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00:00 - 22:0022:00 - 00:00

00:01
woof, a looping recursive database query
And I can see why they are totally usable to a java programmer, but I don't think that's justification for the means in which it is implemented in PHP.
I agree with @Anfurny...moreover, I'd rather they didn't do magic functionality in comments, official or not.
A bit of a strange question....how do I tell PHP to open any kind of file except local ones? Something like: file_get_contents(my_filter($uri))
Yes, I'd like it in the core actually. Just to ensure that it gets OUT of comments asap.
Then again....it might not be a feature well placed in the core...perhaps they should generalize the functionality?
What do you mean?
00:11
@Anfurny Well, it's unfair to modify the core to work with one specific 3rd party product... It would be better to have functionality to cater for this product as well as any other one...make it flexible, in short.
eih, I don't see a huge issue with it. We use comments to influence development-time behavior. So what's the big deal with influencing test-time behavior? If it influenced run-time behavior, sure. But as-is it's actually fairly straight forward, considering the types of annotations involved. And actually, I think it's actually good in a way, since it self documents the message. Meaning that the same thing that tells phpunit what to expect tells the reader where they would expect to see it
and to be honest, I think it's a heck of a lot more readable than javas version...
Well it does influence runtime behavior in ZF
for one.
@Anfurny I was mainly talking about PHPUnit's use
@Anfurny Btw what does it do in ZF?
Good (morning?) Anthony. :) Wait... it is morning here anyway :)
00:15
IIRC it stores necessary parameters for an RpcServer in a docblock
I know Doctrine (IIRC) uses it for their ORM type layer. And Symfony uses it for their dependency injection system. I'm not saying those are good, but uses of it can be good...
Even for dev time behavior I disagree with it strongly.
@Anfurny you never use @-style doc block elements (javadoc)?
Because here's the thing, it may be freaking obvious and take 1 second to learn if you come about it in the right circumstance and have a java background.
This reminds me of Wordpress reading plugin/theme metadata from the source file's topmost comment...
00:16
I've used block comments, but always with the understanding it was written for 1) the reader and 2) software that automatically generates comments
It's done badly (imho) but at least, it's only metadata (copyright, version, license, author...).
Imagine this, imagine in programming language Z which you have never used, but is super popular among some people, variable names themselves influence functionality.
So in my framework, I decide that I'll make $ageInt do some special magic
and it's in the online documentation somewhere, of course.
I'd argue that @param, @return, @see, @throws, @deprecated, @internal, etc all effect dev-time... And they are all in documentation
But if you look at my source, you could literally be stymied for hours as to hour $ageInt + $ageInt is becoming a different data type
in PHP's documentation?
@Anfurny I was talking about developers when I said dev-time. Meaning when it or other code that uses it are being developed
not the runtime
00:19
Okay
so what if I did the exact same thing, but for unit tests
I had AlexTest
AssertTrue($ageInt + $ageInt === "seventeen"); // or whatever
You would rightly be pissed I think.
Also, none of this was in the Zend official PHP 5.3 certification that I remember.
it's cause it's not PHP
it's a meta-language built on top of it.
That's a good point. It's NOT php.
sort-of like Macros. You're not programming C when you write a macro, but a meta-language that tells C what to do. Similar concept here
why didn't they do both of this stuff in comments?
but it's in the source-code, where PHP's comments are supposed to exist. Without deliniation in anyway saying "THIS IS NO LONGER A PHP COMMENT IT's special!"
Except if C macros were in comments that would piss me off too.
00:22
@Anfurny Have you ever used C?
Yes
something like: #DEFINE myMacro(x): x+x
And you think this comment thing is worse than macros in terms of readability and intuitiveness? oO
@ircmaxell Two wrongs doesn't make one right ;)
I do think it's worse.
Because at least the explanation for the functionality of the source-code exists within the document itself.
@Anfurny well, then there's no point continuing this conversation then...
00:25
I don't follow that, but that's fine.
just meaning that we're going to go around in meaningless circles at this point...
Why's that?
@Anfurny Some guys would rather stop Reason at the front gate....I suppose...
With that, I run off while I'm still in time XD g'night chaps.
Goodnight
00:49
Ahoy folks
Good night everyone!
Could anyone tell me saving session id with in what customer made registration and assigning it to him during registration would count as a possible cookie identifier for later usage. i.e. user left site, but didn't sign out and closed browser. Later when him comes back to site I check if cookie is set and if his last state was signed in. If everything validates, then I sign him in automatically. Would be a very bad logic?
01:11
@Eugene What if he left his pc on and someone else uses his computer
This is the question I was counting on. What if someone else would start using pc in his absence. Due to this dillema I asked about it here. But there should be, that possibility. Maybe request only a password like hotmail and offer to sign out if this is some one else?
But I hope I can make original idea work, maybe with some additional validation, but which can made automatically without interacting with user.
@Eugene face recognition maybe? :P
@HoeHoeHoe Yeah, right. Thought about it. What if user doesn't have a webcam. Solution please stick your face into screen and wait few moments.
01:32
But if to think seriously about it, would be great to hear suggestions. For now I'm out. Good night. Hope tommorow there would be some ideas on that topic.
02:00
I was asking before; as far as PCRE named backreferences go, what are the allowable characters? So far as I can figure, its [a-z0-9_]+, but I can't find anything definitive.
You can't escape reserved characters (or use them unescaped for that matter) in group names, such as (?<foo.bar>pattern) or (?<foo\.bar>pattern)
And it doesnt appear that non-reserved non-alphanumeric/underscore characters are allowed; trial and error, but again, couldn't find anything definitive in the perl docs, or elsewhere.
 
2 hours later…
03:50
posted on January 15, 2012 by Larry Garfield

As Drupal is in the process of considering how to restructure code to best leverage the PSR-0 standard, I figured it would be wise to take a quick survey of how some other major projects organize their code bases. This is not a complete rundown of every project, simply roughly comparable notes for those areas Drupal is currently discussing. I am posting it here in the hopes that it will be us

04:14
hey there
04:27
@edorian Thank you so much for your answer; it helped me very much!
You can find the final implementation on smartbuytablets.com. Let me know what you think about it.
If you look in the right-hand corner of the tablet, you'll see your local time there.
For those of you who have no idea what I'm talking about:
Dec 29 '11 at 23:42, by daviesgeek
How do I get someone's local time and display it?
Edorian helped me with it.
@daviesgeek It seems to be off by an hour and a half for me. I do come from a weird time zone that is offset by half an hour. We also have daylight savings for an hour.
It should work for most time zones though
cool interface - nice work on that
 
1 hour later…
05:38
@Paul How easy was it to use the interface? Did you figure out that the tablet buttons work?
@Paul I didn't actually design it, but I implemented some of the design.
@daviesgeek Yes, initially i noticed that they were buttons, by hovering over them. I just tried and everything seems to work well. The only issue I have is in the menu. It hovers open until I get as far down as the operating system. So I couldn't search by operating system. (Linux, Firefox 9)
Nathan Bunney did much of it.
The design I mean.
@Paul It isn't a finished design.
Actually, if I go down the very right edge of the menu I can get to the operating system bits of the menu.
That is one of the main things we need to fix.
Thats very minor.
05:46
Yeah, I don't quite have the expertise to get that to work; Mr. Bunney will need to take care of that...
I don't have the JS knowledge
It isn' too bad
Hey gotta get to bed. I appreciate you taking time to take a look and give some feedback.
No worries, goodnight
 
3 hours later…
08:22
hey guys
user680786
Good morning/evening, gentlemens
08:37
So, PHP.net going to go dark as well? - svn.php.net/viewvc/web/php/trunk/index-sopa.php?view=log
Guys, I'm using IIS 7 server. Can't figure out which one of php is for me: thread safe or non?
user680786
09:21
@TuralTeyyuboglu Use GNU/Linux, Luke.
@OZ I'm on windows
good morning mistress
i have installed eclipse with PDT for PHP development. I have installed Web tools plugin also. But i am not getting CSS code hints.... Which plugins should I install for CSS and JavaScript Development.
@hakre hey
Do anyone test php 5.3.9 with xdebug on windows platform?
I can't get itr work
@TuralTeyyuboglu I've used it with 5.2. It's easy enough to get going
09:34
Your question has the answer in itself, at least partly.
The answer is: "You".
@hakre mistress? o.O
I said, I can't get it work))
@TuralTeyyuboglu read this. Step by step guide - devzone.zend.com/1120/introducing-xdebug
There are three parameters in your test: You, PHP 5.3.9 and xdebug.
@JohnP thx very much
@hakre ok hakre, ok
09:37
Generally xdebug works to the extend documented on the homepage. You need to pick the right version for your PHP version. On windows that means you need to pick the compatible binary as most windows users do not compile their PHP and Xdebug extension
When you write it does not work, I would at first assume you've picked the wrong xdebug binary.
At least that is most often the case if your PHP version works w/o Xdebug.
I installed 5.3.9 nts
version of php
32 or 64 bit?
then installed xdebug
Which compiler?
both 32 bit
fast-cgi
09:39
Stop, first clarify your PHP version only.
32 bit
okay, which compiler was used to create that PHP binary?
I downloaded windows binary files
09:40
sure, PHP 32bit, NTS in binary form.
not source code
yep
Which compiler was used to create that binary you're using?
vc9
downloaded from here windows.php.net/download
Installer .exe
okay. after this has been clarified, which Xdebug version did you choose?
latest
2.1.2
downloaded dll file
to ext dir of php folder
zen made changes in php.ini
added followings
zend_extension = "C:\Program Files (x86)\PHP\ext\php_xdebug-2.1.2-5.3-vc9-nts.dll"
xdebug.profiler_enable = On
xdebug.profiler_output_dir = C:\Windows\temp
xdebug.show_local_vars=On
xdebug.dump_globals=On
xdebug.collect_params=4
09:45
windows sucks
And what is your problem?
hi hakre
hi Paul
Are you unsure if you donwloaded the right Xdebug dll?
ok. it worked
huzzah!
09:47
xdebug.dump.SERVER=HTTP_HOST, SERVER_NAME what does it mean?
Those super globals will be shown whenever you run across an error
it's usually a good idea to have POST and GET in there
@JohnP I added these lines to php.ini
zend_extension = "C:\Program Files (x86)\PHP\ext\php_xdebug-2.1.2-5.3-vc9-nts.dll"
xdebug.profiler_enable = On
xdebug.profiler_output_dir = C:\Windows\temp
xdebug.show_local_vars=On
xdebug.dump_globals=On
xdebug.show_exception_trace=On
xdebug.collect_params=4
xdebug.dump.SERVER=HTTP_HOST, SERVER_NAME
anything else?
there's a setting you might want to tweak in case you work on a lot of recursive functions
also, if you want to do profiling, download wincachegrind and the switch on the log generation with xdebug
Good morning
09:56
greetings
Quick Question, are multibyte strings valid in namespaces and class names? I'm writing an autoloader. I'm guessing I don't need to use the mb_ string functions?
apparently classnames have these sorts of characters [a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff] so they should be ok right? I can't find out anything about namespaces though.
@Paul Good question, for safety reasons I would stick to US-ASCII for the moment.
There once was PHP 6 which was UTF-16 internally and offered something you're looking for.
And the PHP Manual gives no regex for namespaces, right.
at least it didin't last time I looked for that: hakre.wordpress.com/2010/11/10/php-syntax-regulary-expressed
Also note that the PHP Manual is indifferent what a classname is and what not in the context of namespaces.
@hakre i see, so the standard string functions? I've been starting to use mb_ in lots of places. With safety reasons do you mean safe from change, or safe from other things? I'll just go read your link first.
Is the namespace part of the classname or is it not?
@Paul Maybe if you could share what you're looking for specifically, would be good to know to rate the risk.
I normally use UTF-8 as file-encoding when I define classes.
So the classnames are using english letters/digits/symbols only and as long as that happens, it's compatible with US-ASCII.
Even thought UTF-8 is a multi-byte encoding.
Nice site. Well its for my PSR-0 autoload function
10:02
But only for some characters which might have made it compatible with the PHP parser.
All of my classes and namespaces are just US-ASCII for now
But you want to use chinese for example?
yeah, I guess that would be thinking too far into the future which normally only leads to trouble. Good point.
i'll go with what I need now. If the feature is desired later it can be put in.
And I'm pretty sure PHP does not support that yet.
I would expect that if PHP supports that, it's independent to an extension like mb_string.
Because the parser must be able to just work. And that would be a parser feature.
UTF-8 support looks good so far :) - codepad.viper-7.com/GXZxib
Yes, I've got to stop thinking about too many possibilities. Standard strings are all I need.
10:13
I would highly recommend that.
Because with an autoloader you often map classnames onto file-system paths.
So the file-system needs to use the same encoding.
I've seen it in the past that sysadmins as well as a larger share of programmers normally are not amused when they need to deal with encoding issues.
So if you want to keep things simple, keep them simple :)
Yes, that would be a mess. Definitely, I'm happy with simple.
If you want to look how far you can stretch things, then run tests that are reproduceable as well on target platforms.
Hehe, I'd be scared to even start testing that sort of thing.
morning @hakre
morning @Donut
Sup @NikiC
We are still missing a on stackoverflow.com/questions/6924961/… :)
I already placed my votes on all of them, some others in here need to share some love ;)
10:40
@Gordon What especially annoys me about stackoverflow.com/questions/8866172/whats-wrong-with-my-closure is the completely fucked up answer.
@NikiC create_function would create an anonymous function, wouldnt it? i mean, ok, it would have a random name in the global scope, but still
@NikiC thanks :)
@Gordon Not that. Somebody who has no idea about closures in PHP answers a question about closures in PHP. The answer thus is completely fucked up with the main point being not to use closures...
@NikiC dv it then :)
@Gordon thx, didn't think of that
And delv as soon as it's closed an two days elapsed
@NikiC yeah, q shouldnt be there in the first place since it was only a matter of rtfm
10:56
posted on January 15, 2012 by Fabien Potencier

One down-side of our framework right now is that we need to copy and paste the code in front.php each time we create a new website. 40 lines of code is not that much, but it would be nice if we could wrap this code into a proper class. It would bring us better reusability and easier testing to name just a few benefits. If you have a closer look at the code, front.php has one input, the R

how many of these stackoverflow.com/questions/8869136/… do we need?
yet another cluesless OP
clueless*
11:15
do anyone use netbeans for php development?
@Gordon looked for a dupe.
@hakre likely not a dupe but rather not constructive since its a poll type question and based on wrong assumptions
What stuff does jslint do?
@Gordon well, I thought that dupe might add some help for the OP, I know that cwieske is sometimes picky when it comes to wording. So pointing to something existing did look good to me (well he can read books, too ;)) But right he is educated enough to know what sort of questions to ask...
@NikiC enough stuff to "hurt your feelings" iirc
12:19
@NikiC lint for javascript files.
@hakre "lint" in what sense? Like CS?
@hakre yeah, if it hadnt been cweiske i had cv'ed without asking first :)
@NikiC it says what it does on the web interface: jslint.com
I only know it from jsfiddle, it checks the syntax, like missing ; and that stuff.
@NikiC yeah, i'd say syntax linting plus coding style validation
so like phpcs, right?
12:23
@NikiC similar to it
not sure if you can define your own sniffs
@TuralTeyyuboglu I used id both on Linux and Windows but few months ago I changed to Sublime2 and I am really happy for the change, just way faster and better than NetBeans
12:55
every other question is a dup or unusable in some other way
13:51
posted on January 15, 2012 by Lars Strojny

I’ve recently blogged about how we use Drupal as a Content Repository. I wanted to write a lessons learned follow up post to see what worked out and what we needed to adjust. Where we are We still use Drupal as a Content Repository and just consume it’s content data via webservices to let our application do the complicated rendering. We launched the external

14:48
@Gordon, you're here. I was actually just leaving you a message.
Or, perhaps not. Sorry first time in chat on SO. Didn't read timestamps.
15:12
hellow all
15:29
hi @HoeHoeHoe
How are you today @NikiC??
@HoeHoeHoe good, you?
@NikiC Pretty good. Started using both GitHub and php-unit yesterday. And damn they both rock! Especially the unit tests. I don't even know whether I've done the correct tests in the correct way, but it already saved my life :-)
:P
Hey guys it's my birthday today who wants cake?
@Madmartigan Gratz! And me
15:35
I just turned 31, starting to see 40 come closer :(
@Madmartigan Although I would also like some beer or even better some whiskey
@Madmartigan I'm glad I'm 'only' 27 :D
All I have is tons of coffee, I lied about the cake sorry.
@HoeHoeHoe: Your profile says 31
So don't try to fool me :)
@Madmartigan Yup and it also says I'm from the country NULL :)
Yeah but who would lie to say they're 31 unless you are really much older?
I hate service profiles :)
15:37
@HoeHoeHoe lol, nice ^^
OK, going back to getting old in my bathrobe. Take care guys.
@HoeHoeHoe Have you taken a look at the code coverage tools?
@CharlesSprayberry Not at all. What is it / does it / how to use it?
@CharlesSprayberry does it check whether everything in the code was tested? That is great.
@CharlesSprayberry Aha I can just execute a command to generate a code coverage report:
phpunit --report ./report BankAccountTest
Now let's just hope it's decent :)
15:54
@HoeHoeHoe Yes, you can. I use it at times to make sure that the right lines are being covered and not just that the right result is being returned. I've found a couple different bugs where the tests were passing but the logic was following an incorrect path.
@CharlesSprayberry I get an error:
unrecognized option --report
Any idea how to fix it?
I have a folder called PHPUnit\PHPUnit-3.6.7\PHP\CodeCoverage
I think you're looking for --coverage-html /path/to/store/html/files
Although I really recommend setting up an XML configuration file. phpunit.de/manual/3.6/en/appendixes.configuration.html
@CharlesSprayberry OMG That's exactly what I was looking for!
 
2 hours later…
18:14
78 more points and I can actually vote to close questions instead of just flagging
 
2 hours later…
20:39
@Madmartigan i probably dont understand that comment of yours in the comments to that question. but whatever you meant, its nothing that cannot be done with vanilla php as well
20:50
@Gordon , which comment are you referring to ?
@Gordon could I ask for your opinion on question I'm about to ask? :)
Well anyways. Here's the question.
Could anyone tell me saving session id with in what customer made registration and assigning it to him during registration would count as a possible cookie identifier for later usage. i.e. user left site, but didn't sign out and closed browser. Later when him comes back to site I check if cookie is set and if his last state was signed in. If everything validates, then I sign him in automatically. Would be a very bad logic?
@Eugene if it doesnt take too long. im on my way to the couch
HoeHoeHoe: What if he left his pc on and someone else uses his computer
This is the question I was counting on. What if someone else would start using pc in his absence. Due to this dillema I asked about it here. But there should be, that possibility. Maybe request only a password like hotmail and offer to sign out if this is some one else?
But I hope I can make original idea work, maybe with some additional validation, but which can made automatically without interacting with user.
@Gordon Just would like to hear you thought about it. There is no need to help with code or stuff like that.
emm ... think: internet café
21:04
@Eugene what @HoeHoeHoe mentions is one thing to consider. there might be more. check out stackoverflow.com/search?q=[php]+persistent+login
@Eugene If you are going to use it (setting a cookie) please disable it by default and give the user the option to enable it! I really hate those 'remember me' options. Which this basically is.
@HoeHoeHoe , you might hate them , but other people prefer them
just because YOU are not using some feature , does not mean that everyone else thinks the same
@tereško our company has done some tests and most people don't care about them
@tereško I think it was about 70% - 80% ish
hey @tereško's back!
user680786
@HoeHoeHoe where can I find results of that test? I like option "remember me" and I prefer to see it checked by default
21:18
@OZ_ It was a test ran at our company and that was one of the things. Cannot send you the results of that test or my boss might kill me ;)
user680786
@HoeHoeHoe "some test" with "some results" it's just nothing, not an argument.
@OZ , with a "test run by out company" he means "we asked few of our acquaintances"
@tereško Sure if you say so
whatever
if you had a real research paper , you would have shared the link
@tereško hahahah lol yeah right. I don't know where you are from, but if I share companies information here I don't have a job anymore...
user680786
21:25
ok, it's not a reason to argue. Love is in the air.
more like bullshait
Pffff fine with me it's bullshait. Then don't listen. I couldn't care less what you think :P
riiiight ... thats usually the case , when people have the urge to spell it out
Guys guys guys. Don't argue. Everyone can have his personal point of view.
he is trying to position his point of view as fact
.. i kinda take an issue with that
21:31
Wow. Just wow
:)
Well, I just suggested, that eveyone might want to add his/hers suggestion and not argue about something either one cares about. :)
@tereško Wouldn't you agree?
user680786
next theme to argue:
user680786
user680786
is it awful?
@OZ_ Can't argue with that.
This is too obvious.
:)
user680786
21:36
@Eugene yeah, she is too good for him
@OZ you are awful :o
user680786
we did it
Is that justin bieber ?
user680786
21:45
yes
user680786
and selena gomez
user680786
Java sucks (with Oracle), C# is for Windows (and Windows sucks), python sucks because of spaces as scope delimiters, ruby sucks because of perl-like syntax... Which language is good enough?
user680786
maybe C++ with Qt?
@Gordon: Just to clarify, we have a CMS that our clients use. Everything is WYSIWYG (these guys are shop owners and school teachers, not programmers or even HTML'ers). We needed a way to let clients paste in placeholders (smarty code) so they can display dynamic things (navigation groups, links to the latest news articles, the current date, variables, whatever). Most of these are custom functions that look something like {{content_block id="4"}}...
SHould just put them on wordpress
21:49
@Gordon: On top of that, occasionally I need to use more "complicated" stuff like loops, if blocks, etc. So we use Smarty for this, especially because it allows you to whitelist allowed functions. We don't want any random Joe running whatever PHP code they want. So, if you understand and have another solution to this that doesn't use Smarty - please push me in the right direction or concede that there are valid use cases for Smarty.
Anyone else too, who understands what I'm talking about.
All I know is that expecting teachers to do smarty well is a scary thought...
The big thing is the security, I haven't found any issues with Smarty in that regard. I used to use dwoo but it always seemed to be in some state of broken-ness.
They only copy paste, and before saving the content the tokens are validated.
They aren't writing code, just using placeholders basically.
Also, I'd like to point out that there are secure ways to let somebody run arbitrary PHP (safemode, permissions, etc)
Do you get the gist of what we're using smarty for though?
It sounds like you're letting them build blogs or something
with links, news, whatever
21:56
We have "widget generators" that create the code.
LIke making a slideshow from a photo album, little sliders to set the speed, dropdown of effects, etc...
Sounds like you're having to reinvent a lot of stuff.
then the code comes out something like: {{widget type="photos" name="slideshow" album_id="10" width="360" height="240" speed="50%" fx="fade" random="true"}}
I just have Smarty functions that act as wrappers, so it's not a lot of extra code to write.
But what do you mean "having to reinvent a lot of stuff"?
I just don't know of any better solution.
00:00 - 22:0022:00 - 00:00

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