argument sucks)
@FlorianMargaine Not really.
With a try/catch for control, you basically jump to a different location on purpose
Less goto and more gofrom, if you will.
with throw, it's a gofrom
Is there an equivalent of something like WHERE datetime.month is under three months ago from today
in SQL
(above is pseudo-code)
09:03
where date > date - date of three months ago
ThW
ThW
Morning
Morning all
Need some advice if anyone can offer it, looking at creating script to create files automatically based on filename, i'm so close but feel so far: stackoverflow.com/questions/26588225/…
09:33
posted on November 05, 2014 by kbironneau

/* by PCz */

2
> Those who religiously support OOP don't have any facts to justify their support, as we see here in these comments as well. They are trained (or brain washed) in universities to use and praise OOP and OOP only and that is why they support it so blindly. Source: An Idiot
how do I unshelve changes that were shelved in Phpstorm?
Morning
0
A: Curl with multi threading

Joe WatkinscURL Multi does not make parallel requests, it makes asynchronous requests. The documentation was wrong until 5 minutes ago, it will take some time for the corrected documentation to be deployed and translated. Asynchronous I/O (using something like the cURL Multi API) is the simplest thing to ...

moin @PeeHaa @ThW @Jimbo mmmmmm-ulti-ping ....
lol
moin moin
09:40
Morning
@Jimbo Didn't read the entire post, but I kinda agree that the OOP bandwagon is useless
As in it is not a silverbullet
No but that's not what he's saying
He's saying it's utterly useless
Imagine enterprise-level code in procedural
What an ass cactus
@Jimbo ow. In that case he indeed is an idiot
:)
@Jimbo he has probably never actually worked on anything even slightly close to "enterprise level"
ThW
ThW
@JoeWatkins moin
09:52
@tereško Exactly. I would have been find with him bringing at least some 'on the other hand' points - most things have both sides to it. Not putting any positives there just shows a complete lack of knowledge, and clearly being an asshole about it too

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