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19:00
they do have inherent overhead, just not to runtime (aside from cache effects)
void* memcpy(void* region1, const void* region2, size_t n) {
    /* ... */
}

//vs

template <typename InputIterator, typename OutputIterator>
OutputIterator
copy(InputIterator first, InputIterator last, OutputIterator result) {
    /*...*/
}
Oh sure, templates usually have some intelligence overhead on the declaration side
They have identical runtime performance, except that if you use copy() on multiple types you have memory implications whereas memcpy() always uses the same code
@NikiC no, I'm more talking memory overhead in the binary
@ircmaxell That's very oversimplified
@NikiC extremely so
@NikiC so is "they are zero-cost"
It's a terrible example really, because memcpy is specially optimized by the compiler
Also, the compiler is well capable of folding template instantiations
19:04
I just don't buy the generic statement "zero-cost". At least in most contexts. Yes, it's very much a different scale of cost from generics or virtual methods, but there's still cost in many cases
Do you guys think a talk on Composition and Inheritance would get accepted for PNWPHP? I'd walk through a few common scenarios where composition is the correct tool but I routinely see inheritance used.
I have one good talk submitted and I really need another talk to submit by tomorrow.
I want to talk about inheritance in some way shape or form because I see it misused all the time.
@ircmaxell Yes, I agree that any statement can be subjected to lawyering.
@LeviMorrison I'd LOVE to hear a talk on that
@NikiC I think it's more than just lawyering tho
if you think so
@LeviMorrison would listen to/10
19:18
@NikiC Eh, I'm not sure that is abstraction but it's definitely code reuse.
You're saying that templates are not a form of abstraction?
They are a form of parameterization.
Generally speaking abstraction is a complexity management tool -- that's not typically what templates in C++ are.
(At least in my experience)
I'd say that something like unique_ptr is quite an abstraction
And has pretty little to do with code reuse and is much more a conceptual thing
@JoeWatkins you didn't link to the podcast!!! Why not!?!?!?
And is apart from some technicalities zero-cost
19:29
@NikiC That's the idea of ownership, not abstraction.
I guess we have totally different understandings of what abstraction is then
It may even increase complexity.
What is the abstraction in the case of unique_ptr?
And specifically what complexity is it hiding?
It abstracts the concept of unique ownership of a resource ...
What do you think about that ^ @ircmaxell ?
> Abstraction in its main sense is a conceptual process by which general rules and concepts are derived from the usage and classification of specific examples, literal ("real" or "concrete") signifiers, first principles, or other methods. "An abstraction" is the product of this process—a concept that acts as a super-categorical noun for all subordinate concepts, and connects any related concepts as a group, field, or category.[1] -- Wiki
I don't think the words "abstraction" and "complexity" are pretty orthogonal. Abstraction very often increases complexity
19:32
@NikiC From where?
it's definitely a form of abstraction.
@NikiC abstraction always increases global complexity. However, it usually decreases local complexity (which is why we use it)
I think we are working off of different definitions.
@ircmaxell Yup
Abstraction in its main sense is a conceptual process by which general rules and concepts are derived from the usage and classification of specific examples <- I think that defines the process at which you create abstractions (generalizing concepts and rules) I don't think that gives a great definition of what abstraction is though
19:38
In any case, C++'s templates are freakin' sweet.
example: generics and templates give a form of abstraction, specifically type abstraction. And that's awesome, but also only a part of the concept of abstractions (there also exist implementation abstractions which require polymorphic dispatch of some sort)
Templates in data-structures rely on type abstraction.
@ircmaxell Why do you say that implementation abstractions require polymorphic dispatch?
That wasn't the viewpoint I was looking from but I'll cede that.
@ircmaxell the problem just is, that with too much abstraction the global complexity is just out of control.
19:42
@NikiC "of some sort" Meaning that you can swap the implementation externally from the code, otherwise you're not really abstracting but extracting
@bwoebi everything is a tradeoff
even your tradeoffs have tradeoffs
yes. Just people often push it too far…
@ircmaxell Why do you mean by swap "externally"?
@bwoebi Depends. A software architect can live at the top and worry about that level, senior developers can live in the level of a package or subpackage, and junior developers can worry about specific parts of specific packages.
@NikiC function pointer, something like that
Nobody keeps the whole thing in their head.
That's the point.
19:44
at least for a certain type of abstraction
But if you have projects where you need the whole thing in your head that can be an issue, yeah.
@LeviMorrison some would argue that's a trivial project then
For instance, the Zend Engine should probably not be heavily abstracted because a lot of different people need to fit the whole thing into their head.
@LeviMorrison Except that it doesn't work. At some level everything needs to interconnect and there are various dependencies in between. That'd be ideal, but it just doesn't work.
@bwoebi I think you just haven't personally worked on a successful large project then.
19:45
@bwoebi as long as dependencies communicate at the same "level" of abstraction, that's fine
That's the only way that large, critical software projects can succeed.
you get into hell when they talk at multiple levels of abstractions
What is a "level of abstraction"?
So imagine laying out every class/function in your project
you can draw lines around collections of these classes/functions
if every line has the usages crossing in the same direction, each line creates a new abstraction
For example, you can decompose a program into different sections by granularity. At the highest level you have multiple packages working together. Within a package you have multiple classes and functions working together, etc. Each one lives at a different level.
19:47
^^ that's a better way of saying it
your high level application shouldn't know about a filesystem. All it should know about is domain objects. The filesystem is a lower level abstraction.
I'd love to talk more with you guys about it because I think this is interesting but I need to get back to work now :)
@LeviMorrison :-D
@ircmaxell Except when the abstraction becomes leaky...
@bwoebi of course. And all abstraction is leaky. But that doesn't mean it isn't useful
have you driven a car? (not an age question, but a location one, many here in NYC have never driven a car before)
yes
19:50
the steering wheel, accelerator and brake pedals are abstractions of far more complicated processes. But all 3 leak heavily if you are driving too fast, it's raining outside, etc
that doesn't make them extremely useful abstractions, it just means that they have limits (indeed, all abstractions do)
The point of abstractions is to provide limits around a certain operation.
the point of them is so you don't need to care about the underlying implementation (and in many cases, details can be changed to the implementaiton with no changes required at the level of abstraction).
My point is just, that you sometimes need to go below. Abstractions heavily depend on their concrete implementation. On the architectural level, you don't. But on the implementation level there are many factors which play in (like performance characteristics etc.)
(performance maybe not being the best example … but generally factors which influence the whole environment)
@ircmaxell Abstractions are fine for simple things. But like your example with brake pedals… You need to be able to know how much you need to push them. And depending on various factors they are more or less effective.
In that case you still need to know how the concrete works based on the factors. You can't define that at abstraction level.
Or am I wrong here?
Obligatory Joel
@NikiC I've read that article long ago (it's where I've got the term "leaky abstraction" from)… but maybe I misunderstood something about this.
I just wonder how well that works in terms of large software projects.
20:04
@bwoebi which is why we say abstractions leak. Again, that doesn't mean they aren't useful
especially when talking performance, most times the cost of the abstraction is outweighed by the benefits of it
especially when talking about large scale projects with more than a few developers working on it
I nowhere said they're not useful. Just that I can't imagine perfect abstractions working well with lines that can't be crossed.
You always need interdependencies which aren't only at top-level ?
that's when they are most useful. In fact, that's the entire point of architecture and design (making those lines, and choosing where they go effectively). That doesn't mean you don't move them from time to time (especially when you get evidence that an abstraction is bad)
@bwoebi I didn't say they must communicate at the top level, I said they must communicate at the same level for a particular abstraction
@NikiC you maybe want to use ZEND_STRL() in the list of reserved class names
lol, ZEND_STRL is one of those bad abstractions :D
20:15
@NikiC what ordering did you use for that list?
@NikiC It really saved me more than once from dumb errors… (like correctly typed first time, wrongly second time…)
@ircmaxell looks alphabetically ordered?
@ircmaxell it's supposed to be alphabetical, but I may not know the alphabet
/me is an idiot
nevermind
Guys :D Quick question , does anyone here ever used Objective c / swift with PHP?
@NikiC like typing one char too much in sizeof, passing it into zend_str_hash_add() and wondering why I can't access it later … that damn \0 byte then…
20:21
@bwoebi okay, will use it
And that macro definitely isn't an abstraction, it's just an utility macro.
@bwoebi yeah ^^ was just referring to the fact that it can bite you if you try to use it in a macro ^^
is that a no guys? :X
@NikiC I already was bitten :-D
things working fine on a random linux and breaking on OS X… hrmpf!
20:30
/me anyway usually has at least 2 simultaneous connections open to a certain server… No need for exiting tail. Also, doesn't less strip content off when it reaches top of screen? … With tail we can just scroll up in Terminal?
no, because you can switch back to viewing mode without losing following mode
With stripping content off I meant that it's not viewable in terminal backlog (when scrolling up on the scrollbar)
yes
at least I believe so
so, there's not really an advantage to tail -f. It's much more comfortable to scroll with two fingers instead of with keyboard… (but that's probably personal preference.)
that misses the point of the article, but whatever
20:37
see less -X
I usually have LESS=-SRFX
@bwoebi sure, scrolling back to the line you're looking for is much more efficient than /string
less does not strip off content. more is doing that
Hmm, for watching multiple files I bet you can be happier with tmux/screen, split term and less +F. But I don't do it often enough to supply the full command.
@ircmaxell yeah, true. Sorry for that.
@bwoebi scrolling with shift up/down is faster and more intuitive and accurate - if you have some practice. I disable the scrollbars completely in terminals. Doing this you have more space.
20:45
@hek2mgl having OS X scrollbar ;-) (aka automatically fading out)
svn commit -m "Between 00:00:01 and 23:59:59 Pacific on April 1 2015, 2% of all editor pageviews have a chance to load a CSS filter that will change the hue of the entire page by up to 25 degrees in either direction."
@bwoebi Wouldn't like that automatically fading out ...
I love April Fool pranks. Especially subtle, reality-questioning ones.
@hek2mgl these things you just need to be used to.
20:46
@bwoebi You should try the blur effect in terminals that comes with compiz together with tail -f.. It will drive you crazy!!! :)
@Charles Hehe… I once turned all the images upside-down via CSS (there were enough images…)
I need to find a hour in the next 36 hours to implement my prank :-)
@ircmaxell Nice
@bwoebi I did that once for the entire login menu. User reaction wasn't pleasant.
One year we randomly pulled in ie6ify and ran a few iterations of it on certain pageloads. A few specific users freaked out because the pages looked different...
It was glorious.
@TomášAresakMalčánek tnx :P
@Charles lol
20:50
@DaveRandom tnx :D
@Charles I love that you can iterate it :-D
@ircmaxell After ten or so iterations, any page will be totally incorrect. I think we limited it to three or four, we didn't want to risk actually making the system unusable.
Hello
Does anyone, used Coldfusion?
As in the technology used in the 90s? :P
yeah
20:54
neh
Can we filter a result set with a query i
$q1 = "select * from employees";
$r1 = mysqli_query($con, $q1);
can we extend our sql limitation and over rule to $r1
I mean like filtering again..
like
$r1 --- sometign -- "sql query again"
Why would you?
so that i do not want to filter out in main query
Why?
and I curious to know, is that feature available in php or not
thats it.
20:58
Why?
just curious
nothing serious
Well technically you could filter afterwards using php, but without specifics I'm going to have to say 42
42??
yes 42
what 42?
Anonymous
21:00
@Rafee just 42
42 (forty-two) is the natural number immediately following 41 and directly preceding 43. The number has received considerable attention in popular culture as a result of its central appearance in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy as the "Answer to The Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything". == Mathematics == Forty-two is a pronic number and an abundant number; its prime factorization 2 · 3 · 7 makes it the second sphenic number and also the second of the form { 2 · 3 · r }. As with all sphenic numbers of this form, the aliquot sum is abundant by 12. 42 is also the sec...
hmm
Anonymous
the first sentence is funny as hell
true
Anonymous
@Rafee did you try it?
21:05
@Rafee, to give you a serious answer, the common pattern in PHP is to modify the query to include the requested filter, not to filter after the query has been made. In fact, doing that is an anti-pattern. If you don't want to edit the SQL yourself, consider a query builder.
Anonymous
has anyone tried vldPersonals?
Anonymous
V2.7.1
@Charles What if i want filter the result set $r1
because, coldfusion has this feature.
Anonymous
I have 700 instances of the $_GET variable across 408 php files. Very vulnerable to xss attacks, thankfully there is a one entry/dispatch point. How can I sanitize all get variables, or make other get variables an instance of one $_GET variable?
1. Do it manually, using editor 'replace all'
2. does it have common class method, where it gets sanitize
Anonymous
21:15
@Rafee not possible, they are encapsulated with isset and other functions.
and make sure with these type of fileds fieldname[]
its makes up to array in php
oh i see
dont worry about isset
is that other function common to all $_GET
Anonymous
there is no function, the get variables fetch different values, so no replace all method
Hi there. I'm trying to install a composer package from github and it gives me the follow code "torann/geoip": "0.2.*@dev"
I input this into the composer.json file under the scripts array and ran composer install and it returned that there was nothing to install or update. Anyone know what I'm doing wrong? XD
Anonymous
Maybe you are using the latest version already
@PeeHaa: Was it the 26th with your birthday? A happy one anyway :)
Anonymous
21:25
Try 0.2.0 @Purify
It's not always 42, some answers are equally universal. Here my last one on how to import XML into a Mysql database with PHP: stackoverflow.com/a/29356498/367456
hrhr
@NikiC random idea for php7 i just had - not sure it's worth
class A { protected function x(){} }
class B extends A { public function x() { return parent::x(); } } // i just want to change visibility
class B extends A { public function x(); } // no method body, just visibility change, no function call overhead
@sam_io Should I be putting it under 'scripts' or 'require'?
@Worf Only in direction more visible or also to limit access?
well, you can't limit access public -> protected
if that's what you mean
@Purify it belongs into require (or require-dev) and you don't need to edit the file by hand, the command has a command to add your requirements.
maybe with traits you can redefine public to protected
hi
buenas dias @taco
Anonymous
@Purify actually use 2.1.1
21:30
baguette
with cheese :)
@Worf don't tell me this works to override interfaces .... .
?
interfaces are public only
First time I see HHVM make it right, PHP somewhat fails: 3v4l.org/0GUWQ
So now how you can make the interface public methods invisible. Congrats PHP :)
@hakre yeah tnx :)
@hakre go for it and fix PHP :-P
21:36
@hakre that's a fail, yeah
@ircmaxell It's not too bad, 5.4.0 - 5.4.10 had it right :)
Looks more like a regression.
Makes me wonder who broke it :)
5.4.11, what did you do?
Perhaps most easy to find where the error message was given originally and why it ain't be given any longer?
And it's less interesting who but more why it was changed.
@ircmaxell And my C is practically non-existent. I'm only good in finding bugs. It's a mess at work, too. My team hates me. And project management is getting pretty picky at tasking me.
@hakre A traits bug, you don't say
@hakre Hence looking at 5.4.11 :)
21:42
There was a major refactor of the traits implementation somewhere in the middle of PHP 5.4, maybe that was it
^ That commit :)
(I don't know that it is the issue, but it's a major trait refactor that was included in 5.4.11)
The check is still there, it just seems it isn't being triggered: lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/zend_inheritance.c#543
@NikiC Yes, I don't say it's a trait bug. It's an interface bug :P
Was 5.4.11 a special release? And since when is backwards compat broken that easily?
@hakre Let me rephrase that: It involves traits, of course it's buggy.
@NikiC I was not aware of that trait of traits. :)
@hakre Apparently there wasn't a test suite for it :)
user1804599
21:50
Does @ silence exceptions?
user1804599
I'm puzzled by some code that uses @ all over the place.
@райтфолд no
user1804599
That explains a lot.
@райтфолд It silences errors, and in some cases errors could be turned into exceptions, by a custom error handler.
@hakre So do you use Ardent?
You commented on some issues earlier.
21:52
@LeviMorrison Not yet, but I'm reviewing it.
Okay. Why?
For use?
Yeah. Why are you interested?
I'm also considering it because of some iterators
I feel it's missing some basic library with iterators and perhaps those structures.
You feel what is missing some basic library with iterators?
21:54
Yeah some nice iterators.
Which iterators are you interested in?
all. but also on library design.
If you choose to use it know that it's pre-alpha software. I will (and do) break it from time to time.
you had that issue about IteratorAggregate vs. Iterator implementation. An interesting topic.
@LeviMorrison yes, I've seen you've been writing that.
the stable LTS version has to support PHP 5.3 anyway :P
It's a topic I care a lot about.
21:57
uh PHP 7. One of my dev boxes is still WIN XP. Now that's what I call a masochist.
Have you ever considered to aim for a stable release?
Perhaps starting with a very minimal design?
@hakre Every time I work on it I consider what needs to be done.
Well one point is to gain market share.
I don't care about market share until I have a design I'm happy with :)
21:59
I'm sure you've seen NikiC's Iter lib?

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