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00:05
@LeviMorrison It broke some things, not sure why
FUCK, Friday passed and no Blackroll, is the Room 11 spirit dead? :'(
@LeviMorrison and by "things" I mean a few tests
@AndreaFaulds Blackroll?
@Sherif Rebecca Black's Friday
not too late in USA
@AndreaFaulds Who's Rebecca
00:09
@Sherif ...
@AndreaFaulds luckily there is staturday, too.
@FlorianMargaine I'm honestly not sure what to make of that.
Guys, let's make Saturday into Caturday. Let's catroll people.
you wanted to know who's Rebecca.
anyway, it's 1am here, good night
00:11
@FlorianMargaine night :)
So Rebecca is the girl in the song?
Actually, I think I'll just let those be one of those weird internet memes that I don't get...
Sometimes not trying to understand the Internet saves brain cells.
@Sherif Yep
00:39
Fairly sure I am just using these cheesy doritos as spoons to shovel salsa in to my mouth.
Mexicans did a great job of making plates and food a single thing.
Tacos, wraps, nachos...
urgs have to cool down the meal....
@LeviMorrison Why the typedef of ZEND_RESULT_CODE? Why not just rename it? AFAIK it's not used anywhere...
00:53
Wow new chrome lets you slow down and pause animations in the dev tools \o/
A humorous and action-packed story about a class of misfits who are trying to kill their new teacher – an alien octopus with bizarre powers and super strength! The teacher has just destroyed the moon and is threatening to destroy the earth – unless his students can destroy him first. What makes things more complicated is that he's the best teacher they've ever had!
That's quite a plot.
:-P
why am I expecting it to be japanese porn
01:10
lol!. Well it was an anime plot tbf. So half right.
01:30
guys if I have table like this (id, start, end) -> with sample data (1, 22, 28), (2, 26, 30) and after specifying some partition amount like 2, I want to return following rows (1, 22), (1, 24), (1, 26), (2, 26) <---- how to accomplish this in mysql?
YESSSS
I FINALLY FIGURED OUT WHY I BROKE IT
:D
fuck references, mang, fuck them, fuck them so hard, they even cause pain on the internals side, kill them with fire, please...
@AndreaFaulds I've been arguing that for years, but I doubt it will ever happen :/
@Sherif Yeah :(
I'd like typed boxes as an alternative
Well, something like this, I mean:
Like: $x = new Box([]);
Meh, in my opinion objects work way better than references.
01:43
Or maybe just new BoxedArray();
@Sherif exactly
Yea, just use an object. It's still a hashtable :)
No, because objects don't support numeric keys properly, the array functions don't work on them, and they are slower for integer keys
Also they don't convert properly to normal arrays
Why are you converting objects into arrays?
write an RFC that make array and object loosly typed in PHP :)
That hardly makes sense in practice.
01:52
wat
@Sherif for compatibility with things that need, er, arrays
@AndreaFaulds If you need an array, use an array. Doesn't make much sense to use an object that you intend to cast to an array.
@Sherif But you need to do something that requires references, and want to avoid references.
@AndreaFaulds $obj->array = []
@Sherif Which is what I suggested earlier.
@AndreaFaulds Well, to be clear, the purpose of the object is to dereference name from name value, which has nothing to do with the problem of needing an array over an object. They're separate issues.
The only real use case for choosing an array over an object in PHP, in my opinion, is when you want to assemble an ordered list of things, for which you don't actually care about key semantics. Otherwise, arrays and objects in PHP are identical.
02:00
Arrays and objects in PHP are not identical
otherwise identical
Objects are ordered string key => value pairs
Arrays are ordered integer or string key => value pairs
Yes, I fully understand the differences in how object keys are hashed vs. array keys :)
$obj->{0} = 'me object has integer key';
@hakre Yes, but the key is run through DJBX33A as a string rather than an integer.
That's what @AndreaFaulds is talking about.
Which has nothing to do with what I said, obviously.
Arrays just force cast your keys into int/string
02:02
hmm. R2D2.
Objects never cast the key. That's the only internal underlying difference. But OTHERWISE they are identical :)
@hakre DJBX33A is the hashing function used internally by the PHP engine to hash your key into an integer it can store for lookup in the hashtable.
CTR+F DJBX33A on that page if you're interested
ah, I first though some opcode or something.
but objects really do more when there is access to named fields: 3v4l.org/4dNFY
anyway I have to get some sleep
True, properties are mangled differently, which happens one step above the hashing level, but we are talking about public properties here in order to level the playing field since arrays can't have private members.
@Sherif >internal
The point is they are both implemented as ordered hashmaps so functionally they are designed under the same construct. Practically, they are intended for different, but similar, use cases.
02:09
More than internal.
Far more.
It affects behaviour in userland.
Sure, there are side effects to consider, but I think you're still missing the bigger picture and dwelling on the implementation details.
be kind to each other :)
and cu l8ters.
OK, more practical things...
An object doesn't have a length
An object can't be used with the array functions
I'm not suggesting that they are inter-operable (which I think is what you're trying to deduce). I'm merely suggesting you could use an object over an array in many cases (those cases where you WANT an ordered dictionary).
You can't push to an object
02:12
Well, it does. It just doesn't expose that property directly to userspace (for example count(get_object_vars($obj))). As for array functions (well duh, it's an object). And I said that already :)_
You're trying to prove me to me that they are interoperable. You can stop since never made such a claim.
I'm suggesting that they share similar use cases.
I'm saying that objects are too dissimilar from arrays to be useful
For which the object proves better in the subset of use cases which they share.
And they're not a good alternative to arrays
02:14
Right, that's exactly my point. You're arguing that they aren't an array alternative.
I'm not arguing that at all.
So what are you arguing?
I'm telling you that in the use case of an ordered dictionary, the object is better because of its abstraction from the variable (i.e. referency behavior).
Since, internally, they are both implemented as orderd maps.
;)
Order isn't terribly useful when you can't sort ^^
Or prepend, or insert at arbitrary positions
If what you want is a dictionary, it's unlikely you wish to sort it.
So, once again, you fail to recognize the use case at hand.
OK, but you can only append
What's the use-case for an ordered dictionary where you have no control over the order?
02:17
When the construction of the dictionary in order matters.
Consider the use case of assembling multi-dimensional resultsets from some SQL queries where you expect the result to be ordered according to the SQL's sort requirements.
You get the results back in a specific order and assemble the object in the same order.
At that point you do care about order if you're iterating over the resultset, but you dont' necessarily care to reconstruct the data as a list.
That makes me wonder if object key pairs are even guaranteed to be ordered.
Hmm.
Of course they are.
They have the same behavior as array_push internally.
In PHP, yes. In HHVM, apparently also, but that may just be for compatibility reasons
HHVM just copies PHP 99.999% of the time.
They even copy our bugs.
Mom sent a care package of fixin's to make garlic potato soup and sourdough bread. My center of gravity has changed dramatically.
02:33
Honestly, relying on objects to be ordered seems like a bad idea. They happen to be that way, but they aren't designed for, nor optimised for that use case, and there's only a very, very limited set of operations you have at your disposal.
Heck, using them as a dictionary doesn't sound like a terribly good idea.
@AndreaFaulds Not sure what you're basing that conclusion on, but they are implemented as ordered hashtables internally just the same as PHP arrays. Unless we decide to create a separate ht type for objects and one for arrays (which I see no evidence or justificatoin of in the near future), it's very safe to rely on the ht behavior.
Yes, I know they're zend_hash internally.
Making them cease to use the same implementation would make sense, actually.
You don't need numeric keys, so you can get rid of h and make your buckets smaller, and that's just for starters.
@AndreaFaulds Sure, but the casting of the key doesn't even happen at the ht level. Infact, it's a property of the array functions, not the construct.
@Sherif Not quite true.
It's very true.
Look at the code.
02:42
IIRC, don't objects go straight to the string path?
When the key is hashed it's passed to the hashing function directly, whereas in arrays, they are cast by array_push, first.
The cast is only ever enforced in array_push, btw.
Wait, which cast are you talking about?
The cast of the key, of course.
From what to what?
Array keys are always cast to either integer or string.
02:48
Huh
I swear that used to be done in zend_hash. _zend_handle_numeric_str is no longer used anywhere.
Huh, I guess I was wrong.
@AndreaFaulds I don't recall it ever being done in zend_hash for as long as I remember. However, you can find evidence that this isn't implemented directly in the API by just looking at the array functions. Take array_fill_keys, for example lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_5_6/ext/standard/array.c#1566 it's checking for IS_LONG directly. and then doing the cast.
I was somewhat aware of the casting, I've had to touch the indexing ([$x]) code myself
You see the same thing in $arr = array(); $arr[2.3] = 'foo'; // for example
Oh, but that's different. zend_hash doesn't accept floats.
I was referring to the handling of numeric string keys
Which are converted to integers
I thought zend_hash did that, I guess not.
It's not happening at the zend_hash level.
It happens one level before you call zend_hash
It's higher up in the API than zend_hash
02:54
Also, what were you on about with array_push?
By the way, I have a particular disdain for PHP's array key casting behaviour
$x[$y] should be, but isn't, the same as $x[(string)$y]
Also, we seem to use unsigned long integer keys internally yet expose signed longs to userland, causing some weird issues in edge cases
say i wanted to declare a static class as a property of another class. possible?
@r3wt a class be part of another class?
Not possible.
lame
@AndreaFaulds Look at the implementation of ` zend_do_add_array_element, the casting is not happening at the API level, i.e. nothing is enforcing that ht` have either numeric/string keys.
class A {
    public $foo = class {

    }
}
^ not possible
03:01
its possible but not with a static class
$this->unit = Unit;
class A {
    public $foo = "B";
}
class B {
}
call to undefined function Unit() in ....
Which is why it's possible for foreach to return non-scalar keys as a construct.
@r3wt What's the point?
maybe i'm tired of using ->
03:02
rite...
actually, i just want to have some static classes as a part of my app class
@Sherif Er... a zend_hash can't have non-scalar keys.
so i can be like $this->utils:format($number)
What's the point?
foreach can handle them (apparently?), but that has nothing to do with zend_hash.
@r3wt Ew.
03:02
The thing is global once you make it static
...
So again:
33 secs ago, by PeeHaa
What's the point?
@AndreaFaulds No, but my point is that the casting of the key is not being enforced by the API. It's being enforced in various places like array_functions, the foreach construct, at the engine level, etc...
I'm pretty sure $this->utils::format can work if $utils is a string containing a class name. It's not a good idea, though.
As always you consistently miss the point, but anyway, I'm bored this conversation now.
@Sherif Sure. Though zend_hash does enforce int or string keys only... in that it supports no other types.
static gets the b-52's stuck in my head
03:04
Testability and maintainability--
@Sherif I'm not sure why you're still arguing anyway, I conceded ages ago.
@AndreaFaulds Sure, but it doesn't enforce the cast. Which is what I said. Thanks for yet again missing the point :)
@Andrea Faulds, whats the alternative? if i instantiate the class, everytime i use it the properties get populated. hence the desire for a static class i can use then throw away
@Sherif I'm not missing the point - it doesn't enforce the cast, but... oh nevermind.
@r3wt what
O_o
03:05
@AndreaFaulds You're not missing the point, but you're missing the point? :)
@Sherif No. But nevermind.
The fact that you don't end up with a corrupted key is a result of the cast happening outside of the API context.
Which is why casting objects to arrays can cause corruption.
Get it now?
What is a "corrupted key"?
A key that doesn't hash the same way.
An numeric key that is a string?
03:07
For example "2" is not going to hash the same as int(2).
Yes.
Right, I understand that... but that's a matter of casting, not hashing. ;)
It's a matter of casting BEFORE you hash.
@r3wt There is no reason to do whatever it is you are trying to do :)
What you pass to the hash function matters.
I mean, even if it did hash the same, it's meaningless. It's whether or not they match as keys, and they don't (to zend_hash anyway)
I mean, we ultimately fall back to strcmp I think.
03:09
And the cast is not enforced by the ht data structure or the API. It's enforced in places where we know we have an array.
Right.
You've said that a lot now, I get that.
Which is why I'm saying that the hashtable itself is not responsible for the discrepancies in keys for objects and arrays.
@PeeHaa sources?
@AndreaFaulds No, it matters a lot. If you can't find the hash to begin with you never get to compare the hashes.
03:10
You want a source ok:
1 min ago, by PeeHaa
@r3wt There is no reason to do whatever it is you are trying to do :)
:-)
@Sherif Oh, right, fair point. I didn't think of that.
well you did cite a source so..
It's common sense
WE have two different paths for how the key is sent to the hashing function for arrays and objects. but we only have ONE code path to look up the hash.
If you make that thing static and public it is global. If it is global there is no need to make it a property
03:12
@Sherif Yes, I understand that. Although technically we have TWO code paths to look up the hash, with arrays using both and objects using only one.
No we don't.
@PeeHaa well thanks for clarifying that.
Because we expect that by the time the key is stored in the array it's guaranteed to be a either int or string.
Same goes for the key handed to the lookup functions.
03:13
@Sherif Right, but for objects, we know it's a string.
So there's never a need to lookup the hash differently.
We never look up by index
sigh
The hashing function neither knows nor cares about the difference between an integer or a string.
Sorry if I'm driving you insane.
@Sherif Not true. The hash function isn't used for indexes. The hash function cares only for strings.
You need to remember that the caller is the one that determines WHAT the key is that it hands to the hashing function.
@AndreaFaulds Wrong, it is unaware of the PHP datatype.
03:15
Yes, I understand that.
@Sherif There's no difference in PHP 7 between "internal" and userland strings, they're the same datatype (zend_string).
Although, sure, the userland ones are wrapped in zvals...
The hash function only operates on strings.
It's not used for integer indexes.
@AndreaFaulds Wrong, the hashing function operates on const char.
Both strings and integers are sent as a const char
@Sherif Integers aren't sent.
They're just data. It has no clue what the underlying interpretation of that const char is.
@AndreaFaulds Yes, they are.
They have to be hashed just like any other key.
Just look at all the places where zend_hash_func is called.
Doing so just now.
Ah, I previously said zend_hash handles numeric keys. No, zend_hash.c can and does, but it's not zend_hash_*, it's zend_symtable_*
Really?
You mean h is just populated with the long directly?
03:24
Well, I finished checking for what you wanted
Yes, we don't hash integer keys
Why would we?
Damn, I'm slipping.
Well, for one, it would help avoid hash collisions better.
DoS attacks against large arrays would require more than just calculating the keys to the power of the hashtable.
For a packed array, there can't be collisions...
Oh, right.
But I mean in typical use.
Also, we resize the hashtable often anyway
I know nothing about packed arrays. I haven't dug into the PHP 7 stuff that well.
03:26
I'm not sure if that would work
It would work, it'd just be a performance penalty.
Heck, even for non-packed arrays... did we allow hashtables to have less buckets than keys? In what ratio if so?
You can't have less buckets than keys since a bucket == a key/value pair
Er, I mean bucket slots that we index into, oops
Yea, the bucket array has to be fixed, that's where the resizing costs.
03:28
@Sherif Good reference on how hashtables work in PHP 7: nikic.github.io/2014/12/22/…
But that doesn't change anything about integer vs. string key hashing. Just that you have the overhead of another hash.
When you resize the array you're just doubling the size of the bucket array. You keep the buckets in place.
Wait, you don't redistribute them?
Doesn't that, er, break lookup?
Yea, you obviously have to mod them again, but you're just moving pointers around at that point.
@AndreaFaulds I wasn't 100% sure on what to do exactly there; it could be renamed. Or it could not.
The integrity of the doubly linked list remains.
03:32
Er, wouldn't some collisions cease to be after that re-modding?
Possibly
@AndreaFaulds Ideally yes.
There are sometimes new collisions though ^^
But that doesn't have any affect on DoS attacks on the hashing collision itself.
You built the array with 100% collision. It has to be reconsutrcted with 100% collision.
After thinking about it, yes, it's an easy DoS
I meant that there's zero collisions in typical use
7 mins ago, by Andrea Faulds
But I mean in typical use.
For arrays of sequential integer indexes
No, there's typically high collision rate in the typical use case.
Oh, sequential, sure.
03:34
assuming the table size is always >= number of elements
That's a pretty safe assumption since it's required by the hashtable :)
Otherwise we'd have segfaults.
I mean, er
Well, not segfaults, but you'd definitely corrupt the table.
Oh, by the way @AndreaFaulds, there are no references to ZEND_RESULT_CODE in the git repository other than its definition. That doesn't mean extensions haven't used it, so I left it for now. Can easily be renamed if that's what we choose to do.
The size of the set of buckets you index into for a hash lookup
@LeviMorrison Fair enough. Yeah, I knew there were no php-src references, that's why I brought it up ^^
Like
table[hash % table_size] (pseudo-code)
That table.
03:36
Well, you're always doing key & ht->h regardless of the hashing, right.
I guess it's been a while since I've touched internals.
I'm just thinking that, if I have 64 sequential integer keys with no gaps and a set of 64 things I index into, and I'm using a hash function of not hashing at all, there'll be zero collisions, right? :)
That's what I was trying to say ^^
Well, there would be at least 1 collision.
But, yes, I get it :P
At least one? But keys 0-63 map exactly to slots 0-63... nevermind
Sorry about this argument. Goodnight!
Typically, though you see more arrays with string keys or non-sequential integer keys than you do sequential integer keys. That's why it's not the typical use case. You're describing the best-case-scenario. The norm is usually a lot more grim, though not likely the worse-case-scenario either.
@AndreaFaulds Ahh, yea, I misread that as 65 things for some reason.
True, true ^^
03:41
eyes going blurry
Anyway. I'll actually sleep now. Goodnight :)
night
Holy crap! Nickic's article is featured in Google News?!?
Impressive :)
@NikiC Who'd you bribe at Google?
@Sherif Link?
I don't have a link, I just searched for PHP 7 in Google News and got NickiC's article.
If that's what you meant
03:59
@Sherif i think he means link of google news :)
@obiNullPoiиteяkenobi Yea, I literally just searched PHP 7 in Google News. google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=php+7&tbm=nws
 
1 hour later…
05:28
Any good articles about metadata database construction?
05:45
Good articles about bad things?
Bad things?
I guess depending on what you meant by metadata.
Sorry.
There was this one project I worked on with a group.
But I'm not affiliated with the anymore.
There's this one table called meta
and it has four columns which I do not recall what exactly the names are
As far as I remember it was meta_name, meta_property, meta_value, and I forgot the last one. Probably the ID.
They used this to limit the creation of tables.
It was already 1 year or 2 ago when I encountered it
I'm not really sure what they call this type of database model.
06:02
"bad" - it's called bad.
Do you mean that type of model is bad?
Why?
You end up rebuilding things in your application to handle what your database now isn't. Essentially you've given up the power of a relational database to have a dumb key-value store.
Why do top companies use it then? Entity–attribute–value model, I think that's what it is called.
06:12
@Carnal here's a bit of reading stackoverflow.com/questions/870808/…
Alright.
Thanks!
they can be useful, but I've most often seen them simply abused
How do I not abuse it then?
By normalizing your data.
3NF is a good practice
Thanks guys.
06:16
@Sherif third video in that list is "private"
Will study these, kinda trying to learn more about handling database
I only know the basics
@PaulCrovella Woops, sorry, I just published that one. Try again
there it is. cheers.
Wow. You have your own channel. Will sub.
I'm currently working on a set of animated videos for database design actually :)
Happy coincidence.
They're specifically targeted at beginners.
06:19
very cool. basics matter big time.
That's good, looking forward to it. I've only been creating basic websites with little to none relationships within tables. Now, I just started developing a more complex website that requires them to communicate.
@Sherif it might be good to give a bit of a longer pause at the end of the 1nf video. If you're watching the playlist it's just a 1 second flash of the 1nf rules before jumping to the next vid
@PaulCrovella bah, stupid video editing... I apparently cut off some of the frames too early
Just watched the first vid @Sherif, kinda cool! I have a question about it though. You mentioned about setting the email as the primary key. Why not add an ID column instead? Sorry if you find this question stupid.
@Carnal You could do that too. The point is you need some unique key by which to lookup the entity. Both work, since we can safely assume that no two people have the same email address. The examples given are purely for educational and demonstration purposes though. That's by no means the ONLY way to design that table, nor is it necessarily the BEST way. Just a way that demonstrates PROPER first normal form.
06:30
@Sherif You might want to reduce the music volume in the 3rd video, it's very distracting while you're talking.
@PaulCrovella Yea, the microphone on this mac sucks and the editor I was using apparently doesn't let you turn down the audio track anymore than that :/
@Sherif I'm just wondering if there are cases where we must do it this way. Just in case I might need it in the future. haha
Great video, watching the second one now.
@Carnal You must have a unique primary key and rely on it fully in order to comply with 2NF, yes. What that key is depends on your data and design needs.
When you're learning the basics of relational theory, it's important to recognize that teaching people that a primary key is always some auto-incremented number is not very helpful. Mostly because it doesn't help them understand the purpose or application of prime attributes in relational theory.
It also allows you to ignore things like transitive dependencies and gloss over the process of working out a functional dependency in your table.
more easily so anyway
I see.
That made a lot of sense, although I had to google some of those terms. haha.
06:42
Thanks!
Man, trying to explain complex topics to a beginner, in a couple of minutes, is a lot harder than it sounds.
And I really hate editing videos :/
07:12
3rd video is awesome!
The background music is kinda louder than your voice i think
Yea, the mic's audio is really low and the background music is really high, but that's as much as this software will let me turn down the music, unfortunately. Still gotta figure out a better way to normalize the foreground and background tracks.
Plus it doesn't help that rendering all these videos takes forever and I'm pretty impatient...
heh

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