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00:01
Why not sort it in your SQL query then?
any idea banging head for a while..totally struck
the sql result and sql user is readonly , so sorting it in php arrays.. need to filter only based on one same key value through out the array
Well, since you're not writing anything here I don't see why that matters. I still say sort in your SQL. Though I have no idea what your sorting criteria is here. You don't specify and your example demonstrates that the result set is already sorted as needed.
the result api is a response from sql which is a readyonly query ,aside of the response, the array is dynamic , i just need to join employee_zipcode who has the same employee_id_series in the array together
@Sherif it seems a bit confusing to u.. my result is just printing the html row which has 70062 and 6144 all array value in single tab and the rest in other
@BetaCoder That's fine. Since you're only reading data here and not writing anything, using a ORDER BY clause in your SQL still remains a readonly query :)
Yup that seems to order and rearrange , but how do i achieve where i can join this two and dump in a single table row in such desired format as shown ?
00:13
Hmm? Join what two?
all the same zipcode 70062 matches with input query 6144
I don't understand the question.
What is it that you need help with exactly? How to do a JOIN? How to sort the data? How to print it to html?
Some clarification would be helpful here.
How to make sure a url is accessible only from localhost? Is passing a secret key in url secure enough?
Need to dump the matches of employee_zipcode which matches the same as of employee_id_series , thats all what i am asking out of the array
@BetaCoder Huh? You mean if ($row['employee_zipcode'] == $row['employee_id_series')?
Your question is as clear as mud right now.
00:20
ya..exactly the same... i need to iterate through out the array and dump the matches in individual rows
@user3692125 By not having the webserver accept traffic to that URL from any non-local remote address.
@BetaCoder array_filter($result_rows, function($row) { return $row['employee_zipcode'] === $row['employee_id_series']; })
hold on will check that..
What should I hold on to?
<Location /restricted/url/to/only/serve/on/localhost>
Order deny,allow
deny from all
allow from 192.168.
allow from 127.
</Location>
That's assuming you're using Apache httpd
damn it
Stupid SO chat
@Sherif the complication in the above code is array doesnt know which one to compare as its 2d array it would be something like this $row[0]['employee_zipcode'] === $row[1]['employee_zipcode'];
No
It does exactly what you want
00:28
@Sherif Yeah, how exactly to do that? I searched on google but did not work.
@user3692125 Exactly like that
@BetaCoder Wait a minute, you want to match the zipcode against other zipcodes?
That's not what you said at all.
/me facedeskheadpalmneckgrabfootchairs
@BetaCoder So in other words you just don't know how to use GROUP BY in your SQL so you thought you could just solve that problem if you could figure out how to do a group by in PHP?
The problem there is that you don't know how to do a group by in PHP either.
This is called the XY problem.
Now go learn how to use GROUP BY in SQL.
> And still, using a struct is an API. The members have a well defined meaning what they do. The struct itself is an API, it is an interface giving you the offset from base zend_string * address. Using my_len = *((size_t*)((char *)zend_string) + 16)) would be an example of not programming to the API. That's what a struct provides. A layer of abstraction over the offset. Hence it's already a level of abstraction.
Not sure if I'm right or wrong… Sent it to internals anyway^^
@bwoebi Wait is that what people do?
@Sherif no, that's what people don't do. And I just explained why.
00:42
I'm basically explaining why we don't need an additional API layer over zend_string * … because zend_string struct actually already is an API.
@Sherif Oh No u misunderstood , the GROUP BY in SQL is not the issue here , resorting the php array and pushing to a table is what i am trying to achive ...ignore the mysql concept totally
moooare abstraction
@Sherif there are cases where we play around with offsets, in these cases we obviously have macros hiding that logic. A good thing.
@BetaCoder "resorting"?
hmm its a fixed situation where i need to print in a table data row with the same matches
Emp Zipcode_Series

70062_61443
70062_61444
70062_61445
00:45
@bwoebi Wrap the macros in macros and then wrap those macros in more macros
@Sherif macro hell \o/
@BetaCoder OK, but the array is already sorted in that order. I don't see what sorting problem you're having here.
Just print the damn thing.
yes ur correct , if the response array may or may not have the same order !!!
Huh?
I give up. Parse Error: Unable to comprehend vague human
@Sherif Thanks for bearing, Nice that you have tried :)
00:49
@Sherif It's actually an E_CORE_ERROR
@BetaCoder If you sorted the result set in your SQL code it would always have the desired sort order. You seem to be intent on ignoring that bit and focusing on trying to figure out how to sort it in your PHP. Which wouldn't be needed if you already sorted the result set in your SQL. PHP just copies the result set over from MySQL. The order doesn't chage.
@bwoebi It's actually an E_WTF_ERROR
But I'm trying to be nice today.
I'm actually in a good mood.
@Sherif Notice: Use of undefined constant E_WTF_ERROR - assumed 'E_WTF_ERROR'
That's the PHP I know and love :)
Make my bare words bare words!
...get it
see what I did there?
Simple admin doesnt permit write access to mysql only to process the array
wink wink nudge nudge
00:52
@Sherif hehe
@BetaCoder I'm not sure which part of ORDER BY you believe needs to write anything to the database, or which part of my telling you that for the third time you didn't understand, but at this point I don't believe anyone is capable of helping you.
You seem to refuse all reason.
hmm i will hit a last try before i give up ,already i am out of my brain
here is a last explanation..
I can imagine why.
kindly help for the last time
i will be clear this time
i have an array in this format
@bwoebi For what it's worth, I very much agree with you on this. Now the source has zend_string->val in most places, but in a few it has ZSTR_VAL(zend_string)... for whatever reason.
00:54
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[employee_zipcode] => 70062
[employee_name] => Carter Jr
[employee_address] => 472 Shadowmar Drive Kenner, LA
[employee_id_series] => 6144

)

[1] => Array
(
[employee_zipcode] => 70062
[site_name] => Carter Sr
[address] => 472 Shadowmar Drive Kenner, LA
[employee_id_series] => 6144
)

[2] => Array
(
[employee_zipcode] => 29210
[site_name] => Claude
[address] => 2308 Wexford Way Columbia, SC
[employee_id_series]=> 6144

)
@Trowski write that on the mailing list, please.
@bwoebi Ok
thanks :-)
So i am trying to print this $result_row[0][employee_zipcode] which are same through out the array in a single line and the rest in other <p>
the result would be like this
Emp Emp Emp
Zipcode_Series Name Address

70062_6144
70062_6144 Carter 472 Shadowmar Drive Kenner, LA
That's not a single line
But very well.. since you've changed your requirements for the umpteenth time, I shall once again oblige and indulge your circuitous route... What you're looking for is called array_column
00:58
@Sherif as per your last time the comparision was between $row['employee_zipcode'] == $row['employee_id_series')
MY comparison?
Dude, please stop.
@bwoebi Did you figure out what to do with yield from? Leave as is, check for AT_FIRST_YIELD, something else?
@Trowski There are a few things I'd like to see changed, mainly:
- allowing rewind on Generator
- allowing clone on Generator
- fix the AT_FIRST_YIELD if we yield from an iterator upon first yield
- remove the requirement of an initial call to rewind() before first use from Iterator contract
@bwoebi That last one will be difficult since I've seen code that depends on that behavior.
@Trowski code won't break by itself. It's just new code which uses the old code assuming the contract will break; but that's very easily fixed by just adding a rewind() call into the ctor of those Iterators.
01:11
I was also thinking about cases where the same iterator is used in multiple foreach loops.
I won't change that the foreach automatically rewind()'s.
That's a behavior change, and IMO not suited for 7.0 at this stage.
Yeah, you could never change that for 7.0.
@Trowski precisely. Maybe for 7.1… The issue with it is that it'll introduce subtle breaks…
@bwoebi I was thinking you could change yield from to act more like foreach, since it seems to do that for everything other than generators.
@BetaCoder The reason you have duplicate rows in your result set is because you didn't use GROUP BY in your SQL. See the difference here sqlfiddle.com/#!9/e2af0d/5 ... but please keep telling me about how I should ignore the SQL... clearly I am the one that doesn't understand the problem
01:18
@Trowski Question is about what expected behavior is too. Generators are already very special with having e.g. throw(). Or send().
Like you throw in something and it lands on the top-most generator.
@ircmaxell interesting
That's a good point, plus I just thought of a scenario where you could still yield from the same generator in multiple generators even if rewind() was called, so maybe it's best to just leave it as is. :)
I'm seriously wondering whether we should remove the rewind() call from foreach() for generators
@Sherif - newbie coder has solved the issue , check this one - tutorialspoint.com/…
how do we pursue further for comparision , when we dont know how many arrays entries we get from response?
01:23
@bwoebi It would better match behavior in other situations.
@BetaCoder Solved what issue? You don't have an issue. You have a lack of understanding of SQL.
@Sherif - F**k dude i was asking abt the PHP ,not a bit of SQL i was asking !!!
we are only working with Arrays and NOT-WITH-SQL
The problem you believe you need to solve in PHP stems from the fact that you wrote poor SQL code.
i.e. solving the SQL makes your problem in PHP disappear.
Ohhh ...come on dude ... we dont have access to SQL accnt ..the coding is to process only the parsed response of an array
nothing related to sql query !!
@BetaCoder You mean your array magically appears in your PHP code? You didn't query a database to get it?
My mistake. I was under the impression that the part of your question which explicitly states "I am querying sql and response feedback..." had anything to do with SQL.
01:27
Does that grouping fetch response like this TABLE of HTML ...crap !
yup that was the confusion i am separating ...nothing related to sql query
It makes your printing it in the table simpler since you won't have duplicate rows. Which was the basis of your entire conundrum.
It's entirely related to your SQL query. You're just too thick to understand that.
the point which i dint mention is , the row response does contain other entries which are not mentioned in array...
so the dummy output was desired...
@bwoebi nom if I decorate a generator it would be called then as well. Leave it be.
plz sync with the code and let me know where the alterations are needed in this code - tutorialspoint.com/…
You don't need to alter your PHP code. One simple change to your SQL makes all of the hoops you're jumping over in your PHP disappear.
The moment you come to accept that is the moment all of your problems go away.
01:30
@ircmaxell If you decorate a generator then it would just be implementing Iterator.
@ircmaxell When you decorate a Generator, it's your decision whether you forward the rewind() call or not. You know that you're decorating a Generator and it's your decision if you want to receive the Exception back.
And @bwoebi made the rest of my point before I could.
@Trowski are you going to mail that? or not?
@bwoebi Yes, though it looks François is busy making more changes. I'm not sure if he's changing the occurrences of zend_string->val/len or not.
@Sherif - I am clearing the air , this the actual realtime scenario i am having - codepaste.net/kbmyzf
i am trying to achieve the same which i dint post in the Q due to security reasons.
i am posting that codepaste so you can understand what i was trying to achieve when i query 6144
01:41
@bwoebi no, because then the generator would be violating the contract it binds to
@bwoebi I have a simple bug fix I was hoping you could commit :) github.com/trowski/php-src/tree/bugfix/…
@Sherif i hope now u got the real logic why i was beating around the bush
@Trowski add a test? (please)
Sure
@BetaCoder oh I got that have an XY problem ages ago.
01:49
@Sherif Come on Buddy ..thats the solution i was asking for not the sql thing..
sigh
i hope its 95% i reached ...still 5% would solve my issue ..kindly suggest
git.php.net/… NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
@bwoebi heh
mh?
01:58
@bwoebi Did he just do that? n/m, read the timestamp...
@Trowski I just saw it 5 mins ago…
I saw an email about François making more changes too, so that confused me.
now we have direct access to the struct elements, just renamed as a macro…
seriously… what sense is behind that?
I see how it makes sense for zvals bcause it there is zval->value.lval and we want to hide the value union, okay.
But for direct access like here? .... seriously.
enumerating hex flags…
0x10 … 0x20 … 0x30 … 0x40 … eih, why is 256 not 0x100 now?!
02:20
@bwoebi So my bug fix made me reexamine how static methods are being called dynamically. It seems that this line is evaluating to false even for non-static methods.
@Trowski hence I asked you for a test so that I could compare old and new behavior with dynamic and non-dynamic calls.
My bug fix made the 'Class::method' syntax behave the same as ['Class', 'method'], but I'm questioning the behavior of both.
@Trowski Ehm… what's behavior of MyClass::method() direct calls? I'd use that one as reference here.
Now if only we can give callables access to $this when the caller is in object context
@Sherif that is being done…
02:24
Is it?
I think so.
@bwoebi Eh... same message, so I guess my fix is "correct" in the sense it aligns the behavior with other methods.
You mean I can finally do asort($arr, [$this,'someSorter']); where someSorter is a private method?
@Sherif ah no, not that
@Sherif No, but I plan to work on an RFC this fall to make something like that possible by creating a callable that references the private method.
02:27
Yea, my work around to those has been to just make the private method call on asort/usort
You can also wrap the method call in a closure.
That's just as silly but equally as effective, yes :)
The point is to make the sort method a part of the class though, not a closure.
You're calling asort within a class method, right?
yup
you're suggesting I just return a closure from one of those methods, I get it.
I just hate circuitous context
Yes, and I'd like to make it so you could write asort($arr, callable($this, 'someSorter'));
02:30
that would be nicer for the person reading the code to understand, yes :)
aosrt($arr, $this->getCallableSort()); // seems far more wonky
Once that ability is there, I think it would be a good idea to deprecate some of the weird ways that you can specify a callable.
Like ['Class', 'method'] and "Class::method".
Would be replaced by callable('Class', 'method').
@Trowski if it's going to be a construct why not just have some nicer syntax for it?
Although I don't know what that syntax would be as we seem to have run out of token space
:p
I think PHP has exhausted just about every reasonable token there is.
@Sherif That's pretty much the conclusion I came to as well. If you think of a suggestion for another syntax please let me know.
@Trowski I wonder whether we should use callable('MyClass', 'method') or rather callable(MyClass::method)?
02:47
Whatever it is make it consistent! e.g. callable(MyClass::method) vs. callable($this, 'method') is unlikely to be desirable.
@Sherif callable($this->method) ;-)
But what if $this->method is a property?
then it'll fail with undefined method?
But what if it's both a method and a property?
Even worse, the property contains a closure.
Even worse, there's call magic
@Sherif sure, it just won't be accepted
callable($this, 'property') … so… you now expect to respect properties too here?
02:50
Hmmm... how do callables treat __call magic now?
I never tried
@Sherif they just properly call __call if method doesn't exist
ahh, so then I guess it's alright
Also consider callable($this, $method)
@Trowski callable($this->{$method}) ?
@Sherif Not really a fan of that.
I also wanted to support callable('strlen'), which would make callable(MyClass::method) ambiguous.
03:06
@Sherif callable($this->$method)
verbosity++
user4920811
The last line is useful or not ? *(for releasing the memory)*

$obj = new myvlass;
echo $obj->property;
$obj=NULL;
@Trowski ambiguous? how?
MyClass::method could be a constant.
I suppose you could just say that the syntax does not consider constants.
03:35
@Trowski replying to a mail, fixing a phar bug… will look at it later.
@bwoebi No rush, whenever you get to it.
03:51
@bwoebi Now you know what loose vs tight coupling is :)
@Trowski ?
Guess you didn't read that email yet.
Ah yeah
except that we now tight couple to the macros…
As long as they change it all I guess that's fine. What would have made me crazy is having ->val in some places and ZSTR_VAL() in others.
@bwoebi I understand the point they're making. Maybe zend_string could be changed in the future, but ZSTR_VAL() had better resolve to a char* or it's all for not.
It made a lot of sense when working from a zval, but if you already have a zend_string then you're already pretty tightly coupled.
@Trowski not sure what you're meaning with the last sentence?
04:07
@bwoebi The macros to get a string value from a zval make a lot of sense. That's what they're trying to do with the macros on zend_string.
@Trowski basically.
because these macros actually make it more readable than a very long "zv->value.str->val"
So... in a lot of ways that makes sense actually.
but when you directly have a zend_string* doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
I suppose zend_string could be changed someday to require another level of indirection to actually get the char*, and that's what they're trying to enable.
Though I would think a change that significant will have some other consequences that will go far beyond just redefining a macro.
^ this.
04:38
Okay, replied to François …
The point is… I see where François comes from; but I think his logic is fundamentally flawed :-/
François tries to explain me his logic… while my goal basically is getting him to understand my logic ^^
And that's why I usually avoid internals… It's hard to communicate such things via mail :-(
@bwoebi I think you put it very well in the last paragraph of your email.
:-)
These things would probably go much smoother if everyone could just sit down and discuss it over a few beers.
So how do you get the number of properties in an object without using get_object_vars?
@Sherif foreach over it with a counter?
04:45
@bwoebi Needs to be an atomic operation.
There is no sizeof/count object is there?
@Sherif cast to an array, use count?
That's still not atomic
Might as well use get_object_vars
At least it would be safer
no more atomic way there^^
why do you need atomic?
Because this object is huge?
And I don't want to waste memory or cycles if I don't have to.
@Sherif Is implementing Countable out of the question?
04:47
Hmmm
This might take some refactoring if I have to implement countable, but that's one way.
Sheesh, how'd me manage to make it this far without a count() equivalent for objects?
It's not like it would actually be hard to implement that. It already exists in the struct.
@Sherif Don't forget the dynamic properties.
I don't care about magic. I just want to be able to read ht.size when I need to.
Seems silly not to expose that to userland.
@Sherif ht.size?
Yea, the hastable stores a size and numUsedElements doesn't it?
@Sherif when you do count… do we expose, all or only public?
04:51
oh, this probably changed in PHP 7 didn't it.
@bwoebi I would think public, since that's what get_object_vars does
@Sherif I mean, properties aren't stored in a hashtable but in a zval * array
you and your php 7
Anyway, I just want to be able to get the size of that array :)
@bwoebi Wha? Aren't the properties stored in a HashTable here lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_5_6/Zend/zend.h#314
I have a serious bug while web scraping a page which I need to fixed.
04:54
@Sherif that's a run-time deoptimization in case we need dynamic properties
hmm
if we don't, it's all in the properties_table array
me squints at code
I see
I need help to find out the bug so that what went wrong when the code goes live at live server it doies't dispaly anything.
04:56
Still, you have access to a precomputed value. Expose that shit!
It's not always that simple…
ehehehe
I shouldn't have to cast an object with 18 million properties to an array to know that it has 18 million properties
damn it
@bwoebi I need help.
Now I actually have to decode the json to the less-memory-efficient array snark
@bwoebi I have a serious bug while web scraping a page which I need to fixed.
@Sherif I have a serious bug while web scraping a page which I need to fixed.
04:58
@Sherif did you actually try to measure the perf impact?
@bwoebi Yes, it's huge
An order of magnitude or more
@Sherif less-memory-efficient array?
explain
@bwoebi The size of the json decoded to an array is way larger compared to an object
Less overhead
It works great in localhost, but when I move to the live server it displays nothing notices as well.
@Sherif that's a myth?

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