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11:00
It doesn't even say snything about technical issues, but rather rants and personal attacks
.@philsturgeon vitriolic nonsense.
it's that ...
I'm disappointed that anyone I know could agree with any of it ... even the sentiment ...
11:16
> This change will require massive amounts of code to be modified for no tangible benefit other than to please the delicate sensibilities of a few minor nonentities.
Sounds like someone poorly architected their codebase in the beginning. I mean, PHP4 is procedural, right. No wonder he's pissed!
it had an incomplete object model
You know what I meant ;)
ThW
ThW
lol "..., and all the OO "improvements" introduced in PHP 5 I dismissed as mere window dressing which I did not need to use."
Eh ...went to Stockpot in the end. The other options were just too shitty
someone's wrong on the internet
11:26
well ... it's not every day you are called a servant ...
@JoeWatkins Uhhh, they do have a point, you know.
user924016
Their current site was build with codeigniter...
The way I see it, PHP will reach the same conclusion as Python.
There would be a PHP7 branch, and a PHP5 branch
I have GD Image Resource and I want to Convert it into Base64...
is this possible ???
And most people will continue to use the PHP5 branch
Because it has old constructors and mysql_query.
user924016
people will leave php5 and let it burn in a bin =]
user924016
all hail php7
Upgrade is a good thing, and I do agree that BC breaks are inevitable and welcome, especially in major versions. But don't expect everyone to welcome the change.
@RonniSkansing They won't.
yeah, I'm not going to argue about stupid shit with people I normally get along with ... it is stupid shit ...
People who are passionate about PHP and can afford the upgrade will upgrade.
People who using PHP is only their job will not.
And the latter is the absolute and overwhelming majority.
user924016
11:35
@SecondRikudo update or die =]
update or die;
reminds me of mysql_connect() or die;
Saw that a hell of a lot when I first started php
@SecondRikudo And people who dabble in PHP for funzies, will get whatever XWMAMPPZ gives them.
We should add a new one "DIAF" for when we want to exit aggressivley.
I have wtf() diaf() in almost all my projects
user924016
btw anyone else watch Always Sunny, I can not wait to see the new episode =] \o|
11:42
or die(); is great in command-line scripts
Fair point - I would actually normally do if (!file_exists('')) { }
Never thought of die in that case
Btw, if anyone uses phpstorm and finds they'd like to minify their js / css really easily, check out asset compressor. Saved me a tonne of time.
oh joy , the next 3 hours will basically be spent on "project management"
Good ol' @tereško reminding us all "It's not so bad"
fail link ^
@SecondRikudo 404
12:18
@SergeyTelshevsky Exactly.
@Fabor well, have I ever explained ho much I hate Basecamp ?
lol. @tereško You deserve better.
@tereško and so do I. It's for hipsters that prefer clickyblingbling over functionality
this company uses it as the primary tool for project management
ehh, I dont even want to talk about it
12:30
^^
@tereško Not sure if it's similar, but Trollo ftw.
@ircmaxell is there a way to use password compat on 5.3.3 even if it's weaker?
@DejanMarjanovic only if you manually modify it
(I have been known to commit that sin in ancient projects)
@DejanMarjanovic You mean Trello?
@tereško All of our JS libraries at work are "enhanced"
@SecondRikudo I prefer Trollo ^^ But yeah.
for some reason I read it as "trollio"
unfortunately, the domain is already registered
12:40
@tereško Still a better love story than creating my own "Security" class. Would appreciate if @ircmaxell gives some pointers on what's the "next best" thing to do.
@tereško Damn you, Kristian
@DejanMarjanovic Yes upgrade your php version :P
@PeeHaa Coming soon in theaters near you :-P Not trivial, something related to puppet shit and AWS.
@DejanMarjanovic you could maybe use PBKDF2 instead ?
@DejanMarjanovic phpass
Was hoping I wouldn't have to change code once it's 5.5, but, meh. Thanks folks.
12:50
@DejanMarjanovic @webfarto stackoverflow.com/questions/12459896/…
> Now, what can you do if you're stuck on a lower version? You could fork the library and adjust $2y$ to $2a$. That will at least get you to work. Passwords generated in this manner will be portable with future versions (the library is designed to be able to verify older crypt() passwords).
@Jimbo Let me just serial upvote you.
Slowly.
13:04
Anyone here knows bash by any chance?
I have a shell script that assigns the result of a curl call to a variable
@PeeHaa I'm pretty sure that that guy is just nuts.....and so people probably ought not to make fun of someone with mental health issues (seriously). It's not that you won't win the argument against them, it's just that no good will come of it...
VARIABLE=$(curl "http://example.com")
@SecondRikudo Okay
Now, I want the entire script to explode if that curl encounters a 500 error
I found that curl --fail will make curl explode on such error
The question is how to I blow up the entire script?
9
A: Shell scripting: die on any error

BarunMay be you could use: $ <any_command> || exit 1

?
13:07
exit(1) ?
@PeeHaa sorta-sorta. I don't think he's saying it well, but I kinda agree with him on BC.
You know what really grind my gears? When people use "u" and "ur" on the internet. I could throw my keybord at the monitor
@ThomasDavidPlat I think that's official in South Africa :-) Or India...
@FlorianMargaine So do I.....I think someone (Hey, I'm someone) ought to write an email to internals. There's obviously a desire by some people to stay on 'legacy' versions of PHP. The current PHP internals teams has no desire, or really the resources, to maintain those legacy versions in the sense of patching security holes. If people do want to keep using them, perhaps they need to form a legacy maintenance group.
u r over reacting @ThomasDavidPlat
13:14
@Danack the thing is, the only solution I see is a fork of php-src tbf.
I'm pretty sure I will go insane if that keeps happening and just start flagging all comments and cv'ing all questions where "you" has been replaced by "u". Like seriously.
@Danack @FlorianMargaine not sure what is different about 5 and 7 vs 4 and 5 ?
@JoeWatkins I wasn't there :D
why should it go differently this time ?
13:16
@FlorianMargaine That's the correct way to do it. A fork and rename to make it clear that it's not maintained by the PHP group any more.
you would save so many forests if you would write 'u' instead of 'you'
and afaik, the problem exists with php4 to 5. Plenty of php4 codebases haven't upgraded, solely because of BC.
@Danack sums up all my interviews for job positions :X
@JoeWatkins I don't care about any particular version, but being forced to upgrade a currently working application if you want to receive security patches is not good. People may no longer have a developer team, instead just having a sysadmin that maintains a running app.
@DejanMarjanovic #!/bin/bash -e thanks
13:19
And the big difference is the reduce lifetime of PHP these days. It's not great having to plan to upgrade an application that hasn't even been finished yet.
@SergeyTelshevsky but is it really worth it? Because everytime someone writes "u" a kitten dies.
well if we're going to take history as our teacher, and I think we should, there will be a slow adoption rate, there might need to be some action to provoke adoption, but there is absolutely no need to maintain a fork of php-src on the 5 branch ... in my opinion trying to fork php-src and maintain 5 with anything less than the resources of internals is only going to do damage in the long run ...
@Danack You should not have to upgrade when you are still working on something. Unless you are reeeeeeally slow
@JoeWatkins "The current PHP internals teams has no desire, or really the resources, to maintain those legacy versions in the sense of patching security holes. If people do want to keep using them, perhaps they need to form a legacy maintenance group."
As in years
13:20
hi
@SecondRikudo @Danack was faster ^^ YW
I hate to say it, but I think Lester is the voice of many...
@ThomasDavidPlat trees are superior to kittens, don't you know that?
php uses re2c for scanning does it use bison for the parser ? i saw the format *.y
@FlorianMargaine Surely you've meant to complete the sentence :-P
13:23
it's worse than that, the vast majority don't have a voice @FlorianMargaine, see Zeev on the scalar hints thread, the vast majority are "under the radar" completely ...
@SergeyTelshevsky I am tempted to flag that as offensive.
hello every one
@Gordon but kittens like trees, they climb trees and stuff, they like to play with documents which are made of trees and such!
we have to guess, we have to guess aided by recent history ... there was no need to maintain a 4 fork and there will be no need for a 5 fork either ...
13:24
@DejanMarjanovic thank you
@Gordon how would kittens live if there were no trees?
@SergeyTelshevsky which proves that trees only exist to serve kittens. so kittens are superior.
kittens > everything
exactly
well, maybe unicorns
Chuck Norris > kittens > everything
13:25
puppies > unicorns = kittens > everything
what about kittycorns?
kittycornpies
@JoeWatkins do you mean that Zeev represents the majority?
Version 5.4 was the current release up until mid-June 2013. It's going end of life 2015/03/01. If you'd started a project in that June , taken 1 year to develop, release and refine a project, it's then only got 6 months before it needs upgrading to continue getting security patches.
Yes, I know upgrading from 5.4 to 5.5 is trivial. That doesn't stop it being a massive pain in the arse for people who didn't need to keep the development team around.
no he's given a good explanation of who he thinks is vocal and who isn't, I agree with it, it seems rather realistic and it has been his business (literally) to know longer than any of us ...
13:28
@Danack It's indeed that painless part I was hinting at
It's more a matter of sysadminning instead of developing
If you wrote sane code in 5.4 it will still work in even "7"
^ just not if you wrote php4 code ...
Making it a sysadmin task
Software needs updates no matter whether it is PHP or VLC
Or any other random piece of software
yep. And having to spend I-don't-know-how-many-thousands-of-dollars to be able to upgrade your php version is not something I like
What have I done? I just kicked of a discussion about the superiority of kittens. The bad about it? It's not even friday.
@FlorianMargaine If your code is sane you don't have to
It's IE6 all over again
13:32
@PeeHaa what's "sane"? This definition changes every 2 years.
No it does not. The code I wrote 2 years ago will work just fine in php "7"
also, no. No matter what the code would be. Taking your VLC comparison, you don't care how ugly your video files are, how "sane" they are, VLC still reads them.
have you actually tested under PHP7 ?
The point that I'm going to try to make to internals is that if people want maintenance of legacy versions of PHP, then they need to pay someone to do it, as the internals team doesn't want to do it for free. And it's be good for everyone if there was a single legacy support team, rather than fragmented efforts everywhere - e.g. Centos will be maintaining 5.3 for quite a while yet.
@JoeWatkins no :P
13:34
I meant @FlorianMargaine actually ... it's a reasonable assumption to assume that you won't need to change anything, but to assume so much has changed that there will be a costly upgrade seems strange ...
Ahhhh... this won't cheer you up @tereško
@Danack Sounds like a perfect opportunity for a business yeah
And one which I want nothing to do with....
@JoeWatkins well, I just looked at the RFCs...
@JoeWatkins ah yes in that case i am 100% agree
13:34
@FlorianMargaine and which ones break your code ?
code I've worked on?
Everything (most?) that is / gets killed was already on its way out. Even 2 years ago
code you are working on now, or are responsible for now ... I assume we're talking about a real problem ?
depends on the month. Sometimes I work on projects that were created yesterday, sometimes I work on projects created 10 years ago.
and this rfc breaks plenty of code I've worked with in the last year: wiki.php.net/rfc/remove_deprecated_functionality_in_php7
so which RFC's are breaking your code ?
which parts of that one (because many votes) ?
13:37
> Frameworks fooled people into thinking a Model is a class ( usually ActiveRecord pattern ) that represent a single item. When in fact the correct DDD term for that would be Entity.
ext/ereg/mysql, of course. preg_replace e modifier, setlocale
at first glance
none of those things are being sprung upon you, in some cases you have known for 6 years, in other cases, a couple of years, in any case you have ~two years from today before it is a good idea to run PHP7 ... I'm not sure why this isn't enough time, for code that is ten years old or code you wrote yesterday ...
@Jimbo wrong. Model === Entity is as wrong as Model === AR
Well, yes, ZF1 did that.
@Gordon I get from that: "the model is a layer", and "a class that represents a single item in DDD are entities"
That's not what it says?
13:41
to be honest, I don't see why removing all this code is a good thing. If the code is marked as deprecated, then it's pretty clear that PHP is not maintaining it. There's no maintenance burden. However, there's a huge cost with removing it.
@Jimbo yes, Model is a or multiple layers
@Gordon Ah, it's badly worded
@FlorianMargaine it's the responsibility of the maintainer to keep users away from unmaintained code, tbh
@Jimbo the last "that" has an ambiguous reference. could refer to Model or item. When referring to item, it's correct
@Ocramius if you say "the code is deprecated", then the user is well aware.
13:43
deprecated was deprecated for a reason, all things deprecated get removed, that's the point of not removing them at once, user's fault he did use it anyway
projects older than 5 years won't migrate to php7 in 90% of cases
they should be able to...
because otherwise they will be using unpatched php versions
now I have to respond to the internals thread on the scalars RFC...
13:44
@SergeyTelshevsky Even projects older then 5 years should still be able to upgrade without much troubles
@JoeWatkins "I'm not sure why this isn't enough time," Because not every company that runs a PHP application is a development house. If a company got someone else to develop a PHP app for them, and it's been running happily along without needing any new dev, they've now got to hire someone to come in, analyze and plan an upgrade.
That last statement is not entirely true btw
@FlorianMargaine There is a burden for quite a few things....even if it's a small one, why should people who give their time for free have to remember not to maintain BC compatibilty?
@Danack you don't need to touch the code...
it's not a maintenance burden
Good morning
13:48
Removing PHP 4 constructors seems like an unfair BC break, to be honest
it's more work to remove them than to keep them actually...
I mean, yeah, PHP 4 constructors cause some WTFs occasionally
But it'll cause a lot of compatibility issues to remove them
Everyone uses namespaces in modern code, so it only really causes problems for quick test cases and such
I think there's possibly a better solution: Add an E_DEPRECATED and move on
Fixes virtually all problems with keeping them around
@FlorianMargaine Just running an set of tests (for example for ereg) is a burden. And no....upgrading ereg extension to PHP7 would be a couple of days work as well. But the main thing is the cognitive load that people have to maintain to make sure they don't break anything accidentally.
@FlorianMargaine no, the user is a moron, ALWAYS.
If you accidentally make a PHP4 constructor? You'll get an error.
You have an existing PHP 4 codebase? It'll still work fine.
13:51
@AndreaFaulds Fixes all errors besides not being able to use a method with that name
@Danack ah, I see what you mean
@PeeHaa But that's only a problem in unnamespaced code anyway
And who cares about WordPress? ;)
@AndreaFaulds Not even wordpress developers care about wordpress right ;)
@PeeHaa Are we sure they're not just trolling PHP developers?
Oh no. I am sure they are :P
13:53
BTW they still didn't respond to my bug report: meta.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/802#content
Oh, the octal string fix and wiki.php.net/rfc/remove_hex_support_in_numeric_strings is also a BC break that has a hidden burden - the burden lying on all the people who encounter that behaviour by accident. Removing it will almost certainly break someone's app - but it's still the right thing to do.
@Danack Yeah
Octals broke quite a bunch of tests
The good thing about them is you can fix most cases with a regex find/replace
@J7mbo I just wish someone would have told before I get in touch with CakePHP like ten years ago :-)
^ In response to what a model isn't :-)
#cakephp
@Gordon Just reminded me, PHPUCEU this year if you get the chance? :-)
Can anyone explain what happens with regard to the array to string conversion - when does it fail and when does it do "Notice: Array to string conversion" ?
because: "$foo = []; echo $foo;" works with a notice, but lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_5_6/ext/intl/collator/collator_create.c#38 fails.
with "expects parameter 1 to be string, array given in" when you call new Collator([])
14:03
make printable zval
which isn't used for parameters
it's only used for string conversion in certain contexts...
Thanks.
@ircmaxell I got a dslr ... and some books, so I can understand ...
@Jimbo I got my tickets right after last year's already so I'm in
14:22
@ircmaxell ugh, why do we have different string conversion methods
PHP 7 improves this a bit, I think we combined some of them
Still bad though
Wait, I think PHP 7 got rid of it, hmm
Yep, PHP 7 got rid of it ^^
14:48
Anyone who uses a framework like Symfony... do you separate your controllers when pluralized? For example: showing a list of all users entities would be EntitiesController, but manipulating a single entity would be the EntityController?
Or do you throw them all in one?
@Jimbo I always only use singular (not using symfony though)
@PeeHaa So EntityController, even if you're loading a page that will list all the entities
yes
I don't have any real reason to do it like that besides "that's what I always do so I stick with it" btw
@AndreaFaulds You going to let the guy that opened that RFC know ?
@Danack Which RFC?
14:53
@PeeHaa I have no consistency so trying to get some
@Jimbo the same as @PeeHaa
steals your consistency
@AndreaFaulds I think that's @Danack's point...
@AndreaFaulds wiki.php.net/rfc/array-to-string - I am unsure about whether this is the same thing...PHPs type juggling is not my strong point.
Also, here's a poll on strict/weak types. So I can see how room 11 thinks ^^
11
@Danack Ah. Uh, no, it doesn't affect that RFC. The internal string conversion function also converts [] to "Array".
14:54
oh, no.
It's a totally different type of array to string altogether.
Is it?
What, specifically, are you referring to?
@Danack Oh, I loved that movie.
pl0x star my poll post above (so people see it and vote)
@Danack What do you think about Auryn auto-casting scalars if it sees an @param int $scalar?
14:56
s/totally/entirely.
@Jimbo sounds evil
We write PHP. We're automatically evil.
:D
(But in a good way)
@Jimbo It'd be cool if something could parse, like, foo(/*int*/ $bar) tho
@AndreaFaulds IP based restrictions are annoying… Couldn't vote.
@AndreaFaulds Yeah, I mean, that'd be crazy!
14:58
@Jimbo I don't know - I'd have to think about it. I think EXPLICIT ALL THE THINGS is good in general - I can see it being a pain in the arse though.
OH
THAT
JOKE
I never got it before
aaaaaaaa
@AndreaFaulds Wait. Can't tell if trolling or not :P
The airplane joke
@Jimbo Having strict type checking is useful between layers of code - but your application config is usually at the edge of the application....so would it be useful there? Or would it just mean that you're having to do a whole load of casting from environment/config variables to int.....
Did someone say string?
15:01
"It's an entirely different kind of flying, altogether".
It's a joke, see
They say, all together, "It's an entirely different kind of flying"
I didn't get it until it was pointed out to me
@Danack Auryn builds my controllers and runs the appropriate methods on those, with all it's typehinting injection. I'm just thinking, with url slugs for example, if /foo/{id} maps to indexAction($id); and I put @param int $id in the docblock, the slug will have been (int)d before it
So I'll definitely get an int. Same goes for string, bool
@Jimbo That sounds like something the router could do
Like
/foo/{id:int}
It could even reject the id if it wasn't int-shaped, then
so /foo/apple would be invalid but /foo/12345 would be just dandy
But /foo/apple would be indexAction(0);
@AndreaFaulds I think the silex router does reject if the requirements var for the route has \d, for example, and it's a string not a number. But, if it goes through, I'm not sure it's actually converted to an int
@nikita2206 If you're just blindly casting, yeah :(
I suppose this is a use-case for per-file strict hints:
15:06
posted on January 15, 2015 by kbironneau

/* by 3bola */

function route() {
    // do stuff
    // ...
    declare(strict_typehints=FALSE) {
        $controller(...$params);
    }
    // ...
}
Not sure if that's horrible or wonderful :p
@Jimbo having it in the router sounds more sensible.....I was going to say for general config stuff, you always know what type something should be, and config variables almost never change type - e.g. a port number to connect to redis on will always be an int, so if you're doing something like $injector->defineParam('redisPort', $foo), you should always be able to do $injector->defineParam('redisPort', intval($foo))...or even delegate it to something that checks the value is acceptable.
Having it done in Auryn would kind of defeat the purpose of having strict types that you have to be explicit about.
But would be handy.
@Danack I see, it was just an idea off the top of my head as I was working with it right now :-)
2 hours ago, by Danack
@PeeHaa I'm pretty sure that that guy is just nuts.....and so people probably ought not to make fun of someone with mental health issues (seriously). It's not that you won't win the argument against them, it's just that no good will come of it...
15:15
haha
I mean, awww
@JoeWatkins why did you change github.com/krakjoe/strict to casting?
@JoeWatkins nice :-D
You're possibly writing nice code if you can pluck out a directory containing a component you wrote and bang it straight on github as OSS :-)
@iroegbu I think he forgot that epoch upgrades are always slow on the uptake. They contain new things, don't do things the "old" way and scare people silly
@Machavity "i don't know php or the inner workings of drupal" :x
15:31
It took a concerted effort by most projects using PHP to agree to support 5 fully before it went mainstream (which is why so many Wordpress installs still run on 5.2)
Then there's still the crazy mentality of people who think that "older software = more stable"
@Machavity well, seeing how it's trendy to break BC every year these days... I kinda get it.
@Machavity that's not Tony's problem... He just wants consistency
> There are known knowns. These are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that we know we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we don't know we don't know.
Even if it's the same or less stable, having known issues is far preferable to surprising issues.
user924016
15:35
lol
@Danack And there's unknown knowns if you're a bit special.
user924016
"Instead of being competent professionals they give the appearance of being bungling amateurs who have very little understanding of the background, history and usage of PHP" ... wow hehehe ..
Yep, or there's 'imaginary knowns'....
Does anyone know of a place in PHP src where an exception is thrown inside a class constructor with an error message about the parameters being wrong? I'm trying to fix something and I think I need an example of that.
@tereško not practical
@Danack PDO? DateTime maybe?
Danack: zend_replace_error_handling(EH_THROW, ...) before zend_parse_parameters? Sounds pretty common...
15:42
@JoeWatkins what camera did you get?
@m6w6 thanks - that looks like it.
@AndreaFaulds they don't seem to....they have exception on the values being wrong, but not on being the wrong types...
@Danack Why do you need to test wrong types?
Hmm, a PHP array could represent an HTML element pretty well: <a href="/foo" download>yay</a> -> ['a', 'href' => '/foo', 'download', ['yay']]
@AndreaFaulds Currently if you do new Collator([]); it gives a warning....and returns null.
@Danack That's PHP's usual behaviour on incorrect types :(
But that's horrific....
15:45
(Something the Scalar Type Hints RFC would solve ;)
Common practice in php-src is to throw exceptions in constuctors on failure
Oh?
Didn't realise we did something different for constructors
@m6w6 It seems to have changed.....It's present in a lot of ext directories, but not all...
@Danack: probably not a change but an oversight.
After calling zend_replace_error_handling would I need to reset it to whatever it was before?
thanks.
btw "phpog" - I read that as 'PHP original gangster'.
A Page contains many Elements. If you've hit the PageController and you're viewing it's contents, which includes it's elements, and you're going to POST to add a new Element to it, does the method for this go in the PageController, or in the ElementController?
I never know
I'd argue Page, but then element creation happens on the page side not the element side
I'd make it on the Page as well if there's no way to create an Element which doesn't belong to any Page
If the correct RFC for scalar hints fails, I might actually make one that's just strict
There is a fairly good argument for it
Why add weak hints? PHP is weakly-typed, they're unnecessary except for documentation, no?
But I'm not sure.

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