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17:00
@DaveRandom You need to read this:
It's not funny any more. I beg you to read it, before it's too late :/
1 hour ago, by DaveRandom
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh what's that? I'll just click on this link that goes to a totally legit meta question and offer up my opinion on the ma... god damn it.
@DaveRandom E_NOT_VERY_GLAD_TO_SEE_HEAR_ME :(
2
:-D
What the shit was that guy's problem?
user895378
17:01
I was victimized both by @BenjaminGruenbaum and @AndreaFaulds on that front today.
user895378
Well-played, both of you. I'm both surprised and infuriated every time and I never get wise to the game.
@rdlowrey But Facebook have withdrawn Hack, I wasn't joking: goo.gl/1TzFEl
user895378
Not doing it.
There is no way I am click on that link
user895378
I am not click on all.
17:02
You've not even tried to disguise it
Not again ...
我不是click (wo3 bu4 shi4 click - I am not click)
May 2 at 9:45, by Second Rikudo
cv-pls: Docs, Backlog | Tools: Explain, phpdbg, http://devdocs.io/ | Addons: [cv-pls], PHP Manual Linkifier | Snippets: ext/mysql | Reference: QAs
^ this was my favourite
Confession: I just wrote a SELECT without an ORDER
@DaveRandom That's amazing
17:05
@PeeHaa Burn the heretic!
posted on November 14, 2014 by kbironneau

/* by Nader Paul Nader */

I don't get it
The Friday afternoon ones are always shit
It gets better!! I am generating unique codes like:
$stmt = $dbConnection->prepare('INSERT INTO codes (code) VALUES (:code)');

for ($i = 0; $i < 5000; $i++) {
    try {
        $stmt->execute(array(
            'code' = generateRandomString(),
        ));
    } catch (Exception $e) {
        //
    }
}
What could possibly go wrong?
@DaveRandom What do you think of this? github.com/TazeTSchnitzel/…
I got fooled by @AndreaFaulds too, it wasn't even hidden :/
17:07
Fixed link
@AndreaFaulds That's a bit more like it. You should commit that to master immediately.
@PeeHaa Maybe you should... not do that?
@DaveRandom It's ok I've made a if suddenly no new codes are being generated it's because if that piece of code. No worries man. Live life on the edge!
@PeeHaa Yeh, that comment will totally satisfy future self and not make him want to go punch past self in the head
Who cares about the future anyway? Goddamn hippy
17:14
@AndreaFaulds I'll be honest, I'm -1 on having two sets of functions that do the same thing but for the error reporting mechanism...
Esp. since I could just write a wrapper if I don't like the chosen mechanism
I would personally choose exceptions, btw
@AndreaFaulds I'm honestly not sure why you don't just add a $flags arg to the exsting *val() functions. That would avoid creating a new set of functions (will break someone's code somewhere) and would allow you to choose the desired failure behaviour at call time
@DaveRandom that'd be really inconvenient
The whole thing is really inconvenient
The whole point of this is to make safe casting as convenient as unsafe casting
I'm just worried that it makes casting in general less convenient.
@DaveRandom There are two different use cases, which need two different error mechanisms.
@DaveRandom How so?
17:24
I have to remember which of the 3 functions I need for a given scenario
@AndreaFaulds I just don't see how the NULL error case is particularly useful. This is what exceptions are for
@DaveRandom But not for validation
@DaveRandom Input validation
That should be in ext/filter then
It's also, well, more performant.
@AndreaFaulds did you scrap the two separate methods for validation and casting?
If they are separate, a bool for validation and an exception for casting makes sense imo
17:27
@Patrick I don't like that approach much, it's doing the same work twice.
Good lord I've written some terrible code in answers on SO :-(
@AndreaFaulds I'm sorry but perf is inconsequential here. This is not something that you'll be doing thousands of times in an application, and it's only more performant if there's an error.
>This is not something that you'll be doing thousands of times in an application.
False.
Conversion and/or validation is routine and necessary when handling user input
that doesn't mean you do it thousands of times on every execution though does it ?
^ that
@PeeHaa how do you have equality sign inside an array
17:30
@JoeWatkins If you have a lot of user data, you might well do.
I'm afraid I just can't get behind having 3 sets of type conversion/checking funcs
thousands ?
Even ignoring performance... you shouldn't use exceptions for flow-control.
Using them to handle the error case is what they are for...
well no, but if you don't have valid input that is exceptional, in what way can you expect a program to run to completion without valid input ?
17:32
@DaveRandom Error values and exceptions both have their place. It really depends on the situation.
@JoeWatkins If you're validating input, exceptions aren't ideal...
@AndreaFaulds rethinking it, two methods don't make sense. You could just validate and then use (int)... Does this really have to be separate from the filter thing we already have?
you're going to end up with a different set of boilerplate, which is what you are trying to avoid, if you still have to check return values
@Patrick Again, you're doing the same work twice.
@AndreaFaulds True, but if there are things that are there specifically for validation, why are they not in ext/filter?
That's what they actually are...
@JoeWatkins It's smaller and simpler boilerplate that avoids my eyes darting around the place when reading the code.
17:33
we already have a huge framework for this
that's not very good reasoning, the aim to eliminate boilerplate is worth pursuing, the aim to swap for a different set of boilerplate which is easier on your eyes is not ...
@AndreaFaulds It's two different things. Validating it (could also validate more than if it's safe to cast) and then I cast it. I don't really care if it is being done twice in the backend
if (($value = to_int($x)) !== NULL && $value > 0 && $value < $foo) { ... } else { die("blah");
try { $value = to_int($x); } catch (Exception $e) { die("blah"); } if ($value < 0 || $value >= $foo) { die("blah"); } ...
why is the if after try {}
$value might be nonsense, the engine will cast it ...
@JoeWatkins Huh?
17:36
you have avoided nothing ..
@AndreaFaulds if (filter_var($value, \FILTER_VALIDATE_INT, $options) === false) { return' } $this->setFoo((int) $value);
if (($value = to_int($x)) !== NULL && $value > 0 && $value < $foo) { ... } else { die("blah");
this looks equally horrible to the kind of code you would write now
I just don't get why you wouldn't extend FILTER_VALIDATE_INT. That can even already handle ranges and everything
Apparently there isn't an approach I can take that won't upset somebody.
function ten($value) {
    $value = to_int($value);

    if ($value < 0 || $value > 9) {
        throw new InvalidArgumentException
            ("value is foobar");
    }

    return $value * 10;
}

try {
    $value =
        ten($_GET["whatever"]);

    call_something_else_knowing_we_have_int($value);
} catch (InvalidArgumentException $invalid) {
    echo "deal with invalid argument\n";
} catch (CastException $cast) {
    echo "deal with invalid input\n";
}
17:41
@AndreaFaulds The other question would then be, do we really need this?
this on the other hand looks perfectly reasonable to me ...
and is free of boilerplate ...
@JoeWatkins Your code is shorter and simpler if you use the === NULL approach, but don't let that stop you.
@AndreaFaulds True, but based on the discussions I've seen so far it seems that exceptions-only would be the least upsetting.
@Patrick If we're to discourage people from using (int), yes.
function ten($value) {
    $value = to_int($value);

    if ($value == null || $value < 0 || $value > 9) {
        throw new InvalidArgumentException
            ("value is foobar");
    }

    return $value * 10;
}

try {
    $value =
        ten($_GET["whatever"]);

    call_something_else_knowing_we_have_int($value);
} catch (InvalidArgumentException $invalid) {
    echo "deal with invalid argument\n";
}
that's longer ...
17:43
I really need to go, sorry
@AndreaFaulds what's wrong with (int) if validation happens first?
@ziGi lol no idea what happened there
lata @AndreaFaulds
who here's good with linux commands?
@webarto is. He does all the things
17:50
@webarto report in
Can some one help me build this array pastie.org/9719454 I have messed it up
if ($isr) {
$booking_id = '';
while ( $isv = mysql_fetch_assoc ( $isr ) ) {
$result ['id'] = $isv ['id'];
if ($isv ['hdr_import_index'] != $sav_import_index) {
if ($booking_id != '') {
This blows up at the while because a mysql_query() further down invalidates $isr. Any ideas why this would happen?
@AndreaFaulds About anything in particular?
18:05
@NikiC to_int and try_int
@Patrick The if. If you're lazy, and a lot of programmers are either lazy or don't know any better, you won't do validation. And if you don't do validation, your clearly garbage data is turned into data which isn't obviously garbage.
Basically: PHP makes doing the right thing too inconvenient and the wrong thing too easy
Let's make the right thing be easy, so people will be more likely to do the right thing
@StephenWolfe, your example array is incorrect, that third array there isn't contained in anything.
@DaveRandom What if you want to validate with the same rules casting uses? Would be weird if it was in a different library entirely
Also, it's traditional in PHP to allow both OOP and procedural approaches to things
to_int is the OOP approach. try_int is the procedural approach.
18:20
@AndreaFaulds I think having both is the way to go as it satisfies both camps. I still think that the 'can this be cast to X type' function is slightly preferable to a function that returns null if it isn't castable, but I could easily be wrong there as I can't think of an actual specific reason.
This seems bogus though:
// should pass
var_dump(to_int_wrapper(0.0));
// shouldn't pass
+var_dump(to_int_wrapper("10.0"));
@PeeHaa So you're the bot I've heard so much about.
@PeeHaa /make pancakes.
0011101001110000
@DanLugg You forgot the sudo
I only use sudo if it doesn't work the first time.
@PeeHaa Those don't look like pancakes.
EXT4-fs error (device sda3): ext4_mb_generate_buddy:756: group 2947, 29365 clusters in bitmap, 29809 in gd; block bitmap corrupt.
Jun 03 19:30:01 Dell15z kernel: JBD2: Spotted dirty metadata buffer (dev = sda3, blocknr = 0). There's a risk of filesystem corruption in case of system crash.
Jun 03 19:30:01 Dell15z kernel: EXT4-fs error (device sda3): ext4_mb_generate_buddy:756: group 2944, 23842 clusters in bitmap, 23846 in gd; block bitmap corrupt.
Jun 03 19:30:02 Dell15z kernel: JBD2: Spotted dirty metadata buffer (dev = sda3, blocknr = 0). There's a risk of filesystem corruption in case of
bleep bleep
$
18:30
ext4_mb_generate_---buddy---_pancakes Fucking markdown.
Fucking markdown.
18:43
too much arguing in the js room about regex
gaaahh
in mysql what does the number in () mean when we say create table id int(11)
@aWebDeveloper Can you make a guess?
is 11 the length of id or bytes
@aWebDeveloper It is, hilariously, the maximum string length of the number.
bytes would mean max length of > 11
18:46
In other words, it's useless and don't use it.
@Jimbo o.O
I am very interested.
146
A: What is the size of column of int(11) in mysql in bytes?

maclemaAn INT will always be 4 bytes no matter what length is specified. TINYINT = 1 byte SMALLINT = 2 bytes MEDIUMINT = 3 bytes INT = 4 bytes BIGINT = 8 bytes. The length just specifies how many characters to display when selecting data with the mysql command line client.

A bike I don't need to chain to a bike rack for a chance to get stolen?
I wonder if my wife will let me get one.
I know she'd be cool with a bike; I just don't know how she'd feel about this one.
@Danack ?
@Danack Returning NULL avoids doing the same work twice. I mean, to validate, you need to basically convert it anyway. So it makes more sense to just convert/validate at once.
18:50
@AndreaFaulds That's from your link - 0.0 is apparently parseable as an int, but 10.0 isn't?
@AndreaFaulds I know......as I said I can't actually articulate a reason why I prefer the other way.
is it same for varchar n others too
@aWebDeveloper No - varchar size is the max number of bytes that can be stored...which is also interesting given that utf-8 take a variable number of bytes per char. I may be wrong here as well
@Danack "0.0" isn't a valid int, 0.0 is because 0.0 results in float(0) which is accepted
So this only applies to int,tinyint etc
or decimal(1,1)
18:52
@Danack Well, if(foo) is nicer than if(foo!==NULL) ;)
@AndreaFaulds So why isn't float(10.0) accepted?
BTW do stored procedures in mysql help with speed
It's just as inty as 0.0
like PDO?
@221B Just to be clear - I think I was wrong when I said "varchar size is the max number of bytes"
18:55
@Danack There's no such float. 10.0 is the canonical representation of float(10), and that is accepted. "10.0" isn't
mysql procedured dont know if pdo one is same
looks pdo is prepared stmt n mysql is stored procedures
regardless, you should use PDO
in my opinion
18:57
yes i do thanks all
PDO and MySQLi both have their strengths. That's the official line from me - in truth, I've only ever used PDO ^^
@aWebDeveloper Not usually. Stored procedures used to be the way to get great optimization... twenty years ago. The query optimizers in most modern databases, with the assistance of EXPLAIN, should be all you need now.
please
@AndreaFaulds I can see what you mean, but you've got to express that better to convince others..... The intuitive come back would be that "10.0 results in float(10) which should be accepted"....Yes, I know that it's not actually like that, but I still am going to be surprised when it happens.
18:58
@Charles thanks
Ive never found too many issues with either but i prefer the flow and security or PDO
@Danack Actually, the RFC has a fairly succint explanation for this one:
just use decimal
>The functions keep to the principle of zero data-loss, i.e. where X is the type of $A and Y is the type being converted to, to_Y($A) !== NULL IFF (X)(Y)$A === $A.
@221B PDO doesn't offer security guns don't kill people
18:59
lol
ture
(string)(int)"10.0" !== "10.0"
prepared sql
(string)(int)"10" === "10"
My suspicion that calcifer on r/php is not that skilled has been confirmed: reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/2m85jr/…
$a = to_int($a);

if ($a !== null) {
    // do something
    $b = to_float($b);

    if ($b !== null) {
        // do another thing

        $c = $to_string($c);

        if ($c !== null) {
            // ... and so on
        }
    }
}
^ Yeah right buddy.
19:01
Oh god, that.
$a = to_int($a);
$b = to_float($b);
$c = to_string($c);
if ($a === null || $b === null || $c === null) {
    // error somehow
}
You can even combine it into a single if statement, though it's a wee bit ugly.
Oh... oh god. I just had a horrible idea.
I probably wouldn't combine it; I wanted to use real-life structure.
if (isset($a = to_int($a), $b = to_float($b), $c = to_string($c))) { // Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn
Make are_null(...$args): bool
^^
19:03
@LeviMorrison Or extend the existing is_null for multiple params ^^
Perhaps.
That'd be super-simple to code and really handy. And I can't see anyone objecting to it.
@LeviMorrison A lot of people who commute in the UK use a moulton folding bike - pretty sure there's better priced ones out there.
I generally think that anything that is feasibly done in user-land should be done in user-land.
19:05
Hi
I can't find webapps chat
can you imagine if youtube had live chat like this rather than comments /in addition to comments
evil would further be birthed
@Danack ... that won't fit in a backpack though ^^
How can I send an email notification to a user upon a new db insert?
@LeviMorrison I believe PHP shouldn't make things unnecessarily difficult for userland
@Yitzy By sending an email to them after performing the DB insert.
19:09
There's no good reason for is_null not to allow multiple params
But then we shouldn't have stuff only narrowly useful
@Charles I see you understand my question, good job.
@AndreaFaulds Our viewpoints are not necessarily at odds ^^
@LeviMorrison :)
@Yitzy I provided an answer that properly reflects the information given. :) Can you tell us more about what exactly you're trying to do?
If it's widely used, simple and everyone keep having to mplement it in userland, then it should be in core
19:11
In such a fragmented and uncontrolled environment like PHP-land I don't have much hope for widely used community libraries.
If it's only useful to a small segment of people, and there's no reason it can't be done in userland, it should be in userland
I doubt we'll ever have something like C++'s boost.
@Charles I coded an advice feed with threaded commenting. I'd like to send an email to users when a new post or comment is made (inserted into the db)
anyway, busy watching teh animus. bbl.
@Yitzy Add a table that tracks (subscribed thing, user id). After adding a comment to a thing, grab all the user ids that are subscribed to the thing and email them. Tada.
19:16
@Charles Thanks, so you suggest I add two additional fields: subscribed (yes/no), and user id?
how exactly would I send the emails to the users subscribed?
@Yitzy No, don't add new fields to the existing table. Use a new table with just the subscribed thing and the user id.
See also: database normalization
Suck him dry @Yitzy
@Yitzy The best way to send mail in PHP is using Swiftmailer. The second best is PHPMailer. Pretend that there are no other options. Do not use mail().
@Charles Alright, I appreciate your help.
ok
Ohai!
I kinda forgot to open this tab lately :|
19:19
I think I finally have a name for my Collections library! Let me do some searching to make sure it's not taken before I celebrate too much though.
@Ocramius y helo thar
@Ocramius yo dawg
@LeviMorrison I'd be interested to grab all your brains for doctrine/collections on that <_<
You… you'd grab all my brains?
o.o
In a figurative way
no panic
19:20
lol
What did you mean anyway?
I'm wondering about killing the horrible Doctrine\Common\Collections\Collection somehow :|
Oh yeah mate I'd love to help you.
However I have see the code before.
At best you'd be implementing my interface, I think.
Well, right now we have just this arrayaccess thing, heh
and we can't add ANY API to it because of BC
nor remove it, ofc
Doctrine\Common\Collections\Collection has a lot more than ArrayAccess.
what's bad about Doctrine\Collection?
19:23
it has, yeah
@nikita2206 too bloated, yet too small for all the use-cases
not sure about how to approach the problem yet
Yeah, that's a good way of describing it, Ocramius.
should it have more functionality or otherwise?
It should be less restrictive. It's way too specific to be of much use.
19:24
@nikita2206 the main use-case to solve is filtering subset
and that is not even included in that interface :P
oh
and count()
but aaaaanyway, as said, I'll pick @LeviMorrison's brain once I haz time
For instance, add($element)? How on earth is a Map supposed to implement an arbitrary add by value? It doesn't even make sense.
@Ocramius You should totally ask the fig guys for help on designing an interface
@Danack AHAHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAH no.
@LeviMorrison well, it's not a collection nor a map :|
right now it's a mix of both, and none of either
19:26
That's my point. It's a monster.
I just wasn't so blunt before ^^
yes it is
and it's probably the most used API on GH
it's just php array :)
Which is why... we need the NPL! (Non-standard PHP Library)
Yep
That would be a great name :D
I think problem is in the arrays as well, would be cool to have normal data types like they have
maps, ordered maps, sets and stuff
19:27
I thought of it because last night I was playing around with C++11 features and std::align wasn't implemented.
I'm thinking of just going forward and writing it in HH, tbh
the next version, that is...
I was like... what do I even call this? I'm implementing std::align... but it should be there already so...
How about nonstd::align? hahaha
polyfill::align ?
I was actually thinking of writing a framework called __destruct
I know how Sebastian would call it
19:28
lol
produces output on garbage collection...
Well, @Ocramius, I've done a lot of work on Collection-like libraries at this point.
If anyone can help, perhaps I could.
That's why your brain is a good candidate for extraction
:)
is it still Ardent?
Uh... well...
I mean...
But I have another totally separate library called SPL-Collections... which doesn't use the name SPL in it anywhere either ^^
It's this second library that shows real promise to me.
If you come up with decently stable interfaces, I'd love to implement those instead
right now I'm looking at PINQ as a way to escape from this mess
19:36
...if PINQ is cleaning up a mess I feel really bad for you.
Well, it's at least providing a decent DSL for filtering collections lazily
the problem I have is that a collection may be backed by different data sources, yet filtering has to be unified somehow
user924016
Happy friday =]
Happy friday @RonniSkansing!
@Ocramius Do you have any time to talk about this kind of thing today?
Like, serious talk.
Probably do some coding.
@LeviMorrison teaching class in few mins, so likely not in the next 3 hrs
19:41
I'm going to go snag some lunch; be right back.
I can ping you tho
Serious talk isn't allowed on Friday.
@salathe we're gonna deploy the shit out of Friday.
@LeviMorrison Awesome
19:52
OK, I merged the to_int/try_int patch into mainline safe_casts branch.
@TheodoreBrown

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