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15:00
@Gordon no
@user3692125 hmm, then it's probably sth else.
are you sure you are passing no value? an empty string is not no value.
@LeviMorrison Jersey City. So not in NYC, but I also wouldn't call it a commuting in. My apartment is 1.5 miles from Manhattan...
I can literally see parts of the skyline from my balcony
@Patrick yes.
@Script47 in that case, just get rid of it and use pdo directly. PDO is already an abstraction, no need to add another layer on top.
@Gordon No, I am not passing any value... I thought it would break
@Gordon there is no programming language in middle either...
I'm using plain phpmyadmin
15:16
@user3692125 if you are using phpmyadmin there is php in the middle :)
lol.... true...I meant I am sending it in through some code
@user3692125 Are you using MyISAM?
no, innodb @Sherif
Are you sure that table is using InnoDB?
15:24
@user3692125 Try SHOW TABLE STATUS FROM mydbname WHERE engine = 'MyISAM';
@user3692125 Are you surprised yet?
not yet.... it gave back no results
@Patrick will do.
@user3692125 Let's see your schema then.
Thanks.
Argh one of these days I'm going to do a gitblame on PDOs stupid default fetch style
15:39
It's consistent with the same default fetch mode of mysql and mysqli
what is it, FETCH_BOTH or whatever?
FETCH_BOTH...
And that's the same thing you got with mysql and mysqli, so what's the problem?
You should be used it after 15 years
It's stupid
yeah, that annoyed me once or twice :P i figured it was just PHP-AR being moronic, though
15:40
You should never have both. Hell you shouldn't even have OBJ imo
@Sherif mysql_* doesn't have such a thing?
@PeeHaa What thing? mysql_* fetches both just the same as mysqli and pdo
Not that mangled in the api at least
@Sherif With mysql_* you are forced to pick one
by the api
No you're not.
php.net/mysql_fetch_array
Yes that is being forced to pick one
You have a resource which is useless. In case of pdo you have a... thing
How? You can clearly see that the $result_type is optional in that function.
15:44
In mysql? There is no such thing
@krakjoe thank you for your excellent work on phpdbg, it's awesome!
The api not the rdbms
\o/
Looks like someone needs to read before they type.
15:44
?
@PeeHaa php.net/mysql_fetch_array "as you can clearly see the $result_type is optional in the function and defaults to MYSQL_BOTH"
Which part did you find confusing?
Oh sorry. I thought you said _assoc
...
Never used _array in my life
No idea why you would ever use it
have to say, i never have either. i can't think of any time i've even wanted anything but an associative array
"both" has pretty much always been a boneheaded default
15:49
Yeah we have a broken API lets fix it by creating a new API broken in the same way because BC although nobody uses it \o/
@cHao mysql_fetch_assoc() is the same thing as saying mysql_fetch_array($link, MYSQL_ASSOC) in fact they used the same exactly function internally lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_5_6/ext/mysql/php_mysql.c#2249 so every time you use mysql_fetch_assoc you are just using a thin wrapper over mysql_fetch_array
@Sherif I suspected that, however our point is you would never need both ever
I would take it as far as you don't even have to have a way to provide both
Either OBJ or ASSOC pick one. And considering it is PHP pick ASSOC
Now get off my lawn!
:P
OBJ is pretty boneheaded too, imo :P
if i'm getting objects, i want them to have types.
We just have too much choice... I don't like choice
never mind that ... there exists a thing called a squishable snoo ... how many should we buy is the question ?
15:56
@PeeHaa Well, that's not necessarily true.
@JoeWatkins They are pretty expensive though
the reasons the underlying api can return/easily construct indexed arrays to C do not stand for us, not sure why both exist either ...
@Sherif no, i'm using a function that calls the same function as mysql_fetch_array. either one can be deleted without the other changing at all.
The problem is... when you have a very poor understanding of how a blackbox works it's easy for you to criticize things that it does that you don't understand.
15:58
@Sherif That has more to do with the query than the result
Much harder to actually improve it.
@PeeHaa It has everything to do with your statement that you would never need both.
@Sherif why would I ever want to select NOW() twice? And even if, why would I not use an alias for the column?
There are absolutely valid use cases for when you would need both.
not for PHP there isn't ...
1) bad example is bad 2) use aliases
15:59
there are edge cases ... I think it's pretty easy to understand why we need or should have that API in C, but it doesn't apply to us, obviously ...
@Gordon That's just to demonstrate the point. There are cases when we do joins on temporary in memory tables that have the same column names and we don't care about aliasing, because the results are deterministic.
That is imo bad practice. Good luck when you have to run that in sql
...
and to what percentage of queries does that apply?
It's not a question of good or bad practices. It's a question of serving a need.
16:01
even if you can find an edge case for needing an indexed array, why should the default be BOTH, it seems obviously silly doesn't it ?
Yeah some goes for register globals
You posit that you would never need both. Perhaps, you don't, but that doesn't mean no one ever will.
for some screwed-up value of "need", maybe
If your queries are sane you don't need it
BOTH at the same time ?? I don't think you described a use case for that ??
16:02
@JoeWatkins Because some people were pulling there data from the array using the column name and others were looking at the expected offsets.
@Sherif that's not the point. the point is that it's unnecessary in most cases and thus shouldn't be the default setting.
There is actually an old discussion about this on the mailing list.
It dates back to 2001.
@Gordon It was necessary at the time it was implemented.
that seems really strange to me ... that wouldn't pass audit if I were auditing it ...
@Sherif why? what for?
@Gordon Because of the very reason I just stated.
16:03
i would publicly mock whoever wrote code that relied on BOTH
@JoeWatkins Hi, welcome to PHP internals. Have we met?
I suck at searching internals
@Sherif I thought we were talking about a PHP application ?
@JoeWatkins We're talking about why PHP's mysql fetch functions return both by default.
I meant the PHP code that relied on that default or chose it as the offset_type wouldn't pass audit ...
16:05
and the answer is, basically, "because PHP. expect stupid defaults."
I'm certain there are nicer ways to do things, the query is going to look horrible enough, and then there's going to be code mixing offsets and names, just horrible, even if it is possible and works and always has, doesn't make it less nasty ...
@JoeWatkins People weren't very well versed in SQL in those days. Have you heard of magic quotes?
Which is killed
Sure, and for good reason. It caused more harm than good, but somewhere out there there is probably someone still relying on this default behavior of fetching both, and changing it now doesn't win you much. Just set the default fetch mode in PDO's constructor if you prefer assoc.
that's also true ...
but we can recognize that it was probably a stupid default and use the lessons learned as a warning for the future, so that we don't make similar mistakes ...
instead of trying to justify it with BC ...
16:08
^ that
^^
PDO should have been a clean break from that
mysqli ok I kinda get that (still don't agree), but pdo...
PDO just implements the same mysql api that mysql and ext mysqli did.
It's a completely new api
Nope.
16:09
I'm an end user
Sure it is
PDO is a new extension. The mysql driver is the same.
I'm referring to the C API, not the PDO class you use.
I don't care about that
Of course not. It's a black box.
38 secs ago, by PeeHaa
I'm an end user
It was designed so that you don't have to care.
16:10
And to me PDO === new API
I'm simply explaining to your ignorance the matter.
Saying you think somebody is ignorant while multiple people tell you otherwise doesn't help the disuscussion
I said no such thing.
That is php internals talk
Hi :D
16:11
yo @darkyen00
the game got shifted 3 months :-x
ignorance is no crime, there's much I'm ignorant of ... when it comes to php internals ignorance is even forgivable, advisable to a degree ...
u have plenty of time :-D now
@JoeWatkins :-)
@JoeWatkins Absolutely, which is why I spend a lot of effort explaining to it :)
16:12
@darkyen00 \o/ Any chance on getting a private demo so I get a feeling for what I am doing?
Do you mind "reading" a battle ?
I really wanna focus on the core engine, then on gfx.
@Sherif it does feel like a lecture held from a high horse though
yeah but try to switch modes, from a just-a-users point of view, mysqli was the first opportunity to get it right, in PDO there was another ... whatever the underlying API looks like, whatever libraries are used doesn't matter one bit to @PeeHaa and his gang at all ... he cares that there is a sane API that doesn't repeat past mistakes in the name of BC that he, and most sensible folk don't care about ...
but if u don't mind talking on Miaou i can tell you whats on my mind :D
I make similar mistakes, I set about wrapping a C/C++ library and think the API should look roughly the same as the underlying library, and I use stability and robustness as an excuse not to think about what would really be helpful, now and in ten years ...
16:17
so , what's new
@darkyen00 is it ok if I drop by on miaou later. I need to get smokes and I think I first need to de-ice my car
@tereško the purple one ...
@Gordon I'm sorry you feel that way. Is it possible that you feel like you're being lectured by someone on a "high horse" because you feel your knowledge is threatened? I'm not trying to put you down. I'm actually trying to see it from your perspective. This is not necessarily a bad thing. I know that when I feel like I'm being lectured my first instinct is to become reductive and defensive, but someone actually taught me a long time ago that this doesn't help the greater good.
@Gordon Instead, I learned to become more alert and take it as an opportunity to learn something so that I could contribute back and it becomes a discussion rather than a lecture :)
@JoeWatkins Where'd you get the red one?
@Sherif raffle at the last phphants
Never seen the red one before.
16:20
got zend logo on the other size
cool
I need me more of those oversized ones.
Can't find those anymore.
yeah I want the black one from amsterdamn php kickstarter ...
gonna call him vince ...
Which one was the PHP women one again?
The pink?
purple
(my one is anyway, dunno about past ones)
No, php women had a recent kickstarter. It was pink I think.
16:23
hmm, I didn't see that ...
I've seen pink ones in photos though ...
Or maybe it wasn't on kickstarter.
hmmm
@Sherif no, I don't feel threatened. Not at all. Just lectured. In a bad way. Because it doesn't feel like genuine help or explanation but rather like convincing me that I am wrong. And not only wrong but also stupid for daring to have a different view on the appropriateness of PDO_BOTH as a sane default.
But no worries. I've worked with developers long enough to know that this is a common character trait.
@Gordon Again, I'm sorry you feel that way. I certainly have no aggression on my part even if you feel that way. I do strive to provide objective information rather than dwell on my own personal subjectivity where possible and I do respect and value your opinions. I'd love to engage in a discussion with you and certainly don't wish to belittle you :)
@Gordon Very sorry to hear that.
I think it's a stupid default fwiw @Gordon ... we are all entitled to an opinion, even if it's a stupid opinion and obviously wrong ... :D
if a function received a key value pair as an argument... can the function have each of the keys automatically declared and initialized as the value?
16:29
@user3692125 Except that functions don't take key value pairs as arguments. They take variables.
@JoeWatkins I should get one of those...
Evening
the big ones are cool @AndreaFaulds gonna get a small one for herd, but want a big one .... to err ... cuddle ...
@Sherif And that won't change unless named parameters get in ^^
@user3692125 are you looking for php.net/extract?
16:30
@JoeWatkins What could be better than cuddling a big ElePHPant?
Merry Christmas to all!
@AndreaFaulds Why do you wanna kill my performance?
@AndreaFaulds cuddling two big ElePHPants?
@Sherif It wouldn't hurt it.
@Gordon :D
16:31
@JoeWatkins :-). Igor was quite excited by it yest
I mean that's a human child ...
:(
lies
@PeeHaa sure...
@Gordon ...exactly what I was looking for
@JoeWatkins I wouldn't hug snoo, it's the embodiment of reddit, and reddit is horrid
16:31
@Gordon Is this approach recommended or going for variable number of arguments?
@Sherif No, really. Objects aren't hashtables most of the time, why would parameters need to be to support named parameters?
@ircmaxell I'm glad someone else noticed that it's pretty cool ... without needing the bunch of bells and whistles that are just causing friction ...
@user3692125 ok, in that case make sure you understand what EXTR_OVERWRITE does since it can cause security issues. Or just use EXTR_SKIP and don't bother.
@user3692125 If you a have a variable number of arguments, why would you want to export them by name into the local scope?
@AndreaFaulds but but ... did you see how big it was ? with the human child next to it ... that could keep my chair warm on cold mornings ... and I just want one, at least one ...
16:33
Guys, are there any common business solutions for remembering, that user is signed in and not requiring him to sign in again for some certain amount of time if he didn't sign out during this time? I know, that it can be implemented through session and session handlers, but maybe there is some pattern for that and some clean code examples?
@JoeWatkins Oh wow...
@user3692125 you mean like this? extract(func_get_args())? that would make for funny variables.
@user3692125 You wouldn't know the names of any arbitrary arguments nor would you know if they were defined or not without having to explicitly check back with the array. In which case, why not just use the array? Why bother copying?
You really don't want to do that with a session.
this is what I wanted to do: myfunction ("key1"=> 15, "key2"=>17); .... and inside myfunction myfunction ($pars){explode($pars); .....} ...but seems like a bad idea?
16:38
@user3692125 No, that would seem like a parse error.
:p
wait, where?
ohhh...
myfunction ("key1"=> 15, "key2"=>17);
Also, have no clue what explode is doing there.
^ ye cannae dae tha
myfunction (["key1"=> 15, "key2"=>17]); ..
explode expects 2 arguments.
16:39
oops
I meant extract
I'm pretty sure they meant extract.
How many typos I am making
myfunction (["key1"=> 15, "key2"=>17]); .... and inside myfunction myfunction ($pars){extract($pars); .....}
bad idea?
extract with no second argument seems like a bad idea waiting to happen.
@Sherif doesn't seem to be a secure solution.
@Eugene That's possible, but it's a concept not a solution. What is the security problem?
16:40
with EXTR_SKIP ...
still a bad idea?
@user3692125 Well, have you bothered to look at my question? Asking yourself that might shed some light on your doubt.
*@user3692125 If you a have a variable number of arguments, why would you want to export them by name into the local scope?
@user3692125 You wouldn't know the names of any arbitrary arguments nor would you know if they were defined or not without having to explicitly check back with the array. In which case, why not just use the array? Why bother copying?*
@Sherif Sorry...let me read your question... let me find it
@AndreaFaulds read that with full on accent ...
oh okay there it is...
@JoeWatkins :p
(I can't do a convincing Scottish accent, I've only lived here for three years.)
Coming up on four, actually.
16:43
I need to go to Scotland. I hear there are a lot of drunk people there.
I could when younger, my mother has what I think is a pretty vague scottish accent but everyone else thinks is pretty thick ...
@Sherif or maybe I should just stick to optional params =p... I'm such a fool
@Sherif sorry, haven't noticed, that this is only a $key handling example. So you store it and link it to the user record and later on you sign in user by that key stored in cookie if it is present. Okay.
@Eugene Yes, just like with your session, except that the key grants you nothing more than authentication. It doesn't rehydrate any previously stored session data.
@user3692125 sometimes people do this in order to be able to use the keys in $data as variables in a template instead of $data['key']:
public function render(array $data)
{
    extract($data, EXTR_SKIP);
    include 'some_template.php';
}
16:46
@Sherif this is implementable. You can make link, for example if it is a store, then to the last cart state.
@Eugene Sure, if you kept that data in your persistence store.
@Sherif yes, sure.
I just broke my car's window wiper thing. The winter has already won :(
@user3692125 whether it's a good approach is a different question.
@Gordon thats exactly what I wanted to do..... But Sherif said I would have to always check back whether the variable is set or not etc... and he is right... but same thing is with optional parameters too... I would have to see if they're null or not
16:49
@PeeHaa stupid earth, with it's fancy weather ... and stupid plastic, with it's measly tolerances ...
@user3692125 Well, I'm just suggesting that you think about why you're doing what you're doing and consider if it is in fact helping you accomplish something useful. I'm not suggesting that you go one way or another. I just presented you with a case where extract doesn't really make sense for your stated requirement. I mean, you certainly don't write a solution so that you can go searching for a problem solved by that solution.
@JoeWatkins Yeah. Stupid thing wouldn't even clear 15cm of ice from my window...
The thing has one task and one task only and even that fails :|
wait ... why the fuck are you driving with 15cm of ice on your window anyway ...
there'll be some of that on the ground you know ...
@JoeWatkins I was not driving yet. I was about to drive
unless someone is dying, stay home ...
16:51
Neh it was not that bad on the main roads
@user3692125 The difference between optional arguments, and variable length arguments is that you know exactly which arguments are optional from the function prototype and as such can write your function logic accordingly without having to worry about initialization problems. You don't get the same luxury with variable length arguments. So maybe you need to state your use case more clearly?
most accidents occur within 40cm of your own doorstep .. alright not 40cm, but it's really close ...
@user3692125 well, you can preset the variables you want to have available in the template and then use EXTR_IF_EXISTS so whatever is in the passed array will only overwrite set variables
@JoeWatkins Yes that was indeed much more likely. Couldn't be arsed to clear my path today :)
I'm maybe a bit irrationally afraid of bad weather ... but but ... last time I rode a motorcycle in wet conditions it tried to kill me, so just bare in mind, everything is out to get you
16:55
@JoeWatkins The motorcycle tried to kill you? Are the machines taking over already? Is Skynet online?
damn it
I always carry a decoy @JoeWatkins with me so I am fine ;)
@Sherif sure did, but not the intelligent kind of kill me, just totally failed without warning and throw me off, the ground is extremely hard you know .... it really hurts when you hit it ... you're a tiny bit better off in a car, because you're surrounded, but then you are surrounded by things that can really easily kill you if broken or bent ... moral of the story, avoid bad weather whatever ...
@JoeWatkins Perhaps it just wants you to think it's not intelligent?
:p
that's actually possible ... it's still in my garage, all beat up ... you'd think it'd fix itself ... but can't sell it because probably death trap ...
oh pooh, I don't know how to use SO markdown apparently
17:00
It doesn't understand quotes in tags
Chat markdown is an idiot
whahaha
how'dya like me now!
OK, I've conquered SO markdown. I'm done.
you know the markdown doesn't hear you ?
Early retirement here I come.
No, that's it. I've done SO markdown. My bucket list is complete.
congrats
17:01
I know, I have such aspirational goals in life.
/me goes to eat chicken ... lata all ...
@ircmaxell Ah; do you walk/bike to work?
@Sherif Thanks for talking with me last night, by the way.
@LeviMorrison np, always happy to see someone contributing to open source :)
17:19
@LeviMorrison subway, I have to cross a river
Those citi bikes come in handy when you're getting around manhattan though.
they are amazing
17:36
Hmm. What would you name this function?
function(callable $cmp, callable $select) {
    return function($a, $b) use($cmp, $select) {
        return $cmp($select($a), $select($b));
    };
}
callception
not really sure
it's a form of map-reduce
For readability and unambiguity, they will all benefit from {} As in echo "<a href='{$bName}_read.php?bid={$bid}&id={$next_id['id']}'>NEXT</a>";Michael Berkowski 4 mins ago
:O
@PeeHaa :->
My opinion about readability is clearly different in this case :P
17:39
Basically that helper function would solve most of our "add this new kind of sort function" requests.
I just don't know what to name it ^^
@PeeHaa yes, that's correct… where's the issue?
Am I really the only one who thinks that is an unreadable mess?
@PeeHaa nay
17:40
@LeviMorrison select_and_call()
compare_using ? or sort_using ?
the thing is it has nothing really to do with compare
I would generalize it as:
Yeah, it can be more generalized.
function (callable $callback, callable $select) {
    return function() use ($callback, $select) {
        return call_user_func_array($callback, array_map($select, func_get_args()));
    };
};
function(callable $select, callable $f) {
    return function(...$args) use($select, $f) {
        return $f(...array_map($f, $args));
    };
}
^ Basically the same thing.
17:42
ya
pre-5.6 vs post-5.6 code
map_and_call
I wonder if I can find a similar function in other languages.
It's really "call this function for each parameter and then pass it on".
I'm just not sure why you make a dedicated function for this. I'd really just inline these three lines. Sometimes code just says a million times more than a name…
I intend to ship it (in some form) in PHP 7.
Then I can close so many feature requests as not needed; just use this thing.
mhm…
17:47
if using this thing is the answer, the feature requests are already not needed
uasort($array, $f('strnatcmp', array_key('name')));
uasort($data, function ($a, $b) {
    return strnatcmp($a['name'], $b['name']);
});
Meh, maybe writing it out is better.
It is at least a recognizable, common pattern.
in that particular case
@LeviMorrison yep…
IMO there's no need to abstract that tiny bit away in a function…
17:51
Well, I think the function could be reused several times within a project for various reasons. It's just applying a function to each parameter and then passing the result on to some other function.
I've had to do that from time to time.
@Danack pushed something... if there's a connection/auth failure you'll now get a proper exception on the first yield with something related to Pool.
Not 100% clean yet, but should work now. Also, probably no looping of addConnection() anymore...
@bwoebi Thanks, that appears to work. The error message could do with improving for when the wrong IP address is used Connection went away... unable to fulfil this future as the connection was never made rather than went away. Actually even for when the connection is established 'lost' or 'broken' is clearer than 'went away'.
@Danack well, it lands in the onRead function being called and fread() is at eof. I wondered about this too, but no idea why onRead() is called here…
it looks for me as if connection went away internally.
18:08
Actual working code: 3v4l.org/rcj2F
@Danack so, my only choice is as far as I see to return the generic exception message
Oh my god stop multipinging.
no idea why each tiny change triggers a ping…
because that's how chat works? :P
18:23
@bwoebi onRead will be called if new data is available or connection has been closed by the other side, no idea why.
@kelunik hmm… true… if a port is not open it's nothing else than accepting connection and other side immediately closing it…
@kelunik Because a shut-down socket presents as a readable socket with 0 bytes to read. That's how BSDish sockets work
But I'd prefer if nbsock\Connector would check for this too...
18:42
@bwoebi Then you wouldn't get notified about a broken connection.
@kelunik no, that it should check at init. Assume port not accessible if connection broken before fulfilling Future…
19:14
@LeviMorrison makeMappable or something. It's a function creator
@LeviMorrison So foo(...array_map('bar', $args));?
19:38
@AndreaFaulds Yes, but in callback form (meaning you aren't the one calling foo).
19:57
Morning again
in HTML / CSS / WebDesign , yesterday, by Stephan Muller
[tag:nsfw] Live feed of porn searches people are making
http://mmm.mothermedusa.com.au/
The keywords people use are... original
And scary
@PeeHaa I just read "Sex Warrior Pudding"
Seriously, WTF
Yeap some serious WTFness on there :P
 
1 hour later…
21:23
Why do the array functions (array_pop, current, end etc.) not return by ref :-/
@bwoebi Can you even do that?
@AndreaFaulds do what?
@bwoebi array_pop extracts element, it would not make sense to return by ref
@nikita2206 it does. If the entry in the array is a reference...
@bwoebi Return by-ref. (oh, apparently you can, cool)
21:25
Ohh
Usually the answer is - use objects
end($array);
$key = key($array);
$ref = &$array[$key];
unset($array[$key]);
@bwoebi The answer is probably "because you can't use zpp if you want to return by-ref"
vs… $ref = &array_pop($array); :-/
@AndreaFaulds how is returning related to zpp??!?
@bwoebi zpp gives you a hashtable, not a zval pointer
@AndreaFaulds yes, a HashTable of zval pointers…
and I'd like to have the zval pointer inside the hashtable, without ZVAL_DEREF() applied to it first
21:28
@bwoebi I mean, to return by-ref, you need to keep the zval you were given
Oh wait you're talking about array_pop, I'm dumb.
Hmm
So, with by-ref returns, you have to add & when calling, otherwise it's deref'd? So there'd be no harm in making it return by-ref?
exact
so, I see no reason to make these things not return a reference
I suppose the only problem is that 99% of the time you'd be creating and then immediately destroying an IS_REFERENCE
Oh, wait, I see what you're on about
hmh?
21:35
OK, it makes sense to return by-ref if the element was a reference
exactly (!)
I think you mean exactly :p
if the element wasn't a reference, because it's anyway removed from the array, that doesn't matter.
With the way references work in PHP7, no need to always return by-ref anyway
hm?
21:37
You could just return by-ref if it's a reference, otherwise return normally
yes

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