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19:01
so according to the aliasing. this should cause a compile error instead 3v4l.org/RJenh
basically the two test() methods should have the same signature
otherwise a trait can rely on the chosen one, but the other can't, if the signature is different
cc @ircmaxell too (you challenged me to study traits more :P)
@Worf probably not, because this usually happens with inheritance or implementations, not horizontal reuse. But I'll pass, traits are definitely not my cup of tea :P
@Worf insteadof basically ignores that B::test() exists at all. I can see where incompatible signatures would make code blow up. Not sure if there's an easy way to check for that at compile time.
@marcio The class using the trait can call the private methods. Depends on what the method does really...
if you have in a trait abstract function something(int $a, float $b);means that it must have exactly that same signature (3v4l.org/OukrF). why it's not the same for non-abstract ones?
basically all methods, abstract and non-abstract, of trait A must be compatible with trait B's ones, if they are used together (use A, B)
i believe it's just that, signature compatibility
19:20
@Worf 3v4l.org/HaKor :O be sure to use traits in the right order...
and of course even methods of the class should be compatible each others with the traits' ones 3v4l.org/H7LKX
order shouldn't matter @marcio :P
i've seen similar problems with implements A, B behaving differently from implements B, A but i don't remember exactly
did you compare the error messages? 3v4l.org/OukrF vs 3v4l.org/HaKor
@Worf "and of course even methods of the class should be compatible each others with the traits' ones" Why? The whole point of traits renaming is to allowing changing the methods completely.
yes, order matters but it shouldn't, no?
The memo: any attempt to make traits "better" will have the opposite effect.
19:27
@Danack have you seen this? 3v4l.org/RJenh means that if trait A::bar() calls trait A::foo() but you replace it with B::foo(string $foo) you would get an error anyway
also apparently it's aliasing, not renaming. old name will stay as well
and, you change the implementation imho, not the signature
if the trait A relies on A's methods having well defined signatures, you can't really change them (you can change the implementation, but not the signature)
makes sense?
@Danack forgive me if i post this myself this time :D
hello
everyone
hi
@worf
im facing problem in authenticating webpage through facebook (login) but im facing this fatal error
"PHP Fatal error: Call to a member function createPassword() on a non-object in"
@MirzaJhanzaib pastebin.com the code
sure @Worf
@worf
please check
error line # 64
19:40
:| that's a bit strange, because you call it as a function, but you get a method error instead
HI ALL
I have one problem with Regular Expression.
I have this autoloader class
http://codepad.org/EnwSxTpz

but it can not load static classes
can anyone help me?
@worf any solution or suggestion please?
19:43
@MirzaJhanzaib no idea
@Worf can you help me?
@ircmaxell you will be at php barcelona?
@MirzaJhanzaib I have installed Comodo Firewal and on your coode it sad me that it is unsafe page... check it why it is writting this?
@Worf 3v4l.org/FmllU amaze
@marcio ahah
19:50
this should not be happening ^^ you can't have both abstract methods.
NikiC u busy? want to hear your opinion about something traits related
Suddenly, NikiC is busy...
ROTFL
lol
@shalvasoft didn et you please explain
19:51
come on, you implemented scalar type hinting, you can do everything now, even fixing traits :D
I see the RAISE_ABSTRACT_ERROR op but no error.
http://codepad.org/EnwSxTpz
this is my autoloader class...
and when I call after that
e.x. $app = new bootstrap();
$app->run();
it call`s run function
but in run function I have called static class
example
Vendor::Get_config()
and it can not load it
@shalvasoft fistly, why are you using include path? is there a particular reason for that?
I will just leave this here
I have multiple folders for this classes and if I try to use only spl_autoload_register and use in it foreach and in it require_once or anything else
my page gives me that here is redirection loop
so I searched autoloaders and I find this class in php manua;
here it is
http://php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.autoload.php
I had tryed this function for my project before this autoloader class
http://codepad.org/nnM7HwFH
and it is getting me the error
redirection loop
20:11
So what can I do?
ooops I nearly "fixed" the gmp random number generator to always return zero...
user895378
Can't be random. Zero isn't a possible outcome from a fair dice roll.
@rdlowrey It's possible if you account for off-by-one errors
20:27
hei please help me...
I do not what to add all files in 1 folder.
20:37
ok, the RFC says nothing explicit about abstract methods from traits being overwritten instead of implemented. But that's the obvious conclusion. Not a bug: http://3v4l.org/AVWOS

Also, the example in the RFC was carefully crafted to hide this aspect ^^ https://wiki.php.net/rfc/horizontalreuse#express_requirements_by_abstract_methods
it's terrible :P
can hyphens be used in namespaces?
@Worf if there is one thing with room for improvement maybe it's this, but I have no interest :P good luck
I`m very engry. Now I want to break my PC. please hep to it.
@marcio ahah no probs :P
20:51
@bwoebi Mind reviewing github.com/php/php-src/commit/… ? To make sure I'm not totally crazy about allowing this
@NikiC looking at it…
thanks
@bwoebi @rdlowrey How's work on Aerys going?
user895378
@NikiC really well
@NikiC Going well :-)
user895378
The API is asymptotically approaching stable (and is really nice to work with)
21:06
You need a domain isaeryswebscaleyet.com
user895378
lol I totally should -- and you'll know the answer is NO if you get a 500 response because naturally it will run aerys
We're at the point where current rewrite is about as powerful as the last iteration.
user895378
The routing functionality is really cool ... all built on FastRoute, of course
@rdlowrey eih… isn't it already webscale? just not yet with all features? :-D
user895378
good point
21:08
@rdlowrey But we really need @ircmaxell to merge his ultra-fast routing into fast-route for even more power ;-D
@bwoebi looking at things that are touted as web scale, I'm pretty sure that "incomplete" is a prerequisite of compliance
@NikiC so, if I got that right, you're actually avoiding some unnecessary duplications due to PHP 7 semantics?
with ptr_dtor()'ing instead of requiring refcount 1 because the elements are no longer bound to zval, right?
@shalvasoft use composer and make your code PSR-4 compliant. Autoloading is a solved problem.
@DaveRandom wait! I`ll try...
@rdlowrey finger hovers over "buy" button on registrar...
21:14
@bwoebi yeah, basically
as I see in this small time. it needs to install from server
but I have not permition to access into server console...
@shalvasoft In this day and age, if you are using shared hosting and they don't provide composer, you have a big problem. tbh if you are using shared hosting at all you have quite a big problem.
@NikiC yeah, the general patch looks good to me. I didn't search whether there are some duplications too much in code before convert_to_*() calls, but what I see in your patch looks fine to me.
For better or worse, the entire PHP ecosystem is driven by composer for a couple of years at least now
/me just successfully recovered about 98% of the data from a dead 1TB disk \o/
@DaveRandom You forgot to specify class autoloading.
21:19
@DaveRandom I do not know if they have composer. Can I find it in Cpanel?
@bwoebi okay, thanks for looking at it
@bwoebi true, the overhead of the "files" autoloader mechanism does annoy me ever so slightly, but it's not the worst thing ever
@shalvasoft I honestly have no idea, I've not looked at a shared hosting control panel for a while. It's certainly worth contacting support and asking them if they support it though, if shared hosts haven't found a way to support it by now that's got to be the final nail in their coffin
surely
please
it was a bad model from the start, please let it be dead by now
@DaveRandom ok. in the first I`ll try it on windows. and if it will be done here. I think it will work on shred hosting. right?
@bwoebi out of interest, do you have any ideas for a way to support function autoloading? I've thought about it many times and I just can't see anything that's ever going to work better than "always include this file". The dynamic inclusion thing just can't work without a 1-func-per-file structure (at least, I can't come up with anything else) and that would just be awful
@shalvasoft Well, in theory you could just upload the vendor/ folder that composer produces to the shared host and do it that way, so it should work
@DaveRandom ok.I`ll try. thank you at all!
21:26
@DaveRandom there is the function autoloading RFC, ircmaxell said he was outta time so he told me he was going to share a todo list for anyone willing to help, but apparently he is outta time to do the to do list :P
@shalvasoft It might seem big and scary at first, but you don't ever need to touch 90% of what composer can do. Once you get the basics, it can make a lot of things a lot simpler. If you don't get it at first, put it down and go do something else for a while and come back to it. It's not without its problems but it solves a lot of problems, and its very widely used, so you'll easily be able to work with other devs on it if you need to.
@DaveRandom I thought @ircmaxell wanted to bring it for PHP 7.1?
@DaveRandom Maybe just look for a file called functions.php in the namespace?
@DaveRandom You also could for example require a functions.php and do it per-namespace.
@marcio Yeh I did see it at the time, I've forgotten basically everything about it though. I've given it enough thought over time though to know (read: opine) that what would be a lot more worthwhile would be a mechanism to allow symbols to persist between requests i.e. autoload on first request and symbols already exist for subsequent requests
@bwoebi Don't see the practical difference to loading it every time in reality
21:30
@DaveRandom Imagine a submodule you don't use…?
@bwoebi wait, is there a more recent thing for it? I think Igor did sth a while ago?
@DaveRandom no idea what the Wiedler did^^
@bwoebi Unless there are hundreds of them, it's not going to make enough of a difference to be worthwhile I suspect
@bwoebi I may have misremembered it, I think there was something in the run up to 5.6 though
@DaveRandom that probably was use function?
oh maybe
will check RFC list when I've finished cooking
21:35
@NikiC did I miss something or was there no official alpha1 announcement today?!
@DaveRandom php\AUTOLOAD_ALL <3 finally we'll put 'php' namespace to use
/me grabs a rocket and glues php namespace to it … then … launch towards sun!
@bwoebi heh ^^
it was tagged yesterday with one day delay, so maybe release also one day later?
Or maybe it will still come ... timezones and stuff
@NikiC I'm pretty sure that was actually tagged two days ago… just retagged yesterday.
yeah
do you know why?
21:40
@bwoebi grabs rocket, glues bc break argument and launch towards bob
@marcio eih… let's just reserver global scope for php things^^
@NikiC NEWS entries and a few bugfixes it seems?
mainly #69646?
@bwoebi not 100% against it
@bwoebi I agree... why namespace things that are a part of the language?
@Trowski exactly
@bwoebi ah yeah, that one looked like an actual vulnerabilty
21:47
who, besides Lester, puts code outside namespaces anyway.
Screw Lester. :)
... and pretty much any php FOS S CMS out there xD
CMS? Screw them.
@marcio Really? I honestly haven't looked at any.
@JoeWatkins you can communicate decently with twitter! open image editor, write text, save as jpg, upload, profit! (-__-)
21:53
I keep hearing about this thing called WordPress... apparently it's pretty good... /sarcasm
drupal ajax.inc
DOT inc
@Worf just tweet pastebin links :-P
ahaha, true @DaveRandom but they aren't embedded as images! :D
@marcio afaik php.net websites also have a few .inc files^^
@marcio Well, had to scroll a lot to see actual code. ^^
21:54
Why the hell did people start using .inc in the first place?
@Worf yeh, because an image of a screenshot of a wall of text is totally readable without opening it in a new tab and zoom 400% :-P
@DaveRandom lol
@bwoebi unless someone has done something about it, news.php.net is written for 4.2.x... .inc files are the least of its problems
@marcio drupal has a lot of .inc files
and it's a convention to write .inc files for custom modules too
@DaveRandom What are its problems then?
21:56
@marcio also, drupal main modules files are .module files :)
@kelunik because 30 LOC comments protect code from being plagiarized, we all know that.
@FlorianMargaine yeah, just noticed that -.-
@marcio most modules also have a .install file
@marcio Certainly keeps it from being read...
21:57
that will be run during the install/uninstall of a module
@bwoebi Code soup, basically. It was written by Jim Wrynne (a name I've never seen in any other context) who I believe is the guy who used to maintain the ML back-end about 15 yrs ago. It's mostly monolithic script-per-page stuff. I rewrote it once but was shot down by the server being running 4.2.something, although I know the server has now been updated so maybe the code has as well by now
@marcio thankfully, drupal 8 is much better
do they use namespaces?
Also it's supposed to render text/* attachments and it doesn't I have no idea why
namespaces, yaml files, service locator, etc :D
21:59
@DaveRandom eih, nice :o
@FlorianMargaine s/much better/basically symfony with some shinyness glued on/
@FlorianMargaine great, so they will go 5.5+or 5.4+ ? #lazyweb moment
(not that I have a particular problem with that)
half-kidding about the SL, but there is a convention that some classes must have a public static function createInstance(Container $container) { return new self($container->service('foo')); }
@marcio 5.4 iirc
good night
@NikiC @bwoebi is it still the case in PHP7 that different archs can result in different sets of opcodes after the compilation?
22:01
@Trowski ^^ obfuscation by documentation. They probably change the file extension to .module so syntax highlighter won't help the thieves
@DaveRandom … was that ever the case?
Maybe I dreamed that, but I'm sure it was the underlying issue blocking the idea that you could ship files of compiled opcodes instead of the code itself
Basically a half-way between opcache and parsing for every request
Seems, on the face of it, like it should be a relatively easy win
I tried to find a commit FY, something about loading opcodes from a file, but it's long gone.
obviously there would be complications with cross-version compat, but nothing worse than shipping both 32 and 64-bit bins
You'd need to standardise on endianness and int width/alignments, but other than that I don't see the fundamental problem, as long as all platforms work with the same set of opcodes
@marcio There was an ext that did something like it a while ago, afaik it died though
22:07
Ooh shiny
basically that ^^
But I still think that creating something like a per-app fpm pool that keeps symbol defs between requests would be the best (relatively) easy win we could get, something like that could instantly remove 98% of file I/O for a lot of apps, that would make a huge difference
you mean to allow partial applications?
Not sure what you mean? I just mean to avoid needing to load classes/functions on every request - even opcache carries a bunch of stat() calls for every file on every request, just talking about being able skip that stuff, persist the class/function/constant symbol tables between requests
It would mean you need to restart fpm (or whatever) every time you deploy, but there are plenty of ways around that being a problem
@DaveRandom "even opcache carries a bunch of stat() calls for every file on every request" Have you measured that recently?
@Danack No
HAPPY REBECCA!
3
22:16
and I'd be happy if you told me that was no longer the case, but how could it work when I modify a file if that wasn't the case?
@PeeHaa E_UTC
@DaveRandom you can turn off the checking for whether files have changed.
@Danack orly?
I'm pretty sure i got down to almost zero stat calls.....there was still a directory acccess for permissions I think...
@DaveRandom Only if you really messed up your opcache config
/me goes to actually bench it
22:18
ah I'm late
@DaveRandom opcache.validate_timestamps=0
@DaveRandom E_GET_A_FUCKING_REAL_TIMEZONE
is anyone versed with Jquery ? i have a jsfiddle and a little problem I need some help with
it's already friday... and today this week this month this year basically i haven't done anything
Have you tried using more jquery?
@DaveRandom Don't benchmark - strace all the things - gist.github.com/Danack/de16db746dd2c6a29c8d
22:21
yes and it really messes things up :)
@havingagoatit You should totally drop that and use jquery
@PeeHaa hah ,
.on("transitionend webkitTransitionEnd oTransitionEnd msTransitionEnd", function(e)
22:38
@DaveRandom I have an outstanding patch
@NikiC Yup, not sure which talk I am giving, but I committed
22:52
@PeeHaa nah… E_UTC.
@PeeHaa E_YOU_ARE_IN_CEST_WHICH_SEEMS_A_PRETTY_GOOD_DESCRIPTION_OF_YOUR_FAMILY_TREE
3
#burn
@ircmaxell All your work is outstanding
:-P
(sorry for multiping)
It's worth it :)
@havingagoatit What's a Goat It?
Also, share link to fiddle would be easiest way to get some help ;-)
23:04
Meeting with client tomorrow monring see ya all
@PeeHaa nn
Also E_SOFTCORE but that's what we've come to expect
love you
Yeah I'm weak like that for which I am very very sorry
<3
23:20
@DaveRandom I am planning on finishing it for 7.1
and am interested in hearing your thoughts
@ircmaxell in case it wasn't obvious I meant that in terms of the other meaning of "outstanding" - but that's good to know :-)
I figured ;-)
@Tyrael just a quick note to say thanks for all your hard work of late, I'm sure that mentoring the 7.0 RMs has added to your workload, it's great to see your still managing to keep on top of the 5.6 point releases. Don't want to pollute internals with a "thanks!" thread, but I wanted to let you know your work is genuinely appreciated :-)
@ircmaxell not in a great mindset for looking at it now but will devote some time to it tomorrow
Ugh, I wish chat had private stars or something
23:29
hehehe
@ircmaxell btw, if/when you have some time, I wrote github.com/DaveRandom/phphuck recently as a (WIP) teaching tool for a guy I work with who wanted to know more about how compilation of a high-level language works and why it's better to compile to an intermediate representation than execute line-by-line, since it's something you know a lot more about than I do I'd love to hear any feedback you might have
esp. since the chosen language is something you have blogged about in the past
cool
first suggestion: separate parsing and compilation
parsing to a known AST simplifies a lot
OK, so like e.g. create an array of the commands without the extra meaningless chars before generating the "op codes"?
So that's lexing
and lexing is the first step to parsing
so, first convert raw text to an array of tokens (T::PLUS, T::SL, etc)
then the array of tokens to an Abstract Syntax Tree
Then the AST into a graph
then finally compile the graph to the end opcodes
the reason is that some optimizations and operationsa re easier on an AST
and some are far easier on a graph
...I clearly have further reading/re-reading to do
23:43
for example: your "compression" step is a trivial graph operation
@ircmaxell Yeh, some of the state tracking during lexing is pretty horrible
It did feel a bit wrong while I was writing it
in fact, it's just an iterative peephole optimization (you look at the next one, and if it's the same as this one, drop it)
@DaveRandom I've written WAYYYYYYYYY worse
I'm going to try and fully grasp how AST works this w/e, I've looked at it before but it's one of those incremental learning things where I know it'll take me a few goes to really get it
building something with it is the best way to learn something
so you're on the right track
the key thing
the structure of the code is identical in an AST
I was quite please when I managed to cut the run time of one of my test programs from 12s to <1s
23:46
it's not in a graph
@DaveRandom that's impressive :-)
your AST may look like:
[
    ["+"],
    ["[", [
        ["-"],
    ]],
    ["+"],
] // "+[-]+"
doesn't need to be OO or anything
can be quite simple
I didn't know until now that removing all your class and callable typehints from code makes your code 2% faster…
wow
type safety, at a cost
(well, surely, it heavily depends on the App, … currently looking at Aerys)
I really wish I understood how those two things relate to each other but I just don't, I'm going to go read some stuff before I go any further I think
@ircmaxell yeah, sure, there's a cost, but I didn't expect it to be that significant.
23:51
@DaveRandom which two things?
@bwoebi neither did I?
@bwoebi I've recently started removing the typehints from private methods, didn't know if it would actually make a significant difference but it sounds like it might
@ircmaxell Assuming the AST structure represents the code in the "comment" at the end? Or did I misunderstand?
@DaveRandom correct
so the top level array has 3 children, one for each "top level" command
OK, I'm going to try and understand that message before I go any further then
the array creates a "second level", which is represented by the second argument to the array "["
[
    ["type" => "+"],
    ["type" => "[", "children" => [
        ["type" => "-"],
    ]],
    ["type" => "+"],
]
@ircmaxell the issue is mainly … in real code ^^ why? because class names tend to be longer in real apps with all the namespace prefix. It has to lowercase, calculate hash… which already takes a significant amount of time.
23:55
@bwoebi both of those happen at compile time tho
Ahh right, that makes more sense with the "keys"
@ircmaxell except that it doesn't.
@bwoebi no?
@DaveRandom yeah, we only have one compound statement in brainfuck: [], but other languages have multiple types, which can have multiple children
@ircmaxell lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/zend_execute_API.c#1355 note the second argument (the caching key) is NULL
@bwoebi yeah...
that seems like a worthy optimization to spend time on
23:57
It could make a significant difference if I were to cache that… hmm…
yes.
@DaveRandom for now, don't go the graph level. Just play with the AST for a bit
it's powerful enough

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