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20:01
In the same vein as OWASP, any good online security resources?
20:21
@tereško what is that mean ?
Anonymous
:\
Next you'll be telling us you don't rotate your owls:
Anonymous
^ hilarious.
This video doesn't go into the advantages of owl rotation.
I'm not going to go around blindly rotating birds of any sort until I know there is a measured benefit to doing so.
Anonymous
It's 2015. What matters most is being the first to do .. anything .
20:37
anybody know why this comment has 4 favorite star ?
Anonymous
because there is no php6
"How can I avoid HTTP 417: Expectation Failed" -- By using Great Expectations by C. Dickens.
@samayo oops !
> anybody know why this comment has 4 favorite star ?
^ For some reason, I find this hilarious
@iroegbu :-) If I was instead you, instead of favoring it, I told you "there is no php6"
2
Anonymous
20:42
@iroegbu do you have github account?
Anonymous
share
Most of my work is private though, and bitbucket
Anonymous
I like bitbucket, I wish the gui was a bit like github though
What's acceptable performance for a join nested 3 levels on a table with about a million records with a IN (FIXED LIST) clause.
21:03
@LeviMorrison we can have constructive discussions without getting ad-hominem. This is why we keep having discussions. Even if we disagree, we still respect each other. And that's awesome.
thanks for the discussion :-D
when teaching a beginner about scope, is it necessary to tell them about global?
okay, thanks
21:07
Yeah… please don't teach them about globals.
Yeah… I sometimes have these moments where I just want to slap people in the face… When it gets extreme… you just should say you need to back away for a few hours and then come back later…
@bwoebi and there's a difference there. When they are people you respect and know respect you, walking away is usually all you need. Otherwise, there's a bit of a difference
Anonymous
@iroegbu Using a function would be a great way to teach about scopes.
@bwoebi Later tonight I'm going to try to find time to do the auto-closure stuff. Is your branch current with all your work?
@LeviMorrison yes… you can just clone it and change parser rules to your needs. That's all it should need.
21:10
@iroegbu If you do mention global, please introduce them to the concept of code smells and evil.
@LeviMorrison What syntax are you planning on proposing?
@Ghedipunk I'm for acting like it doesn't exist at all.
@Trowski I guess fn(params) => expr_or_stmt … is it that @LeviMorrison ?
Yeah, basically. If it goes to vote it would be two-part voting so you can vote against the fn part without killing the whole idea.
21:14
@bwoebi Seems nice, I assume that could then support fn (Type param) : Type => expr_or_stmt?
@Trowski yeah
@Trowski Everything you can do with types is supported.
It's probably not that helpful a lot of the time.
But it's there if you need or want it.
Though I'll slay everyone who thinks he needs to specify return types on a single-expr short Closure.
Probably not, but people will want it.
@bwoebi Param types can be pretty useful though.
@Trowski I haven't said anything about these…
21:15
@bwoebi True :)
I totally agree these could be helpful.
@LeviMorrison you'll probably be able to also take most of my RFC and just change these parts which actually change.
@bwoebi Could be helpful with weak types.
@kelunik then cast the goddamn returned value directly…
Would requiring curly brackets instead of fn be weird (or even possible)? {(params) => expr}
I'd say weird
21:22
weird and harder to type
Yeah, after typing it I don't like it either, n/m.
Having a leading token is necessary for simple parsing by humans and tools.
I had suggested using a symbol instead, such as *(params) => expr, but I'm not sure if that's better or not.
@LeviMorrison Let's say: necessary for simple parsing by tools and makes parsing for humans easier.
21:25
@Trowski now nest these things a bit *&(&...$var) => $var … nice… symbol soup!!!
@bwoebi No one uses references anyway :-P
I've heard Perl were a nice language :-P
Perl is the nicest write-only language I've ever touched.
@Ghedipunk Try APL.
I would generally write the proposed syntax with the space between fn and the parenthesis, if only for uniformity with function and other keywords.
21:30
@Trowski not sure… I'll think that'll establish by itself when reading a bit code with it.
I like the space only because it otherwise looks like a function call.
Which makes me think of an interesting case: How would this parse? $value = [fn ($param) => $expr];
@Trowski I used to put a space.
However I've written a bit of code with it now.
@Trowski It's an array with one item which is a closure.
PSR-2 requires a space for anonymous functions. ;-)
@LeviMorrison Not an array with one element who's key is the result of calling the function fn()?
@bwoebi I like what little is left of my sanity, thank you.
21:35
@Trowski The function hasn't been called – why would it be?
@kelunik @LeviMorrison This is part of why I was recommending the space.
@LeviMorrison Just pointing out that this is valid syntax now.
@Trowski There will be no function fn, it'll be a keyword?
@LeviMorrison fn is a reserved keyword then.
@Trowski Oh I see.
Yes, fn would be reserved like function. This is why it would be a two-part vote. You can vote against that piece if you don't like it.
@LeviMorrison What would the other option be?
21:37
Just =>.
$value = [function ($param) => $expr];
Ah, you mean either use fn or function?
@LeviMorrison (no, I do not want fn and function to be allowed there.)
@bwoebi No, a voting option for one of them
@kelunik yes… I just want Levi to clarify.
$value = [*($param) => $expr]; :-D If only because that isn't valid syntax now.
@bwoebi I was going to propose fn resolving to T_FUNCTION. This is so that fn can be used in other locations. There are two points of view:
Well, nevermind.
Anonymous
21:39
@bwoebi Are you going to modify the rfc?
@Trowski It is valid syntax now.
@LeviMorrison I think we agreed to not want fn foo($bar) { return $bar; } to be allowed.
@kelunik no? there's no unary '*' now.
But basically some people wouldn't like that fn can't be used everywhere that function can be but other people think like what you are saying.
I am leaning towards fn being capable of being used everywhere.
@LeviMorrison Please. Make it simple. One single voting option. fn a keyword, not resolving to T_FUNCTION. We always can extend that functionality in a further RFC.
If accepted then we could deprecate function long-term. (Remeber the if and long-term)
21:41
@LeviMorrison strongly against that.
If we have fn I don't see what value function has at all in the long term.
@LeviMorrison It is verbose.
it clearly shows you with many chars: "HERE IS A FUNCTION"
@LeviMorrison I really don't want to see public fn foo() { ... }
^ this
@Trowski I don't either because you shouldn't be writing public unless you are overwriting visibility.
21:44
@LeviMorrison Except people almost always put visibility on class methods. I think PSR-2 requires it.
They shouldn't.
I've talked about this several times.
It's 1) redundant and 2) can mask visibility overrides.
And let's be straight: PSR's are definitely not standards in the sense of language standards like ISO C++.
No, they aren't. But rarely do I see class methods without visibility explicitly declared.
I rarely do see it.
It probably comes from the type of people you work with, as well as the age of code bases.
I brought up the issues with requiring the visibility with the Hack team by the way.
They just don't care. This is not surprising because I've never gotten good discussion or feedback out of them.
They only care when I propose something that doesn't match Hack.
Also, if we are going to require visibility (a possibility that has advantages) then having two long tokens in a row just sucks.
Yeah, because they want to be able to say they can run any PHP code.
@LeviMorrison I feel like you might have misunderstood. I wasn't talking about visibility on closures.
@Trowski Of course not.
21:52
Which isn't a thing anyway...
I would like to see making function optional if visibility is declared.
private foo() { ... }
^^ was about to say that
why do we even need "function" or "fn" in the first place?
@Trowski Nope.
Nope, nope, nope.
It won't pass.
It breaks so many tools to omit it.
It's been brought up many times.
I'm quite confident it won't pass unless we see a radical change in the voting body.
Not exactly something that keeps me up at night. I don't really care much. Was more of a passing thought related to the conversation. :-)
@tereško I started that audio book 5 min ago.
Allowing fn instead of function might break those same tools.
21:57
@Sajad any problems understanding?
@tereško emm, no, it is almost good, but sometimes I need to repeat it.
that's why I added the PDF
yes. its PDF is really useful
@Trowski True, but accepting a different token is much easier than removing one.
If you don't believe me go try it :D
@LeviMorrison No, I definitely believe you.
22:09
Also, I don't plan on a new token.
fn would just evaluate to T_FUNCTION, so any tool that uses PHP's tokens wouldn't break.
How are people still using the mysql_ functions?
(Of course, Bob doesn't like this and I don't think Anthony does either)
@LeviMorrison I'm doing it so that method decls are all aligned at their name (well, not perfectly, but it doesn't look totally off)
@LeviMorrison did anyone agree with you though?
22:13
@bwoebi Since when has that ever stopped me from doing something I think is right?
:D
Really it comes down to the fact that I don't want it to be a new token.
@LeviMorrison just, with nobody agreeing, your RFC won't pass…
I don't think that is a good solution.
fn for only short closures doesn't appeal to me.
I would rather have that portion fail and have to use function.
@LeviMorrison First: basic solution, we always can expand.
@bwoebi This is a case where I don't want it to diverge.
I would rather not have it at all than have a fragmented solution.
Which, by the way, allows future changes as well since it doesn't change anything.
@LeviMorrison The reason why I dislike function is exactly why I like fn. It provides a prefix telling exactly what's going on.
22:15
If fn as you propose it was implemented we don't need => at all.
fn($x) $x * $y
@LeviMorrison would work. I'm just wondering whether it's nice or not…
from a pure esthetical point.
You can actually always just omit it.
It wouldn't be ambiguous.
Yeah… we also could have foreach ($array $key $value) and foreach ($array $value) … it'd be unambiguous… but is it nice?
Sure. It was required when you did () => expr though right?
Only required when there isn't a leading token? Or am I wrong there?
no
...
22:19
Is there a reason fn is required at all? is ($param) => expr ambiguous?
It would be in an array, but outside of that?
@Trowski array and yield.
you could force parens then
So [fn ($param) => $expr] is ambiguous already.
but it'd be awkward and as said, not permitting types.
@Trowski not when fn is a keyword.
@bwoebi Right. I wonder how much backlash that would get.
@Trowski not too much, I guess.
22:22
@bwoebi Depends on how strongly people feel about semver.
@Trowski we will have breaks either way.
Well, it seems you two aren't fans, but using a unary operator like * wouldn't have breaks.
It's not searchable.
Honestly I'd like to keep function declarations as uniform as possible.
@Trowski We had discussions about using \, but honestly, using a two letter keyword just looks better.
Everywhere we define a function we always have a function token.
22:24
@bwoebi Yeah, I'd rather fn over \
@LeviMorrison create_function doesn't require a function token. (internally maybe, but meh).
@bwoebi Ugh… being serious: do you think we can deprecate it?
@LeviMorrison I hope so.
fn($x) $x * $y
function($x) $x * $y
Should do it... just remove the curly braces
@iroegbu fn($x) + $x + $y
doesn't that look… weird?
22:28
a token should come between, I guess...
If we could do with as few tokens as possible, it'll be good
Which is the point of having a T_DOUBLE_ARROW here @LeviMorrison
@iroegbu => already exists :D
fn($x) ==> $x * $y
function($x) ==> $x * $y
@iroegbu what's the point? … just use =>
Yeah… just use an existing token.
And I think => is better than -> and I'm not sure any other tokens except = would be in the running.
22:31
=> is much better in this context than ->
why textarea does not serialize ?
function ($x) = $x * $y is a possibility
I think => is better though.
@LeviMorrison yes.
Whenever we have => it is in context of "this transitions to that"
\> is semantically meaningless, yes?
22:32
Functions are like that too – "this transitions to that"
I know, I know... quit making new arrow tokens. :P
@Sajad serialize how?
We totally need a <^> operator…
var frm = $('#formid');
$.ajax({
    	url :  frm.attr('action'),
    	type : frm.attr('method'),
    	data : {frm.serialize()},
    	dataType : 'JSON',
    	success : function (commenting_system) {
I have a textarea in my form
but the value of it, does not send ...
After all the discussion, I still think fn (param) => expr is the best choice that I've seen.
22:37
@Trowski And if fn fails to pass?
right. The point now is persuading @LeviMorrison to not make the mistake and confound fn and function. I want T_FN and T_FUNCTION.
If you don't want fn for other uses… why here? I still don't understand that.
@Sajad why do you wrap the serialized data in {} ?
@LeviMorrison Then we need another alternative. But first we need feedback.
/me shutters slightly
22:39
@tereško because I want to send textarea.val() as another value
@LeviMorrison Allow function (param) => expr as well, but don't allow fn where function is current required.
Allowing fn where function is required could always be RFC'd later.
@LeviMorrison as said: to differ at a first look from Closures with import and without.
@Sajad what you wrote would looks like: {"serialized-content"}
that's invalid code
@bwoebi Doesn't the => do that?
@bwoebi I would argue the => does that.
22:40
Right. But a prefix is much more expressive than an infix.
It doesn't really matter until you get to the => does it?
@tereško here is my real code:
var txt = $('#textarea-id').val();
data : {"t_comment": txt, frm.serialize()},
@LeviMorrison the better you can distinguish code, the easier it is to read.
same issue
{"t_comment": txt, "serialized string"}
@tereško ok, so how can I send textarea value to my ajax page ?
22:42
that's NOT a valid javascript object
@bwoebi if you want to do fn(), then don't do =>. Just do fn($a) $returnval
@bwoebi <v̂> should be an operator.
14 mins ago, by bwoebi
@iroegbu fn($x) + $x + $y
^ doesn't that look weird?
(That's supposed to be a combining circumflex... a "v" with a "^" rendered in the same space)
@bwoebi yes, which is why I want () ==> + $x + $y; or () ~> +$x + $y;
but it seems we can't do anythign sensible
so I just don't want insanity
22:43
@tereško there is any approach for serializing both inputs data and textarea data ?
26 mins ago, by bwoebi
Yeah… we also could have foreach ($array $key $value) and foreach ($array $value) … it'd be unambiguous… but is it nice?
@Sajad yes. Pass the values are a correct JS object
What is preventing using ==>? Just because we aren't exactly matching Hack's semantics?
So… we're not in agreement about fn at all.
We have at least three different viewpoints on it.
@ircmaxell Point is: if we want types, we need a prefix. If we use a prefix, it'll be ugly without infix.
22:45
@tereško actually I did it already, something like this:
data : {"vote_value_d": vote_value_d, "current_value": -1, "total_votes": total_votes, "urlhref": urlhref},
I think I'll just propose => with auto-importing semantcs.
but I don't know why I have a problem now ...
Sound good?
@LeviMorrison You mean function (params) => expr?
@Trowski Yes, and it will capture anything that is used like Bob's patch currently does.
22:47
@LeviMorrison Seems reasonable to me.
@bwoebi honestly, I think that's not quite the same thing, as we're talking about having tokens in between
@LeviMorrison will it support block mode? or only expression mode?
@ircmaxell I think it's comparable enough.
@ircmaxell Just to make sure: => {} you mean?
@LeviMorrison yes
22:50
My $0.02 is to say don't
I like => expr on methods and I know some of you have mixed feelings about it, but if I have => {} then I don't think methods should support => at all because it seems weird and inconsistent because => {} on a method doesn't do anything.
keep it expression only
Yeah, that's my feeling.
I know from experience that it can be valuable, though.
the context is clear though: If you do a little, auto-binding is handy. if you do a lot, be explicit"
@tereško oh, my problem was: I had not a name attribute for the textarea, and it solved now
22:51
hmm
Part of the issue with having both => {} and => expr is that it makes the identity of => less clear. In my opinion anyway.
@ircmaxell Generally this is how I feel. If your function is doing this much, a little extra verbosity isn't a bad thing.
I feel like I should just go ahead and propose fn() => {} / fn() => $retval
@bwoebi It feels like special casing to do that.
@LeviMorrison that I agree with
22:53
@LeviMorrison It is special casing
As outlined above => expr can be used on any function expression, closure or not.
It's less special and more general compared to what you are suggesting.
that's the whole point of doing that.
I want an unique, recognizable respresentation of that particular thing.
@LeviMorrison wait, that can get dangerous
@LeviMorrison also… function() => $expr going to mean implicit use or not? … when we generalize that.
We need to have that special.
function foo() {
    $a = 1;
    // clear what this does
    return function($x) => $x + $a;
}

$y = 1;
// What does this do???
function Foo($x) => $x + $y;
22:55
@ircmaxell Undefined variable $y because named functions aren't closures.
I see your point, though.
2 mins ago, by Levi Morrison
As outlined above => expr can be used on any function expression, closure or not.
oh, you see the point, nevermind
My point was that => expr allows a short-hand return expr that will use() if applicable. It's not applicable to named functions (including methods).
well, but if you support it as a token, doesn't that become a bit "weird"?
since it looks like a closure, but isn't really
I mean… I'd be okay with using it if others are. Why can't named things close over values?
@LeviMorrison so, to explicitly use use() on Closures, I must not use => … wtf, PHP?
22:58
This goes back to why I started with => expr meaning literally { return expr; }.
well, that's fine, except that doesn't get us auto-binding
function foo() {
    $a = 1;
    // clear what this does
    return function($x) use(...) => $x + $a;
}
@LeviMorrison and return function($x) => $x + $a; then?
I think NikiC mentioned use(...) in passing, and in this case its longer than just using $a.
@bwoebi Sorry? I don't understand.
@LeviMorrison copy paste went bad, corrected.
23:00
Anyway, all of this is because PHP made a mistake about how it closes over scopes and variables. In my opinion, anyway.
not sure if mistake or not…
JavaScript has issues because it doesn't have lexical scope (and we screwed that up too).
@LeviMorrison how did we screw up there?
@bwoebi foreach ($input as $key => $value) {} <- $value outlives the loop.
@LeviMorrison I'm sure I've already used that to use the last value of a loop.
The only time it may be annoying is by-ref loops
23:05
I think we should have to defined new variables using let or var or something.
Just assignment was a mistake, I think.
And there's no way I'd propose that now.
Just something we'll have to live with.
Alright, going home.
I'm not sure if that's a mistake or not.
It allows us to reuse a variable which we don't need anymore without caring whether it already existed or not.
whoosh this ghost is going to bed. Good night everyone.
23:21
$foo = [];

foreach ($foo as $key => $value) {
}
var_dump($value);
Notice: Undefined variable: value in /in/ggLVQ on line 8
that's where the scope is borked.
sure… it never was set…
what else should it's value be???
Asked 3 minutes ago.
6 views.
-5 votes.
-5
Q: Making a web crawler

jessicaJust saw this tutorial on making a web crawler, but when I tried to test out the code, the page just shows a blank page, while on the tutorial, the contents of the web page below actually shows up. I think I typed everything exactly as the tutorial, so I'm not sure where I went wrong. Please take...

@bwoebi In a sane language, the contents of an array wouldn't change what variables are set. i.e. $value shouldn't exist outside of the foreach{} scope, even if the array was not empty.
@Danack don't know.
variable shadowing is annoying.
That was what Levi was saying:
26 mins ago, by Levi Morrison
@bwoebi foreach ($input as $key => $value) {} <- $value outlives the loop.
And I agree.
Having the correctness of some program vary depending on the value of a variable is......not so good.
23:31
$foo = [];
$value = null;
foreach ($foo as $key => $value) {
}
var_dump($value);
^ which is why you write it this way then.
And generally, with that example… what'd the value of $value be in a sane language?
@bwoebi Without the deliberate scoping to outside the foreach loop, it would be an undefined variable all the time outside the foreach, as it is only guaranteed to exist within the foreach loop.
How can I get the ID of row after inserting ?
so I was testing the ==> on classes and the result looks a bit alien strange to me, but perhaps I'm just not used to it gist.github.com/marcioAlmada/8e7cc707666f5e2a38a2 I'll save it and look at it once in a while.
@Danack I mean, here, $value is initialized to null before the loop… what will it be at the end of the loop?
Either null or the last setting of value. I'd usually use a separate variable to reduce the wtf factor:
$last = null;

foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
    $last = $value;
}
23:34
And I'd just prohibit successful compilation here then alternatively.
assuming the array doesn't store null - and if it did I'd use a $anyValuesWerePresent instead.
@marcio it reads like some other language.
@bwoebi totally, but it doesn't mean a bad thing if it turns out to be an improvement.
@marcio Not sure if improvement…
> IF it turns out to be...
23:37
there is any function similar with this: mysql_insert_id in the PDO ?
@bwoebi there are some problems. 1) is it possible to declare an empty method with the short syntax? 2) what if I don't want to return anything but my method is still a one liner :x
@marcio just use => {} ?
@marcio Also… can you please use => instead of ==> in your example?
oh right, your proposal allows the block syntax
@bwoebi hhhm, no D: I prefer ==>
@marcio brb… grabbing a few stones // j/k :-P
@Sajad Yes. Both the PHP Manual entries for PDO and for mysql_insert_id link to it.
23:42
ok tnx
@bwoebi the implicit return is a seduction but it's also dangerous as you leak a return value almost without realize it, but it's probably just me being undisciplined and most people would not make this mistake.
@marcio you'll leak the retval… but is that an issue?
@bwoebi yes if somebody decides to rely on the return value for something and that's NOT exactly your intention.
1) oh this method is a one liner 2) let me convert it to short syntax 3) leaks return value instead of null.
@marcio uh… yeah, was still thinking in Closures terms.
cc @LeviMorrison did you think about these nitpicks? ^
23:50
I agree with @bwoebi – you need to use => instead of ==>. Also, what's up with the spacing?
As far as returning nothing - that's equivalent to => null.
What spacing? I did a dumb search and replace, so it might look broken in some places.
For what it is worth I asked my two web developers what they thought about fn working everywhere. They were enthusiastic.
I promise I didn't bias that at all.
@LeviMorrison Did they say it sound "fn great?"
/stralia
@LeviMorrison I'm okay with 'fn' too, but => is not good.
?
What's not good?
23:55
@marcio you meant it isn't good, … it's great… right?
@LeviMorrison The => looks confusing when there are arrays nearby. I'll wait a few days to see if this impression goes away.
For what it is worth I don't think assignment should be an expr, which in turn means using => to assign things is abuse.
(imo, obviously)
@bwoebi :P
Your foreach and ifs not having {} is weird too.
It was on purpose. I started to wonder, if people get short syntax for functions they might want to revive non common short syntax already allowed. So this is how php would look like because of the trend. (we can't ignore the human factor)

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