« first day (1533 days earlier)      last day (3643 days later) » 

08:34
why is stuff like this a thing
@PaulCrovella You mean annotations?
I find them to be pretty useless in a language PHP. Especially Doctrine's implementation.
This guy's just realizing how crappy it is for the first time. Basically the regex that reads this doesn't allow for expressions to span multiple lines so he's screwed.
I guess I've really only seen it done with annotations, but anything that's basically "let's code in comments instead of, ya know, the language we're coding in" gives me a case of the WTFs
@PaulCrovella It's a side effect of too much magic, I have the same problem with DICs
Annotations are useful in a language like Java where you want to separate the responsibility of how some class control is turned over, for example, from the actual logic of the class.
It's what happens when the caller needs to know how the callee works
08:49
The way people use annotations in PHP, however, to me, is just ridiculous.
@Sherif To me it's just a sign of too much abstraction
People get obsessed with writing reusable code, even in places where they will never ever reuse any of that code
@PaulCrovella amen
Well, abstraction adds layers of complexity sheriframadan.com/abstraction
It's making the internal workings part of the public API
It's a side effect of abstraction
08:52
It's crap
THere's a sweet spot to abstraction :)
People in room 11 agree on something. Internet shuts down in shock.
heh
Your eMail param looks like it should be a type to me. — Gordon ♦ 3 mins ago
means... type="me" ? — prady00 51 secs ago
2
@Gordon it's your own fault for getting involved
09:00
yeah, I know. stupid me.
@Sherif Nice article in principle, don't like your example interfaces but since discussing that would entirely miss the point of the article we should probably just agree to disagree there :-P
Although the one thing I will say about that is that it would be good if you make them valid (you can't have protected members in an interface)
> The long-term benefits of abstraction are most evident in code maintainability, but it has subtle short-term benefits as well.
@Sherif where is the evidence for that?
I know that this is what everyone, including me, keeps saying.
@DaveRandom Must've been a typo. That probably should have been in the implementing class.
But recently, I question that this is really true. Most of the time, you just throw away code and rewrite it or hack stuff into it.
@Gordon Have you ever used an MVC framework where every controller is just a subtype of the framework's core or parent controller?
09:05
great, from code in php comments to data in xml comments.‌​. da crap has happened to this world
@Sherif yes
@Gordon I have been given an old interface an written new implementations that are entirely and cleanly encapsulated by that interface (only twice, with the same interface, but I have actually done it)
@Gordon Well, think how much harder it would be to maintain your application controllers if the framework didn't abstract away the logic of the parent controller's core functionality from you.
@DaveRandom "most of the time"
That's evidence of maintainability in abstraction to me. If DateTime didn't abstract away the logic of a Date/Time from me, I wouldn't be able to easily maintain my code in the long term should the underlying implementation of the Date/Time change. I'd have to think long and hard about everything that logic touches and look really close for what breaks and what side effects it has.
09:10
@Sherif imo, base controllers are a design smell, so I avoid them when I can.
in our current sf app we use controllers as a service and only inject functionality needed for a certain request. the "shared stuff" is in a controller helper that gets injected.
@Gordon Maybe so, but they are common and an abstract way of solving the control-flow problem in the underlying architecture. More to the point, they are the evidence you asked for.
@Gordon Right, but a service is yet another means of abstraction. So there you have it.
@Sherif consider the php script in gist.github.com/gooh/…
I've been abstracting and refactoring this for a couple of days now
for no apparent benefit
I did exactly what your article suggests. break it down into smaller problems and stuff
long-term benefits aren't typically apparent in the short term, but if you don't see a benefit to abstracting something it's quite likely you don't rely on it very much.
coming up with the right abstractions seems ridiculously hard
24 mins ago, by DaveRandom
People get obsessed with writing reusable code, even in places where they will never ever reuse any of that code
i.e. solving a problem you don't have
09:16
@DaveRandom yes, exactly
@Gordon Sure, it's a heavy upfront investment, with long-term benefits.
Not all code is reused. It's not at all uncommon to write code that you know you're going to throw away, ultimately.
@Sherif my impression is that most code in php apps is thrown away
But that's why the biggest benefits are evident in LONG-TERM MAINTABILITY
:)
@Gordon So the problem is not with the idea of abstractions, the problem is knowing when it's actually a good idea to create one
@DaveRandom both
09:18
@Gordon It's easier to throw it away, because it's also easy to get it running, but I find that most code in general is thrown away.
@Sherif what @DaveRandom just said :)
rm is the single most useful tool when it comes to maintaining code - and it doesn't care about your abstractions.
That's why I say "Trade-offs of abstraction" ;)
But I personally think this is less about general design principles, and more about the OCD-like tendencies of any given developer. Also, a bit of highly unscientific personal experience leads me to believe that software development attracts people with a higher tendency towards this sort of thing (call them "perpetual fiddlers")
09:21
@darkyen00 Independent thinkers are a rare commodity in a world where information is both abundant and cheap.
@Sherif Okay that bounced off my head, Please lower your english ^_^
@darkyen00 Please rephrase 2.3 3 tier arch to separation of concerns
@Sherif I wish there was more evidence on where the sweet spot is
@darkyen00 In a sentence: what you are suggesting is the hard way, 99.9% of people will take the easy way.
But the 0.1% do matter...
I am only focussing on the 0.1% that will be like 7 - 9 students :-)
09:24
2.6 Why writing your own code like a library is -good- best way to write code.
2.7 Re-write all code using libraries.
s/library/component/ please
@darkyen00 Well, today the 16 year old sitting at the corner cafe can pull out his phone and Google "Laffer curve" to get regurgitate a wikipedia article at an ecomic's major from Harvard, for which he would have access to just the same amount of information this Harvard Alum paid over 6 figures, with no more than the cost of a $40/month internet connection.
To be fair, independent thinkers are not rare at all, they just don't necessarily spend their time and effort on the same things that you or I think independently about.
@Sherif wow
@Gordon I have no scientific evidence. I just modeled this based on large code bases that I've personally worked with.
@darkyen00 My point is, we are in an information age where the problem isn't a lack of information, but a lack of what to do with that information. And the people with ambition to do things with information are not the norm.
@Sherif My point with this whole thing is letting those 0.1 % people with ambition have a chance
the brain damage of the education system we have especially in lower college is un-acceptable
09:29
@darkyen00 I think you're looking at this all wrong. The problem isn't that they don't have a chance. They all have an equal chance.
I know :P
but how can you expect to learn when your own teacher is getting his Major for M.Tech. done by a classmate ?
The problem is that the majority of people don't feel they have to think very hard in order to accomplish something, or that they aren't ambitious enough to accomplish something big.
Some of them might be ambitious but perhaps de-moralized ? Perhaps scared to try ?
morningz
I learnt to code when i was 13, I had no shame pushing up a terribly written game with all math.random for ai's name sake and crappy graphics. the community at scratch.mit.edu took it well, I became confident ... 8 years later :P I write servers as my day job while multiplexing college :D
09:31
/me demands greetings
@darkyen00 I disagree with that analysis. People's morality isn't the issue. It's that they are generally afraid to take big risks. It's because society has taught us from a young age that risk is bad.
@JoeWatkins Greeting Granted.
GOOD MORNING @JOEWATKINS
I hope that somehow pinged louder
@PaulCrovella you might wanna do @@ ?
I read it super loud @PaulCrovella
09:33
@Sherif and hey, its an experiment... who knows what may come out.. I personally thing everyone participating will learn a lot from this :
think*
"people tend to assume things are impossible, rather than starting from real-world physics and figuring out what's actually possible." - Larry Page
If you told someone you wanted to build a world-wide WiFi network using balloons, they'd probably tell you that was impossible.
@darkyen00 worth talking to chat.stackoverflow.com/users/1438393/amal-murali if you see him - I seem to recall he was interested in doing something like this a while ago
Probably, long before they actually tried to crunch the numbers.
I don't think he comes in chat much but I have him on Twitter I think, looking now
Hmm, maybe not
@Sherif basically, what would be useful to have is some kind of heuristic that tells me whether I can reasonably expect change to something.
09:40
@JoeWatkins mornjoehappyingswatkinschristmas
@JoeWatkins Mornin' buddy :)
Sorry, your demand for greeting got jumbled in between my coffee and my monitor.
moinz all :)
Religion agnostic seasonal greetings
09:42
@Gordon Hmmm... Not sure how you would go about that. I guess you could try to measure asymptotic complexity, which is not that hard to do, but then you'd also have to figure out how you could normalize that on a scale that measures the caller's instructions. Even then you still need to figure out what the level of effectiveness is for all the inputs, which would be a massive regression model.
There's also the fact that PHP sucks at static code analysis and there are million and one runtime edge cases.
So you're saying... there's a chance
There's always a chance!
POST /rooms/11/php HTTP/1.1
morning=good
Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth.
:)
@Patrick 400
09:46
I think you mean...

Morning: Good
@JoeWatkins she could have used variables: "Dear $supremeBeing, please keep me and my family safe. Oh, and Worldpeace pwz. Nuff said. Kthxbye."
POST /rooms/11/php HTTP/1.1
Host: chat.stackoverflow.com

morning=good
There... now you're compliant with HTTP/1.1
:)
@Sherif 403
The lesson here is: never post anything in the room if you don't want it to be immediately and brutally dissected
God damnit
I forgot the friggen origin didn't I
Oh noes... authentication :/
09:48
:D
Also if you send a POST without a Content-Length: you are a bad person
Screw content-length. Let the server wait for me to terminate the connection.
HTTP is resilient in fault tolerance :D
@DaveRandom thanks
Oh in fact it's mandatory with a request, I think, implicit eof only works with responses
Nope.
The ONLY header HTTP/1.1 mandates is the Host header.
Read the spec
09:50
my internal http parser thinks @sherif is right ...
@Sherif For every request, yes, but requests with an entity body are different. Without a stated length how can the server know where the request ends, unless it interprets the entity body as well?
(which it shouldn't, payload format is not part of the protocol)
@DaveRandom When the connection is closed :)
3 mins ago, by DaveRandom
The lesson here is: never post anything in the room if you don't want it to be immediately and brutally dissected
It doesn't assume it knows anything. That's the point of HTTP.
@Sherif Works for responses, not for requests
The client will not close the connection, it needs a response
09:51
Works fine for requests as long as the implementation allows it
It's not a requirement of the HTTP specification.
@DaveRandom Sure, it can safely assume the EOF is coming though since large requests are generally multipart encoded, but you will find that apache has a time out for this reason
This is also how you can DoS an apache server with incomplete headers :)
Open the socket, send the request line and just wait indefinitely...
good mornings
apache will give up after a while, but you will tie up the entire worker in the mean time :)
> Recently, Symfony went from Zend-like bloat and rigidity to extreme decoupling and modularity. With the new Developer Experience initiative, Symfony has done a Laravel-style 180° and dove right into making its components more end-user friendly, its docs more complete, and its AppBundles unbundled, simplifying entry and further development almost exponentially.
wut?!
hä?
"a Laravel-style 180°"
so everything's going to be static now?
09:57
@Sherif yes, you are right (had to draw it out). Using a half-closed socket approach is horrible but it would work. It would be... weird though.
8 mins ago, by DaveRandom
Also if you send a POST without a Content-Length: you are a bad person
^ I still maintain that you are a bad person
Even if technically valid
@DaveRandom :)
and in the context of the article: this makes no sense. such var_dumpers are available since years, perhaps the author means that by it then: "pushing out of new components that are incredibly useful outside of Symfony’s context." - ref stackoverflow.com/q/2141585/367456
I never claimed to be good. This is why people hate me.
if I send a Content-Length but lie about it, does that leave me in neutral territory?
@PaulCrovella No, apache will likely give you an error like 405 or something
I forget the error code
10:00
I don't want to be too good or people might get their expectations up
Depends which way you lie about it
Yea, it also depends on the implementing server software
If you claim to be larger than you actually are, roughly equivalent to a small man in a big car. If you claim to be smaller than you actually are, chances are your end will get cut off
All in all, probably better to just tell the truth
Some webservers actually error out when you claim to be smaller than you really are though.
Are "trailers" valid in HTTP?
MIME is a stupid format
10:03
trailers?
Yeh, headers at the end. They're valid in straight MIME in some cases
Maybe only in multipart messages, I forget
No, HTTP headers have to come before the CRLF
Otherwise it can't distinguish the entity body from the entity.
No, multipart messages don't change the HTTP message structure. They are just a part of the entity body.
That is ...they have their own special means of decoding, but they are still a part of the HTTP message body.
I'd go read up on where they are valid in MIME, but I value what little I have left of my sanity
@DaveRandom I think maybe you are referring to chunked encoding?
Where the message transmission is determined by CRLF
In which case you get message length from individual transmissions.
@Sherif tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616#section-14.40 <-- I knew I read it somewhere in the context of HTTP
10:13
Yea, that's chunked encoding
It has an actual valid use case somewhere in "straight MIME" (i.e. email)
gotta love email
No, wait, the other thing
I really hope that no-one has ever actually used that
Hmm? Trailers you mean?
In an HTTP implementation
I recall discussing it with @rdlowrey once and I think the conclusion was just to not support it because it's stupid
10:16
Not support the spec? Sounds like a plan to fail.
Yeh, I think it threw up some implementational problems though, I forget the specifics, it was a long time ago
Yea well, then you have an implementation that isn't compliant durp
Not like webserver's are perfect at implementations though. Gotta love that IIS invents its own HTTP status codes some times :)
Or how it places arbitrary limits on things the spec didn't limit.
Wow, over 2 years ago
Dec 13 '12 at 14:12, by rdlowrey
There are two known issues right now that I haven't gotten around to fixing because no one has used those aspects of the HTTP/1.1 spec in years:
Dec 13 '12 at 14:13, by rdlowrey
1. The response message parser will throw an exception if the message contains trailer headers (no one uses them).
May be fixed by now
I read that as if IIS became sentient and creative, it's much more impressive that way.
Also interesting to you @Sherif from the same day:
Dec 13 '12 at 13:40, by Touki
Since when can we vote on comments of the PHP doc ?
Dec 13 '12 at 14:11, by rdlowrey
@Touki Yesterday, I believe.
10:22
Wow, that's ancient.
I almost forgot I implemented that.
Damn Total: 319825 these votes have really added up over the years.
Does that include deleted comments?
Nope.
The votes get deleted with the comment.
The glass delusion was an external manifestation of a psychiatric disorder recorded in Europe in the late Middle Ages (15th to 17th centuries). People feared that they were made of glass “and therefore likely to shatter into pieces”. One famous early sufferer was King Charles VI of France who refused to allow people to touch him, and wore reinforced clothing to protect himself from accidental “shattering”. == The delusion == Concentration of the glass delusion among the wealthy and educated classes allowed modern scholars to associate it with a wider and better described disorder of schol...
When I see a high-voted comment that fits in easily I try and edit it into the docs page and kill it (i.e. what comments were intended for)
interesting
10:25
359725 votes, including the deleted ones.
@DaveRandom Nice to see my efforts did not go in vein :)
I keep trying to do stuff with the curl_setopt page, but lose the will to live very quickly :-(
@Gordon the world was a strange place back then en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_Plague_of_1518
The world is still a strange place now
@PaulCrovella yeah, I heard about that one. Very weird.
Its particularly weird, in that it's easy to ascertain that it cannot possibly be true
10:29
You wanna see how f***ed up Rome was back in the day watch the movie Caligula.
Be forewarned, it is rather disturbing and sadistic.
@Sherif never believe anything you see in hollywood movies.
@Gordon It's historically accurate, actually. It's based on Caligula's biographical story.
@Gordon Any chance we'll be seeing you at phpsc?
@Sherif I suspect much of the behavior was due to a blockage in natural movement of humours throughout the body, likely due to poor understanding of the importance of mastication at the time.
@Sherif still, it's a movie. and given by the receptions in en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caligula_%28film%29#Reception and the fact that it was produced by Penthouse, I wouldn't expect it to be unbiased but rather focused on certain things.
10:37
We are fortunate to be better learned in the sciences now.
@DaveRandom haven't submitted to any conferences for 2015 yet
@Gordon Sure, there's added dramatic effect, but the facts are still accurate.
@PaulCrovella Are we? :)
@Gordon You only go to confs you are speaking at?
We only assume those that came before us were stupid. The truth is much more deceptive.
@DaveRandom no. but when I have to pay for them I am selective. so you can expect me to attend PHPUCEU and PHPUCHH.
10:39
Or shall I say, we assume we're smarter than those that came before us...
it was a joke :/
it's snowiiiing ♪ ♫
It's snowing music?
You took a little too much acid, maybe?
is that like raining men?
@Gordon Yeh true, those are not cheap options either :-/
10:43
@Sherif added dramatic effect? I haven't seen the movie, but when an adult publisher hires a sex film director, I would assume they don't take it too serious with the historical accuracies but rather focus on their main business.
@Gordon sounds like a bad assumption then
quoting the wikipedia article: "Producer Bob Guccione, the magazine's founder, intended to produce an explicit adult film within a feature film narrative"
Yea, so?
It's gory. It's pornographic. It's still telling a true story though.
I can't fault a man for making a sweeping period piece, but with blackjack and hookers.
The point of art is to inspire thought through perception. Not necessarily to lie.
10:45
so the focus apparently was not on making an historically accurate picture, which would be quite funny given that Penthouse is Penthouse but instead make an adult movie.
@PaulCrovella ...and not then following that up with "in fact, forget the sweeping period piece"
@Gordon You don't have to be historically inaccurate to portray sodomy and incest.
@Sherif sure, in fact, I dont have to be historically at all for that.
Yeh, you just have to be Dutch /cc @PeeHaa
and that's my point.
10:47
Yea, but the point of the movie is tell the story. Not just to do porn.
It's like saying that a comedy movie can't be true, because it focuses on being funny.
Comedy is just a vessel for transmitting the story.
/me goes to dress a wet, wriggly toddler
@Sherif given by the description, it sounds like they just the use the historic figure as a vehicle to portray various depraved sex acts. that doesn't make it an historically accurate movie.
It doesn't make it a historically inaccurate one either.
"loosely based on the life of" is different than "historically accurate"
Have you seen the movie? Have you read scholar's account of his life?
Or are you just very good at copy/pasting wikipedia articles? :)
10:50
No, like I said, I am just basing it on my impression that I got from the wiki articles.
So your entire opinion is a regurgitated account of the writings of others?
Doesn't sound like much of an opinion :p
ah, so I can only form an opinion if I was around Caligula then?
No, but you'd be better off forming an opinion by experiencing things for yourself.
will jumping off a cliff kill you?
Who knows. Maybe.
10:52
you'd be better off forming an opinion by experiencing things for yourself.
I guess it depends on how high the cliff is and what's at the bottom of it.
@Gordon Yea, that's what I already said :)
Original thought is a powerful thing.
It inscribes character
@Sherif so will you jump off a cliff now? like … a real high one? with concrete at the bottom? or maybe lava?
@Gordon Probably not, no.
There are no such cliffs within vicinity nor an inclination to jump off of one.
and it's exactly the same with having to see that movie
How's that exactly the same?
10:57
y'all have convinced me, I'm gonna go find a cliff
You're asking me if jumping off a cliff will kill me. That's a factual statement. It either will or it won't. Seeing a movie and formulating your opinion about its artistic intent is the same as the proving a scientific hypothesis?
You're really bad at formulating a strong premise, BTW.
:)
@Sherif well, you said I need to watch the movie and read scholar's accounts to form an opinion. I don't have to because people did so before me and they wrote down their opinion. And taking these opinions into the context of what I know here and now, I can perfectly form an opinion. Just like you dont have to jump off a cliff to know that it will likely kill you although you never did that before but only read so somewhere.
Yea, but your forming an opinion about their opinions. That doesn't speak to how you perceived a work of art.
Reading about a Mona Lisa isn't the same thing as experiencing it for yourself.
Also, once again, you're confusing fact for opinion. You can deduce facts based on logic.

« first day (1533 days earlier)      last day (3643 days later) »