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15:01
You can see my file in above link.
> mysql_connect("localhost", "root", "");
:o and :o
try edit this var:
$q = "insert into a values ('$disc')";
to:
`$q = mysql_query("insert into a values ('$disc');")`
` $q = mysql_query("insert into a values ('$disc')"); `
I don't understand you.. what your target?
and where the problem?
Obligatory note: Stop using mysql_* if you can - they are removed in PHP 7. You should learn to use mysqli_* or PDO instead
Or you could just save yourself the bother and start using a proper RDBMS
15:15
According to Forbes. Website Developer is the 7th happiest profession in the world.
#9. Senior Software Engineer
what's the 1st?
"rich man"?
School Principal oddly
DB Admins are pretty happy too.
Hmm… I was hoping to keep my Algorithms repository to PHP 5.6 but yield from is so tempting to use :(
sorry. but i am displaying problem using the following image.
and my frontend is as following.
15:23
@bwoebi If you have a few minutes, could you do me a favour and see if there is anything that is too wrong/insane in to_closure fyi I know it doesn't currently support __call or __callStatic...
@user3216114 if you want to parse that text in HTML page, you can use nl2br() function I think
@Danack ideally I think you should be able to use zend_is_callable_ex() to get the callable (zend_function) instead of switch(){case IS_ARRAY; case IS_STRING; etc...}
@nikita2206 zend_is_callable is a bit messed up - 3v4l.org/hZ8un
@Danack Your indentation appears to be 4 spaces instead of tabs.
@LeviMorrison hmm, though I fixed that in the last commit....
15:37
ok. thank you. but tab and space given by space key in keyword these type of blank space are not displaying using the nl2br() my output is as following. and my php code i write as following.

if(isset($_POST['show']))
{
$con = mysql_connect("localhost", "root", "");
mysql_select_db("abc", $con);
$q1 = mysql_query("select * from a");

while($row = mysql_fetch_array($q1))
{
echo "<hr>";
echo nl2br($row["description"]);
echo "<hr><br><br>";
}
}

http://s13.postimg.org/7rlftkajr/output.jpg
...But only partially...
@user3216114 HTML hates whitespace like tabs, spaces, newlines, etc.
> Fatal error: Default value for parameters with callable type hint can only be NULL
Hmm. Anyone aware of a specific reason that would prohibit us from allowing string literals which can be determined to be callable?
@Danack Could to_closure() instead take 1 or 2 params instead of an array? Just thinking to the future when we might want to eliminate the array callbacks altogether.
15:41
@Danack wow I didn't know about it, and I used this function in callable types patch... We should add a check_flag for the case where this function also needs to check if method can be called or not
@LeviMorrison Probably because that can only be determined at runtime, not compile time.
@Trowski Ah, yes. I suppose failing at runtime when the value is not provided might be undesirable.
@LeviMorrison Unless only built-in functions were supported... but that doesn't sound particularly useful.
15:43
callable $minner = 'min'
Just dump the logic into the function.
@DaveRandom ok. I understand. but if I fetch data from database and display output in any control like textarea then it is possible to display data with whitespace like tabs, spaces etc because I want to display data with these whitespace like tabs, spaces, newlines, etc.
@FlorianMargaine The official EOL, yes...
@Trowski "when we might want to eliminate the array callbacks" - why would we want to do that?
if (null === $minner) { $minner = 'min'; }
15:44
@kelunik we, as a host, will use this as an excuse to stop supporting it :)
@Trowski I know – I just think that seems unnecessary.
@nikita2206 I have an RFC to make callables be non-insane which I will submit in about a year...for 8.
@LeviMorrison Maybe someday if we have a more uniform way of representing callbacks.
@Danack Didn't you write an RFC about something like this?
@Trowski which is what that function does. It allows you to represent any callback as a closure, and it is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay faster to use a closure as a type rather than callable.
Where if we had a function like $callable = to_callable($class, $method), there would be no reason to allow $callable = [$class, $method]
15:47
@FlorianMargaine Fine, will kill it for Artax as well then. :)
@Trowski Only reason would be backwards compatibility.
@Danack call that function callable please^^ // looking at it currently
@Danack Exactly. I'm just thinking to_closure($class, $method) seems way better than to_closure([$class, $method]).
Allowing both would be just fine.
What would to_callable return... a closure?
bound to the instance
@Danack also please fix the tabs and space -.-
15:49
@Trowski I think there would be....for going either from a callable type to a closure, or just when you are getting something from a config e.g. a setting up some routing:
foreach ($routes as $route) {
	list($path, $callable) = $route;
	$routeList->register($path, $callable);
}
You don't want to have to inspect whether $callable is a single variable or whether it's an array.
@Danack I think this makes only reasonable BC breaks, it's like breaking possibility to shoot yourself in a foot, you could try 7.1, that would be pretty nice. On the other hand I would approach this problem from another angle: we could make actual callable type (or reuse Closure for it), so that you could do something like return callable($this->privateMethod); and this method would actually be callable in the end
@Danack Ok, I honestly have no problem allowing arrays to continue to reference callables. I just thought it was something you were considering.
But I do like the idea of supporting to_closure($class, $method).
Oh I guess that was already in your mind, that's nice then
@Trowski You're adding a new thing......that is not needed imo. It doesn't allow you to do anything extra, but is just an extra case....and gives more error scenarios.
@Danack It avoids building an array just to destroy it shortly after.
15:52
btw @all there are currently a very small number of PHPNW conf-only tickets on sale conference.phpnw.org.uk/phpnw15/tickets
@nikita2206 I think the path of least resistance is this:
Plus is cleaner imho.
i) get the to_closure in so people can use it.
ii) Show people how much more performant using closures rather than callable as types for parameters is.
iii) Decide then whether we want to go about cleaning up the current callables. I suspect that we wouldn't be able to....as there would be too much resistance.
@Danack I'd rather have Closure::createFromCallable(callable $callable), not sure if this has already been discussed
@Trowski when would that happen in your code? In my code at least it's pretty rare for me to be passing a class name around, and then attaching a method to it later.....and on a single line there is the factor that:
15:54
I think a function that is tied directly to one specific class is sort of weird
if () {
} // a newline here is CRAZY
else {
}
@DaveRandom Nikic says that he would prefer this to be a language level construct......which I have no idea how to implement.
@bwoebi /cc @Jimbo he does that, it drives me nuts
@DaveRandom to one specific magic class that no one even can instantiate, I think that's fine
@Danack Something like return to_closure([$this, 'privateMethod']);
15:55
But which would give some nice performance benefit - i.e. opcache could completely optimise this away for constant strings.
@Danack me too! it would be much nicer to do callable($obj->methodName)
@Danack Ahh OK
makes sense I suppose
@nikita2206 Not sure that is possible, may have to be callable($obj, 'methodName')
@Trowski as I said....the function currently takes a callable (ignoring the bad things about what is considered a callabe) as a parameter.....adding the ability to pass in other things, just to avoid constructing one array seems not good to me.
@DaveRandom yeah, please either the everything on a newline or nothing, but not mixed… that's insane.
15:57
@Danack if you aim to remove [$obj, "methodName"] at some point, I don't think it will ever happen, that would be a lot of breaks. Like, shitton of breaks, internals will explode
@nikita2206 nonononooononononononononon
@nikita2206 it would be nicer to have $obj->methodName just... be... callable
I want to remove 'classname::methodname'.
@Danack Constructing the array ruins a lot of the performance benefits. Then we're back to return function () { return $this->privateMethod(); };
@salathe Which I have talked about unifying the symbol tables in 8.
15:58
@Trowski that is possible if you remove possibility of having callable($obj->property) where $obj->property is function name or Closure instance
benchmark needed please......it's going to be trivial compared to the callable comparison.
@nikita2206 As each time you pass 'classname::methodname' as a callable, the engine has to find the colon, allocate a new string to hold the class name, copy the class name and then start to do the tests on whether it's callable or not.
@DaveRandom @bwoebi Actually, slightly different....
@LeviMorrison Less talk more... oh wait, 8's a while away yet...
@Danack I can put together something again. At one point I tested returning [$this, 'method'] vs. function () { $this->method(); } and found they were about the same.
@Danack is "self::foo" supported as argument?
16:00
if ()
{
}
else
{
}
@salathe Less talk more waiting. Is that what you mean? :D
We're not writing JavaScript here
@bwoebi maybe?
@Danack Heh, yeah, I wrote the code that does this and wasn't particularly thrilled about it.
it should be...I am missing a test for self....
16:00
@Jimbo yeah, that's acceptable. But what @Danack does it crazy…
@Jimbo That's not quite as bad but still horrid horrid horrid
@LeviMorrison Less talk, more code! :D
@bwoebi meh, it allows me to view the blocks separately....
@Danack you're directly calling zend_lookup_class, so doesn't look like to me…
I think unifying the tables would be a huge stride forward but would be a huge cost.
The BC impact for it is quite large.
I also think we'd get a noticeable speedup from switching to case sensitive identifiers.
It would also avoid some localization issues but create a large BC break.
16:03
@bwoebi why do you want it called called callable? I think avoiding that and making it explicitly be a closure might avoid a lot of debate about what a callable is until a more appropriate time.
@Danack Because it's reserved already
(probably)
I would avoid underscore at least, so that it'd be easier to type ^^
@LeviMorrison I think it is - I remember trying to use it and the parse barfs on calling it as a function name, even when it's been defined as an internal funciton.
@Danack Oh it is reserved – I meant that's probably why bob made the recommendation.
@Danack because it actually sets the context of a callable in stone. Just like something might become not-callable anymore if it has "self::foo" references and similar. … so, basically: binding.
16:05
It also matches the name of the type that is used in function signatures.
@nikita2206 maybe, though some people read it as toca-able.......also procedural functions mostly are snakelike....
@LeviMorrison which we're totally allowed to do, for 8 :)
@salathe Yes, yes… there is just a lot of politics and I honestly don't think it would pass.
Would need a lot of people to rally behind it.
@salathe as long as you're not going to unify class and function names. Then it definitely is a too large BC break.
But if we decide to do it now then we can write linters and other tools to help mitigate the BC impact before it's ever released.
16:07
@bwoebi That sounds a lot like it should be called just closure($foo)....as a callable will remain something different until/when the consistent callable RFC passes.
@Danack good idea. just closure().
@bwoebi Definitely not doing that at the same time as merging class constant/property/method tables.
I think maybe in 9, though. It actually has a fun advantage:
@bwoebi I'm not going to do anything. :)
But will you be able to that though? Leaving ability to do $foo instanceof \Closure?
$foo = new Foo();

// \o/
$foo = Foo();
16:09
@nikita2206 seems to work for userland:
function foo() {
	return new foo();
}
class foo {}
$ins = foo('foo');
var_dump($ins instanceof foo);
It would technically block us from allowing properties to be bound to functions ala Javascript....
@Danack also needs support for callables of style [$obj, "parent::foo"]
@bwoebi We could not support it.
Can we not support it, please?
@LeviMorrison any reason why?
Dynamically binding to the parent of some object? I just fail to see how that's useful and makes parsing harder.
meh - it's currently valid callable syntax......although it's stupid it probably should be allowed until we remove that crap.
16:12
@LeviMorrison I'm seeing people doing their own closure() wrapper then, just to parse the method name and rebind a closure to parent then…
@Danack it's different when foo is a language construct
@nikita2206 k, I have no idea about the parser to be honest.
@bwoebi I am of the opinion they should feel the pain of writing that code if they want to do that.
2
@Danack Here's a bench showing how creating the array is about the same as just creating a closure encapsulating the method call: gist.github.com/trowski/0804fd6d8ecfae3f6607
the mechanism of stackoverflow's chatrooms is a javascrept loop that send a request for check the new message each (for e.g) 1 sec?
16:15
@LeviMorrison We're the language, not telling people how to write their code (well, we still do, but we shouldn't by placing arbitrary restrictions here and there).
I don't think it is arbitrary.
It's quite specific and nasty. Furthermore, I would like to see specific examples of it in the wild.
@LeviMorrison It pretty much would be to force that inconsistency when we easily could support it.
I really pray it's ~0% usage.
@LeviMorrison @Ocramius probably has some use case :-D
@sajad its using web sockets... it keeps the connection open and talks back and forth across it
16:17
@Orangepill ah, so there is just one connection for ever ?
@sajad one fore each client
ah I see, tnx
@bwoebi There's no good reason I can see to call the parent method from outside.
@Orangepill oh wait, in this case, stackoverflow's server will be busy so fast, if there is not any disconnect, so I think the server will be burst ..
@bwoebi Haha! Burned!
16:20
@Danack Actually, this is probably better as it doesn't have all the function call overhead in it: gist.github.com/trowski/15c6cc38a46e59852047
@orangepill i'm trying to match part of a filename to the variable
Just to clarify my stance, though: it is still possible for them to do that; it's just harder.
@Sajad WebSocket servers don't open a new process per connection usually, so it's not that much of a problem to keep a lot of idle connections open.
If they really need that behavior they can still do it.
@kelunik ah ! very good ! can I use websocket ? it is a API ? or it is a new language ?
16:21
@simplycoding strpos($haystack, $needle) !== false;
@Sajad It's a protocol, there are several server side implementations.
@kelunik ah, like what ?
Rat Shit
@Sajad Like HTTP for example.
@kelunik ah ok thanks, I found websocket.io website.
16:23
@LeviMorrison Just saying that I don't recall where exactly I've used that… I'm sure I already did. But I have no real code example location off my head here…
@Trowski ok noted....I'll think about it, but if we can make the be a language construct anyway and/or opcache can optimise this case away it might be a moot point. Also I'd really prefer to keep the parameter as just 'callable' rather than having other types allowed.
@Sajad google.com/… (Don't use anything that supports the old HyBi and Hixie versions, such as Ratchet, as those are very insecure.)
@DaveRandom Thank you so much. It works very fine. My problem is solved now. Thanks.
@Ghedipunk ok tnx
@kelunik I will, tnx
its syntax is like javascript
16:26
with password_hash()/verify()/needs_rehash() and friends: is there some standard way to get a token representing the defaults? The only option I'm seeing is to specify algorithm and options (rather than trusting the defaults), and hash them myself.

Use case: being able to quickly find and disable every account that hasn't had a rehash after $time_period, to avoid things like http://cynosureprime.blogspot.com/2015/09/how-we-cracked-millions-of-ashley.html
@Danack If it were a language construct then it might be able to be improved significantly. One thing my benchmark is missing is that calling the closure will require 2 functions calls vs one dynamic call for the array.
@Sajad The client side is javascript, the server side not necessarily.
So a function to_closure(['ClassName', 'method']) that returned a closure is still going to be faster by eliminating a function call.
@kelunik ah, but I think websocket does not support php for server side, there is a list of what it supports: Node.js, Java, Ruby, Python, Erlang, C++, .NET
@Sajad A person can write a WebSocket server in any language that allows communicating across the network. PHP can do that.
16:29
There are PHP implementations, but I can't recommend any, because the only one I use is still closed source.
ah, alright, I think I need to read more about websocket, anyway thanks
I heard about a pretty awesome implementation of a socket server in php :)
In fact, github.com/ghedipunk/PHP-Websockets is the one I've written, personally. (Do your homework, don't just pick an implementation because someone else suggests it.)
@Ghedipunk did you create a php implementions for websocket ?? :-O
@Sajad Yes, several years ago before I really understood some of the modern best practices. I'll eventually rework it to be a good, modern, stable WebSocket server.
16:32
@Danack Here's a bench when actually calling the function, showing the closure method is still slower: gist.github.com/trowski/983422a11bc788b99ad1 So what I said before wasn't entirely true, there's still an advantage even if the array has to be created when calling to_closure().
@Sajad the thing you have to understand though is that you are writing a server... not a script that handles an http request.
@Ghedipunk that's great, you have just 500 rep, but your information are too much! good for you
@FredEmmott Don't follow which "defaults" you are talking about, algo and cost are stored as part of the hash (obviously) so can't just extract the info from there?
@DaveRandom Does libdns use semver?
@Orangepill yes, I'm reading about it ...
16:34
@kelunik In theory, why did I screw up?
Nope, just because I updated form ~ to ^, that change should be fine then.
@bwoebi @LeviMorrison what use-case exactly?
@Ocramius talking about [$obj, "class::method"] style callbacks
oh, just kill them
ow ! so realtime systems are related to wehsocket ...!
16:37
such a stupid syntax anyway
@Ocramius pub?
@Danack I and the others are thinking steak somewhere in the city
oh-la-la
but only later, we're still at work :|
Not so oh-la-la
16:40
Yes, as Orangepill says, WebSockets is not like normal web traffic. You are not serving a single request then going away. You have multiple users all connected to the same script, sharing the same memory space in your server, sometimes sending messages, and sometimes it's appropriate to respond to the messages, and sometimes you're sending them messages without them necessarily expecting them...
Most important of all, the superglobals just don't make any sense, like $_SESSION and $_SERVER (and $_GET, etc)...
Great Fatal error: Stack overflow in .. on Line 65 :D
Saying about [$obj, "parent::method"] "it is already possible via Closure rebinding so it's ok to have simpler syntax for it" is just like saying "accessing private properties is already possible via Closure rebinding so let's make $obj->privateProp work too"
@VeeeneX is that xdebug?
@bwoebi No actually but : vendor/symfony/css-selector/XPath/Extension/AttributeMatchingExtension.php
16:53
@Ocramius where have you been all my life!!!
@Sjon Did you know that 3v4l doesn't work on edge?
@Ocramius you should be PHP's mascot (instead of that elephant)
I cannot click in the code window
@prograhammer what did I do this time?
Related: win10 is an utter piece of shit
16:54
nothing, I just like how you steered me in the right direction in DDD (plus reading the Red Book has helped)
I've been developing more CQS (command-query-seperation) style also
quick question (this is a dumbed down example)...I'm trying to get away from inheritance. Does something like this seen good:
// Demonstrating Delegation over Inheritance, is this better?
class BlogPostsQuery implements QueryContract {
    use CanRenderQuery;

    protected $query;

    public function __construct(Query $query){
        $this->query = $query;
	    $this->query->settings = ["limit"=>100, "sort"=>"id", "page"=>1];
    }

    // This method is moved to "CanRenderQuery" trait
    // public function prepare($input){
    //	  $this->query->prepare($input);
    // }

    protected function doCount(){
        // protected internal method we supply. Runs count query.
And use it like...
// Usage in some controller somewhere...
$blogPostsQuery->prepare($request->input());
$outputForView = $blogPostsQuery->render();
why does a query render?
or is this a command?
Because I'd like to add more traits/interfaces for "->renderAsGrid" or "->renderAsPDF"
all these start with a query
What's a query here?
The sql is called in "doCount" and "renderQuery" methods provided by you (BlogPostQuery class)
But query could be anything really, you could return just an array (with data you read from a file)
The point is, does this make sense versus inheritance? Imagine I do this:
// With added trait of "CanRenderGrid"...
$blogPostsQuery->prepare($request->input());
$outputForView = $blogPostsQuery->renderAsGrid();
Would it make sense in your system for a query to be involved in generating a response, which then gets rendered by something that implements `render()`? I.e.,
`$output = $pdfWriterObj->renderQueryResponse($query->getResponse());`
17:01
I'm not sure how I'd add logging (or some middleware to the query process?) just yet though.
If it doesn't make sense, ignore my idea, of course. You're the subject matter expert on your own system, naturally.
@Ghedipunk I thought of that too....
but I wanted to see if I could tack on traits in a de-coupled manner
one thing that concerns me is each trait would probably require more things set in here (notice: "myGrid" name): $this->query->settings = ["limit"=>100, "sort"=>"id", "page"=>1, "name"="myGrid"];
so ... anyone know if it's possible to get travis to test 32 and 64 bit ?
@Ocramius this is a query (for screens). I have commands handled seperately (they are like DTO's that get passed to handlers that are like application service fascade over domain)
@Ocramius does this pass your nose? (smell test)
17:07
nope, but I don't understand what you're doing and I need to finish what I'm doing before I GTFO
> Closing this issue for now, as we have no immediate plans to add this feature. Should we add it to the roadmap eventually, we'll make sure to update this ticket.
pooh
many poohs
I wonder what the difference is between "interface + trait" versus "trait that has abstract methods"?
@prograhammer Interfaces can not define functionality (can not have methods with bodies). A trait with only abstract methods can be used as an interface, but you're likely to confuse some people.
17:11
@Ghedipunk ahh. Yeah, people won't see the interfaces and be alarmed
Plus, the interface should exist no matter what. I mean, if we wanted to not use the trait, but paste the code directly.
Windows project resource management software? Something that acts as a single-file DB and archive for common web/design project assets and information? Like, contact cards, notes, docs, images, schedule, etc.
Also, free plz.
I just wrote a CMakeLists.txt for one of my PHP projects.
It helps detect php, composer, phpunit and has a few commands to run:
make check
make install
I want to expand it to include make phar that would make a phar out of the repository.
@DanLugg Considered Office 365? It's paid but the monthly fee is pretty cheap atm
For like, MS Project?
I'd just go OO, but meh.
17:33
@Ghedipunk I know the difference. With traits I can have protected abstract methods. With interfaces, the methods have to be public. Right?
@prograhammer That's my understanding, yes.
Why is the PHP community seems so reserved about using traits? This is a powerful thing!
Should be embraced more.
@prograhammer Personally, I don't see many direct uses for them yet. They are useful for shimming in functionality when the platform that a script is deployed on allows it, such as having libevent available compared to using my own BSD sockets loop.
I'm not used to them, and generally treat things that smell like raw multiple inheritance as "evil." I'm not used to looking for places where they can make my work easier.
If traits could explicitly implement interfaces, rather than implicitly, they'd be more powerful.
Such that a class using a trait also implements any interfaces implemented by the trait.
interface I { }
trait T implements I { }
class C uses T { }
(new C()) instanceof I; // bool(true)
Abe
Abe
@DanLugg i don't want traits to actually implement interfaces, i just want to automatically import all the "abstract function *()" from an interface, basically
17:42
They don't have the cons of inheritance/multiple-inheritance as long as the client takes the step to bring in the dependencies, like at construction, first. Then it's just composition, but more encapsulated.
Well, I feel that the static composition achievable with traiterfaces as above would be powerful, like a form of MI but following the conflict resolution rules that traits already do.
It just moves reusable chunks into places that are semantically sensible, and carries those semantics through the type hierarchy.
resusable chunks = oop
I say "just", but as far as debloating and deduplication is concerned, I think that's powerful.
encapsulation = oop
right, was just being quick
17:44
polymorphism = oop, but that's not the point.
the point is, instead of having a layer above perform the composition, I'd like the have the choice to do it encapsulated down, if I want.
This is a matter of code organization, and type semantics in a system, and bridging the two together in such a way that reduces code duplication and maintains type relationships.
inheritance =... well, you know. (Just fleshing out the vaunted pillars. ;-) )
inheritance addiction = bad. Inheritance + composition = good.
composition only? = sure, even better
Pure composition isn't necessarily better than composition and inheritance; they solve different problems. It's just that people tend to use them to solve the same problem, or each to solve eachothers problem.
17:47
@danlugg you word really good... that sounds all enterprisey
I see two types of composition; dynamic and static. Dynamic being the type of composition normally referred to: object composition. And static being type mixing at the declaration level.
@Orangepill lol I do use a GrammarFactoryWizardDecoratorDecorator
hmm. Good point. I think the big inheritance scare comes from the fact that newer programmers can go crazy and have these giant inheritance things grow out of control. Plus, it helps to really "think" if these things being more tightly coupled is what we prefer, for this situation. Sometimes it is.
There are a lot of things in OOP, and software development in general, that can be abused. The tools aren't enough... I can cut a board apart with a hammer, but knowing that saws exist, knowing how to use the different types effectively, and being willing to put in the effort is why there are carpenters.
I guess I'm leaning more towards "mixins"? But I could be wrong.
I like the name "traiterfaces", so I'm going to periodically soapbox until that's a thing or I'm dead.
17:49
I like the name "Traitor Interfaces". LOL, nah, that sounds negative.
Not to be confused with "traitorfaces"... yes?
^ or that
I wish someone would star something I say.
@Ghedipunk With enough effort anything can be abused some things are just easier to abuse then others.
@Orangepill Yeah, but I hate the pendulum. Something is abused, then people scare everyone to never using it.
\o/ I have a phar working.
17:53
@Orangepill Indeed. Some of them want to abuse you. Some of them want to be abused.
Wait, where'd the Benedict Arnold comment go?
Abe
Abe
3v4l.org/YGjBZ traits ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
lol removed @DanLugg doh!
@LeviMorrison Yay!
17:56
@DanLugg Now I just need to hook it into my makefile.
Traits = Not a big problem when you code, you know, using your eyes.
Abe
Abe
3v4l.org/bYkVn this works, though
I just like the idea of "tacking on things" to my class. Versus "passing, or injecting my class into things".
@Abe I like seeing the shrug operator used in the wild
Abe
Abe
eheheh
17:58
@tereško @Epodax I checked my win box and its an i5 quad with 3.2 ghz
is that still good enough?
Traits let you "loggable", "touchable", "huggable", "bffable". Those are good traits.
do you know the specific number ?
@tereško of the cpu? let me check
i5-3470?
@Machavity (╯°□°)╯︵($e); // just blew my mind

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