« first day (1554 days earlier)      last day (3622 days later) » 

00:00
ok autoloading doesnt fix it
The future of PHP:
$ sapi/cli/php -r 'var_dump(json_decode("[10000000000000000000000000000000000]"));'
array(1) {
  [0]=>
  int(10000000000000000000000000000000000)
}
that's over 9000
Even on 32-bit! ^^
@PaulCrovella it is!
@AndreaFaulds how are your bigints coming? :-)
working a lot on them?
OIS
OIS
I've never seen so many zeros before
00:01
@bwoebi Better, especially with weltling's help
@OIS Oh, that's a tiny number.
@AndreaFaulds please print Grahams number :-)
@bwoebi Not enough RAM for that ;)
@AndreaFaulds damn
$ sapi/cli/php -r 'function factorial($x) { return $x === 1 ? 1 : $x * factorial($x - 1); } var_dump(factorial(500));'
int(122013682599111006870123878542304692625357434280319284219241358838584537315388199760549644750220328186301361647714820358416337872207817720048078520515932928547790757193933060377296085908627042917454788242491272634430567017327076946106280231045264421887878946575477714986349436778103764427403382736539747138647787849543848959553753799042324106127132698432774571554630997720278101456108118837370953101635632443298702956389662891165897476957208792692887128178007026517450776841
nice^^
how fast is it? (compared to floats?)
00:04
Python, for reference:
>>> factorial = lambda x: 1 if x == 1 else x * factorial(x - 1)
>>> factorial(500)
12201368259911100687012387854230469262535743428031928421924135883858453731538819976054964475022032818630136164771482035841633787220781772004807852051593292854779075719393306037729608590862704291745478824249127263443056701732707694610628023104526442188787894657547771498634943677810376442740338273653974713864778784954384895955375379904232410612713269843277457155463099772027810145610811883737095310163563244329870295638966289116589747695720879269288712817800702651745077684107196243903943225
@bwoebi Almost certainly a lot, lot slower, since you need to maintain full precision
Lemme see...
php -r 'function factorial($x) { return $x === 1 ? 1 : $x * factorial($x - 1); } var_dump(factorial(500.0));'
Segmentation fault: 11
wtf rly … oh that's your current build
No
That's normal PHP 5.6
The segfault is because you very quickly hit floating-point INF, so it never finishes, I think.
eih
00:06
In PHP 7 it doesn't segfault, but your computer runs out of memory
the issue ist your ===
instead of ==
when you pass a float in
Oh, that's probably it ^^
$ sapi/cli/php -r 'function factorial($x) { return $x == 1 ? 1 : $x * factorial($x - 1); } var_dump(factorial(500.0));'
float(INF)
should it really segfault though?
better^^
@FlorianMargaine Recursion ought not to segfault, and doesn't in PHP 7 (at least for simple cases), but it does in older PHP versions
By the way, if you just needed the first digits, you could use bigints to implement arbitrary-precision floats
Want a 256-bit mantissa? No problem.
00:08
@AndreaFaulds simple means as long a no magic functions or internal calls to the function occur
@bwoebi Yeah
An object cloning itself segfaults :<
It's "not a bug"
@AndreaFaulds it's probably fixable, but not worth it
well, php should never segfault really...
OIS
OIS
shouldn't that be stack overflow not segfault?
@bwoebi Segfaults and other aborts are pretty serious especially for multi-request SAPIs
@OIS Stack overflows can cause segfaults if you don't specifically detect them, I think?
00:11
@AndreaFaulds well. please tell me how we'd fix e.g.:
29
A: Weirdest way to produce a stack overflow

bwoebiPHP A stackoverflow done with looping elements only. $a = array(&$a); while (1) { foreach ($a as &$tmp) { $tmp = array($tmp, &$a); } } Explanation (hover to see the spoiler):

@bwoebi We already have a way to check for recursion in arrays, nApplyCount, used by var_dump etc.
@AndreaFaulds that array isn't recursive
@bwoebi It is, actually, look more carefully
woops, you're right
00:18
$a = array();
for ($i = 0; $i < 1e6; $i++) {
    $a = [$a];
}
unset($a);
@AndreaFaulds But this ...
(if necessary increase your mem limit a bit)
This is not a self-referential structure, just a deeply nested array
OIS
OIS
is this another rebecca movie?
Just click it.
OIS
OIS
yeah...
(it's not Rebecca Black)
00:20
@AndreaFaulds nice. 16384…
@bwoebi 1 << 15 and 1 << 16 get stuck
OIS
OIS
what's with all the 0's at the end?
@OIS that's when the factors end in 5 or 0…
OIS
OIS
ah
The answer isn't wrong, by the way. PHP bigints are consistent with Python's results :)
00:23
:-/
@ircmaxell :-\?
:-DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR
Compile Error: Unexpected T_FROWNY_FACE (:-/) in http://chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/11/php on line 3
@AndreaFaulds prefix that call with time please
@ircmaxell Okay
real	0m8.474s
user	0m8.177s
sys	0m0.082s
And that's with LibTomMath, it's probably faster with GMP
00:27
710998587804863451854045647463724949736497978881168458687447040000000000000
I get this in lisp
really? that fast?
wow
oh wait, wrong number
I had 14 << 1..
@AndreaFaulds and now time python
@NikiC Will do :D
1 << 14 is much much worse.
OIS
OIS
00:29
time it @FlorianMargaine :)
@NikiC RuntimeError: maximum recursion depth exceeded
So you could say Python is a lot faster ;)
OIS
OIS
I thought you said python got the same answer?
@OIS For much smaller numbers. I didn't test this specific one on Python
OIS
OIS
k
@AndreaFaulds can't you set that to a higher number?
00:31
CL-USER> (time (fact (ash 2 14)))
Evaluation took:
  0.547 seconds of real time
  0.552064 seconds of total run time (0.478948 user, 0.073116 system)
  [ Run times consist of 0.138 seconds GC time, and 0.415 seconds non-GC time. ]
  100.91% CPU
  1,418,887,269 processor cycles
  861,578,320 bytes consed
@bwoebi I'll try in a sec
lisp is compiled though, it's not really fair to compare
Also, that's probably an optimised factorial function
CL-USER> (defun fact (x)
	   (if (= x 1)
	       1
	       (* x (fact (- x 1)))))
Anyway, let's see how GMP compares
OIS
OIS
00:32
yeah, does that include compile time? :P
Oh... heh
anyway, as I said, it's not fair because lisp is compiled
Building with --enable-bigint-gmp...
@FlorianMargaine Oh wow
@AndreaFaulds ReckiCT gets the wrong answer in 0.011 seconds
@AndreaFaulds anyway, if you want a comparison pastebin.com/5ThwBrUG
00:35
@ircmaxell :D
static inline long recki_if_test(long var1, int *validReturn) {
    long var8;
    long var7;
    long var6;
    zend_bool var3;
    var3=var1==1;
    if (!var3) { goto label1; }
    *validReturn = SUCCESS;
    return 1;
    label1:
    var6=var1-1;
    var7 = recki_if_test(var6, validReturn);
    if (*validReturn != SUCCESS) {
            return;
    }
    var8=var1*var7;
    *validReturn = SUCCESS;
    return var8;
}
Aha
GMP is a lot faster
OIS
OIS
that doesn't look like the same number?
real	0m0.178s
user	0m0.161s
sys	0m0.010s
00:36
noice
Spent 3.5 hours debugging a method, realizing only later on that the data structure was bad. YAY FOR RELEASE DAY!
LibTomMath isn't really optimised for speed. Also, it's not being compiled with -O3 and -funroll_loops as it probably should be.
I mean, it's not ignorant of performance, but it's written in clean, simple C89 rather than being full of optimised SIMD assembly routines like GMP is
@AndreaFaulds surprised by lisp repl? :P
@FlorianMargaine I hadn't realised it compiled to pure native code
OIS
OIS
00:38
I have a book on clojure here... want to learn it...
Also, GMP can manage beyond 1 << 14. That's probably because it uses a more compact representation
clojure is not the same
@AndreaFaulds want me to try something on lisp?
OIS
OIS
clojure runs in java and of course is a bit different, but afaik can use regular java classes?
@FlorianMargaine You mean Common Lisp
yes
using the sbcl implementation
00:41
I wonder how much faster LibTomMath goes with -O3 -funroll_loops, hmm
CL-USER> (time (fact (ash 2 15)))
Evaluation took:
  1.881 seconds of real time
  1.890217 seconds of total run time (1.877137 user, 0.013080 system)
  [ Run times consist of 0.212 seconds GC time, and 1.679 seconds non-GC time. ]
  100.48% CPU
  4,879,968,522 processor cycles
  3,710,212,208 bytes consed
it handle 1 << 16 too
but crashes on 2 << 16
2 << 16 is 1 << 17
OIS
OIS
ops, its "practical common lisp" not clojure
CL-USER> (time (fact (ash 1 16)))
Evaluation took:
  2.055 seconds of real time
  2.071050 seconds of total run time (1.822334 user, 0.248716 system)
  [ Run times consist of 0.322 seconds GC time, and 1.750 seconds non-GC time. ]
  100.78% CPU
  5,331,455,923 processor cycles
  1 page fault
  3,710,128,000 bytes consed
100.78% of CPU :D
@OIS ah :) that's a good book then :P
Control stack exhausted (no more space for function call frames).
This is probably due to heavily nested or infinitely recursive function
calls, or a tail call that SBCL cannot or has not optimized away.
with 1 << 17 ^
I wonder if I can optimize the function to use TCO...
hmm
Prelude> :set +s
Prelude> product[16384, 16383 .. 1]
1207246711959629373360986450739318394863160529561287608575629387196936928780181990465560552258592074811981315056118371423442345362132228006382172955418340896476688365044810033410244680627606072225654459054530536814127267523341414508945906400415049211416416612527350311059553799064710720446783625634394967773124825999358410153429632030955107770604439039428111625571620465984698858585226004145455112949445337647682240813034750853584493860664609873009542755741706349738407470901374714151019084962317664613407320286938640942405469557011133441635430
00:45
Yay, Haskell ^^
What does :set +s do? Timing?
time and memory benchmarks
45
A: Haskell function execution time

RafalSimplest things is to just do ':set +s' in ghci, and then you can see the execution time of anything you run, along with memory usage.

but this probably is an optimized internal function, no?
oh wow what
why is ghci doing this so slow
Prelude> let factorial 1 = 1
Prelude> let factorial x = x * factorial (x - 1)
Prelude> factorial (2 ** 14)
<freezes>
assuming that the second let didn't override the first, but it shouldn't, right?
Ah
It gobbled endless amounts of memory
See, PHP's request memory limit is a wonderful thing. Do a ridiculously large bigint op, you just get a fatal error
Python and GHC will exhaust ALL of your RAM. And all of your swap. and grind your computer to a halt
You may be able to guess how I know this.
00:51
well, lisp crashes very fast too...
/me observes @AndreaFaulds's box crashing after exhausting all swap
let me try actually compiling it
@ircmaxell Keep System Monitor open
no, I'm doing the optimized product version
guys guys guys. Lisp is the best. Don't try.
00:52
@FlorianMargaine wrong wrong wrong. Wrong wrong wrong wrong. Wrong wrong.
Buffalo buffalo buffalo
Buffalo buffalo, Buffalo buffalo buffalo, buffalo Buffalo buffalo. (American bison from Buffalo NY, that American bison from Buffalo NY bully, bully American bison from Buffalo NY.)
aferrara-macbookair:~ aferrara$ time ./test
1207246711959629373360986450739318394863160529561287608575629387196936928780181990465560552258592074811981315056118371423442345362132228006382172955418340896476688365044810033410244680627606072225654459054530536814127267523341414508945906400415049211416416612527350311059553799064710720446783625634394967773124825999358410153429632030955107770604439039428111625571620465984698858585226004145455112949445337647682240813034750853584493860664609873009542755741706349738407470901374714151019084962317664613407320286938640942405469557011133441635430300432890
all we're timing is the power of our processors, really
$ cat test.hs

main = do
let result = product[16384, 16383 .. 1]
print result
00:56
@FlorianMargaine Nah, we're timing how fast each language's bigint library is ;)
wow, the pattern matching version is SLOW
@AndreaFaulds well, one should do them all then
bah, confounding factors conshmounding factors
if you have an obscure php install: twtsurvey.com/xdebug-max-nesting
5
Hmm, one potential bigints issue: the /(dec|bin|hex|oct){2}/ functions treat signed ints as unsigned
That completely breaks with bigints
There's just no way to support that and bigints
01:10
what do you mean? can you give an example?
@ircmaxell IIRC dechex(-1) is ffffffff on 32-bit
$ php -r 'var_dump(dechex(-1));'
string(16) "ffffffffffffffff"
Though decoding's no issue, I guess:
$ php -r 'var_dump(hexdec("ffffffffffffffff"));'
float(1.844674407371E+19)
Actually, this means it isn't a problem then
We can keep the (ridiculous) dechex behaviour, I just need to add a two's complement conversion function to zend_bigint.h and use it for negative numbers
Also, @AndreaFaulds, anything you don't like in lisp?
@FlorianMargaine Common Lisp? It's not purely functional, very kitchen sink. Lisp in general? Syntax vs. Haskell, say. Though its extreme simplicity is awesome. Easy to implement your own Lisp, I've done it myself :)
@AndreaFaulds so… dechex and hexdec aren't transitive anymore then?
@bwoebi Never have been, is my point, at least not for negative numbers
01:15
Well it's not made to be purely functional...
oh okay
Very kitchen sink compared to what?
@FlorianMargaine Something like Scheme.
But I've never used Common Lisp or Scheme, so... ;)
(When I say lisp, I mean common lisp. Otherwise I just say "lisp dialect" or "a lisp"
Don't do that
Lisp =/= Common Lisp
01:18
Scheme is an academic language tho
Only arrogant Common Lisp programmers mean CL when they say Lisp.
@FlorianMargaine So's Haskell, so's Lisp
@AndreaFaulds no, every LISPer uses lisp to mean common lisp, really...
Common lisp is anything but academic...
@FlorianMargaine No, only Common Lisp people are arrogant enough to do that
@FlorianMargaine I'm not talking about Common Lisp
I'm talking about Lisp
the Lisp
The original Lisp, rather
What's Lisp?
McCarthy's Lisp
01:19
Oh, you mean LISP
Or Lisp.
Yeah, the language dead since 50 years
so.. how is Common Lisp kitchen sink?
@FlorianMargaine it does everything
If there's a bad idea for a Lisp feature, CL probably has it
01:23
ok... I guess I'll just wait for when you'll have a real argument
It's not an argument
Whether you like a language or not doesn't really need rational argument
It's largely about what programming style you prefer etc.
@Ocramius How's that for turnaround time? :D
@AndreaFaulds very nice ;-)
TESTS?!
sure. But when you say things like "it's a kitchen sink", then you're giving reasons for why you don't like it. You have to support these reasons.
01:31
j/k
@Ocramius Pah, this is 5.3, who needs tests?
fair enuff :P
@ircmaxell It's perfect in many ways. Like how simple it is to define it in terms of itself
A Lisp interpreter is possibly the easiest interpreter *(for a useful language) to write
@AndreaFaulds write it from scratch: go
@ircmaxell What, now?
In PHP or in Lisp?
01:34
time's ticking
OK, let's reimplement yolisp
started stopwatch
okay, let's see...
OK, I got quote working
OIS
OIS
what are you coding in?
PHP
Would be quicker in Lisp, but I'm unfamiliar with any Lisp dialect ;)
~~@DaveRandom Why does RedisCache use that Lua script if storing null isn't allowed anyway?~~ Nevermind.
01:47
T w i t t e r T i m e l i n e D e n i a l O f S e r v i c e P r o o f O f C o n c e p t T r i a l T w e e t 2 V e r s i o n 1
:-)
open it in the twitter client :-D
@ircmaxell awesome
@ircmaxell denial failed: too many vertical pixels:
@Ocramius it's pretty effective there too :-P
but we could coordinate :P
well, it's backfiring
my notification screen is denial-of-serviced now too
01:50
heh :P
lol
This is taking longer than I thought
Mostly because debugging is a pain as I have to write an s-expression serialiser etc.
wondering if it can be optimized with multiple line-breaks
20min so far...
01:56
@AndreaFaulds I'm debugging a state-based bug since 4.5 hrs, wanna change seats? :P
@Ocramius I'm cracking up at my timeline, and the replies I'm getting
@ircmaxell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
@ircmaxell You just broke my laptop.
I don't get it
and my favorite
it's just because vertical newlines?
.@ircmaxell y o u s h a l t b e d a m n e d w i t h a n a n n o y i n g d a y s p e n t s c r o l l i n g y o u r o w n f e e d
01:58
@ircmaxell invalid link?
workaround is SO easy too
@FlorianMargaine open them in the twitter website
@ircmaxell I have
max-height and overflow-y: auto;
I just see a long tweet, sure... but that's it
01:58
I guess Luke must be private
is there anything else I should see?
nope, that's it
just HUGE messages
Urgh... turns out that computing SQL values for fields that are derived associations of derived associations of derived associations of entities is a mess
who would have guessed that...
user895378
02:01
lol
user895378
I'm surprised they don't strip vertical newlines
nobody thinks about \v
OK, got quote and eq working
cons, car
hmm
list, cdr
list is of course just a convenience
atom, cond, lambda and label, and you've got a fully functional lisp
Yeah
Now for lambda...
(not as hard as you think)
Actually, label first
02:11
atom and label are not necessary
> You could implement one without the label function, as you could simply functionally compose everything, and obtain recursion through applying the Y-Combinator.

atom could be discarded if you defined the car operation on atoms to return NIL.
Sure, but for convenience
I'll call it let because I want to
you dirty dirty
hmmm, time to pour some bourbon in my tea ;-D
I keep typing cons::cdr(cons::car( when I mean cons::car(cons::cdr( :/
let works
atom just checks something's not a list, right? does nil count?
OK, time to do lambda
I know from experience that defining it usefully requires you to use references in PHP
I only have 9 minutes
I CAN DO THIS
02:27
wait, there was a time limit?
No, but I'd like to do it in < 1 hr
DONE
WORKING LISP IN 57 MINUTES 52 SECONDS!!!!!
What's got two thumbs and access to moderator tools?
Also fairly useless because recursion won't currently work
<-- this guy
Let me see if I can do that in two minutes
02:34
@AndreaFaulds confirmed: you're insane
@FlorianMargaine nah, @ircmaxell set me a challenge, and I've done it before so it was easier ;)
OK, here goes: working recursion, let's see how long this takes (probs > 2 mins but I'll try)
Try factorial with 1 << 14 in your lisp now
@Danack It's extremely tempting to find a couple of things of yours to downvote... you don't even know.
Congrats for the 20k @Danack
20K? nah 10.
02:36
Oh.
Btw @ircmaxell they send swag at 100k...
Dystroy got his swag recently
@rdlowrey So if I am doing ->define('MyClass', [':foo' => $myTypeA, ':bar' => $myTypeB]) I would not do ->share($myTypeA) and ->share($myTypeB) at the same time, right?
user895378
@crypticツ If you share a class instance then ALL occurrences of that class's type will be provisioned with the shared instance until you unshare it.
user895378
I forget the resolution order, though. A specific definition may override the share in that case. I'd have to look.
@AndreaFaulds such a wasted opportunity with that link
user895378
02:41
Nope
@PaulCrovella oh sure, but it's no longer Friday :)
user895378
> If a shared instance exists for the class in question, the shared instance will always be returned
@AndreaFaulds still got 5 hours of friday friday here
@PaulCrovella Ha. You can try if you like. Just look at all the sweet, sweet points I'm getting in Imagick - it's over 2/3s of an upvote per answer - I'd be back in no time.
I'm like
an expert at toy lisp interpreters
I've written three of them now: GG2lisp (incomplete), yolisp (pretty damn complete), this one
I knew how to get recursion working so quickly (it only took me 4:02) because of yolisp. The answer is references.
02:45
that's worthy of putting on business cards
This is a bit of a weirdo lisp fwiw
You'll get an error if you try to make a cons pair that's not a valid list
Could be easily fixed, but still :)
@ircmaxell y u no respond in chat
Specifically, you'd need to remove the typehint on the cons constructor, and make its __toString support the non-abbreviated (a . b) form
because I was away from the computer
:-P
@FlorianMargaine I've gotten swag a few times :-P
Any questions about the implementation details? ^^
@FlorianMargaine first, when I got admin access on their servers :-P
Anyone curious as to why you need to use by-reference assignment to make recursion work?
...aw.
Loops are so... limited
There's a lot of common patterns when using them, which probably shouldn't exist
There should be some sort of construct that does them
For example:
user895378
02:59
@AndreaFaulds I'm interested.
some_loop { if (!first) { $out .= ","; } else { $first = false; } /* ... */ }
@rdlowrey OK, the reason is that you need the function to be in its own scope

« first day (1554 days earlier)      last day (3622 days later) »