I can't remember the exact quote, but there is one like "Programming languages don't stop evolving due to a lack of idea, they stop evolving due to running out of different brackets and other useful punctuation on standard keyboards".
Hi All. Several of you may (or may not) know that Zephyr (the last user in the user list of this room, grayed out, no reputation) is a bot that watches this room. It watches several rooms across the network for various voting requests.
My question for you, since that room seems to have low (non Zephyr) traffic...do you feel it's important that Zephyr continues to aggregate these voting requests to a single location?
I don't buy that argument. There is enough time between RCn and RCn+1 / final to build on Windows. And I am perfectly fine with delaying the release, having a new RC, etc. when there is a Windows build issue.
the fact of the matter is they've been doing it this way for years. Don't like it? Great. But to bitch and make a big deal out of it today when it wasn't a big deal since 5.2, is a bit over the top. Make an RFC and see if it passes.
Yup. Actually Windows releases were very unnoticed in the normal release process. It now only gets noticed because the release got delayed by a few hours (!!!).
I use Microsoft Edge and OneNote for this, but then again, I may be a teeny weeny bit biased.
I guess my point is that there are numerous ways to do this on the client-side already, some of which sync as well (even if you're vehemently against Microsoft and don't use OneNote, there's the equal...
@SebastianBergmann Mainly I'm not complaining about having the discussion, but more about the timing of the discussion and the "authority" with which people presented themsevles in it
@bwoebi I don't (really) care about the few hours of delay. I care about things like changing code, re-tagging the release, and then releasing without a new RC. Things like that scare the shit out of me.
@ircmaxell Problems that get fixed relatively quickly, which is nice, if it wasn't for the fact that new versions tend to introduce other bugs for no apparent reason. For example, background-position: <direction> <amount> not working, pseudo-elements not rendering unless you added an empty rule with the same selector, html::before, html::after not rendering, transitions didn't work on ::before/::after for a number of years
@BoltClock Edge has more bugs than Chrome IMO, with IE having even more. Chrome has a lot of CSS bugs we work around though - mainly with transforms. And the fact fixed is quirky. Chrome crashes a lot for the last two versions on my computer though.
opinions You've been tasked with hammering out an online store; stock functionality of the known platforms is sufficient, you're basically just branding it; CMS/framework that'll cause the least friction?
Windows 10 is great for being an example of how not to do certain things - like the autocomplete in the start menu - if you type "chrome" it will take you to chrome if you wait for it to load - but if you type "chrome" and press enter immediately it'll search bing for Chrome instead.
@DanLugg probably the one tha'ts the cheapest to outsource, probably wordpress since you can hire 10 year olds for very cheap to deal with it and then just review their (lilkely shitty) work - since it's a simple problem that's been done millions of times that will be sufficient anyway and will likely be quick and cheap.
Is there a pattern for deprecating ini settings? For functions I know it's possible to give a E_DEPRECATED notice - is that safe to do for an ini setting?
I think I might just remove it at a appropriate time....when my own issue saying I should remove it, is the 4th search result for it, that probably means not too many people are aware of it, and as it doesn't even work....
I don't have the answer as to what the proper routine is... but... If an E_DEPRECATED notice is fired every time an INI setting is read, wouldn't that produce a notice every single time a script is executed? Rather, I think that the default value for that setting could be changed to a safe state, the setting removed from suggested configs, and the documentation describing that setting would explain that it's deprecated.
The alternative is for developers to see too much junk coming from deprecated warnings, stop paying attention to it, and other deprecated stuff gets ignored.
@Ghedipunk No it would be in module init, which means it would be done once.......and never be seen by most people unless they go looking through their log files, or run PHP from the command line.
s/done once/done once when PHP starts up/
The safe state is to remove it......any attempt to use that setting is bogus.
I want to argue that people maintaining their systems should be looking at log files constantly, and it's common for professional developers to use PHP scripts from the command line... but, yes, there is enough of a divide between PHP users and PHP developers that the people who would notice the deprecated warning would also know how to fix it.
@bwoebi Software is a gas: It expands to consume all available resources.
15:16 <voodooKobra> if you're good at something, don't do it for free
15:17 <ircmaxell> you're not doing it for free
15:17 <Derick> I did Xdebug for free :P
15:17 <PSchwisow> Derick: who said you were good at it?
15:17 <PSchwisow> :D
15:17 <Derick> oi! :P
99 little conditions not yet thought of on the wall 99 little conditions not yet thought of Take one down, implement it around 472 little conditions not yet thought of on the wall
99 little conditions not yet thought of by our users 99 little conditions not yet thought of Take one down, implement it around 523 little conditions not yet thought of by our users
I wish we could read hex numbers like we do with decimals… Like 7FA = seven hundred fty a … but that reads absolutely weird… can we have something better than that?
@bwoebi to define 10, you need to define 0 and 1, with 1 being the immediate successor to 0. All numbers greater than 1 but less than 10 can be defined by that successor form
@ircmaxell Turn "Because the MD construction is subject to length extension attacks, .." into "Due to the {is subject to}-ness of the MD construction to length extension attacks, ..."
so say you need to keep a global instance somewhere, how would you do it? class A{ public static $instance; public static function get(){} public static function set(A $instance){} public function __construct(){} } something better than this?
php -r '$a = [1]; call_user_func_array(function(&$a) { $a++; }, $a); var_dump($a);'
Warning: Parameter 1 to {closure}() expected to be a reference, value given in Command line code on line 1
array(1) {
[0]=>
int(1)
}
@fat_flying_pigs What details are you wanting to look at? There's stuff like wireshark which can show you all network traffic on your machine and allow you to examine things at the packet level
@fat_flying_pigs Chrome shows you anything, including websockets frames in realtime. It could be less practical than the raw dump of the HTTP flow though, if it's what you want.
I was looking at how setinterval and usleep don't work with the same numbering scheme, so I was wondering why programming languages don't set one standard with front end communities.
Should the communities with other number schemes come up with something like "jsleep" where the "j" means using t...
guys please take look, pastebin.com/D0JLT96t i can edit all the records except the first one, the eidt, doesnt edit the first record in the database, i guess it's an html error
guess im missing some tag or something
so i cant edit the first record in the table, say i have 20 employees, i cant edit the first
@MorganTouvereyQuilling This is the best I can get. http://imgur.com/cEfMJEy I need to view the details in the initial connection, SSL, and request sent
@AjaxGuru PHP takes a lot of its functions from Perl, C and the standard *nix libraries - I don't think Javascript has had much influence. It's fairly simple math to convert between - no need for extra functions.
@MorganTouvereyQuilling In that first image, can you show me where to find the SSL details? I've looked over it before, but I did not manage to find anything of use. It seems that it hides the SSL details (and even encrypted information would be helpful at this point)
@AjaxGuru I use javascript on the frontend. Personally I've found very little usage for sleep/usleep when writing backend code - it's rare that you want to wait for nothing but a specified period of time in that manner in my experience.
@AjaxGuru As I've said, if you ever do want to convert between the 2, the math is trivial - it certainly doesn't warrant an unnecessary new function in the PHP core, in my opinion
SSL/TLS negociation ? It's made at lower level in the connection, that's not really part of the HTTP protocol, and Chromium doesn't shows that in the dev tools :/ But you can still view the certificate informations by clicking on the lock icon in the URL bar.
foreach in PHP7 by default, when itterating by value, operate on a copy of the array according to: http://php.net/manual/en/migration70.incompatible.php
Does it lazily create a copy only if there are changes made to the array or a value or will it always make a copy and in essence make looping o...
Unix time (also known as POSIX time or Epoch time) is a system for describing instants in time, defined as the number of seconds that have elapsed since 00:00:00 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), Thursday, 1 January 1970, not counting leap seconds. It is used widely in Unix-like and many other operating systems and file formats. Because it does not handle leap seconds, it is neither a linear representation of time nor a true representation of UTC. Unix time may be checked on most Unix systems by typing date +%s on the command line.
== Definition ==
Two layers of encoding make up Unix time. These...
Did I miss it or is there no documentation about the (*XXX) sequences in the PHP regex docs?
Also… \K wasn't quite what I expected it to in preg_replace context… I thought it'd just affect the offset where the next match starts, not also change where the replacement context starts…