I've been wondering the whole day how would it be the best way to implement business rule validation and how to report the user if something goes wrong.
@PPPHP: Get a USB microcontroller and connect the GPIO pins to a relay/motor and make that press down on an air horn. Then have PHP open the com port the USB device is masquerading as and alert the user by setting the relevant GPIO pin to high voltage.
@markustharkun I'll need your help. Look at that screen
When I hover over $this->accessToken it says me that accessToken doesn't exist. When I try to Refactor -> Introduce field, it says me it already exists
Extract method works REALLY well, because you let the IDE determine what needs to happen so there is not a chance of errors. But if that is buggy, it underminds the trust. And if I can't trust it, I'll do it manually...
@markus Im designing my domain model. Lets say I have method which should do something interesting. There are few parameters that come from user and if some of the parameters dont add up with the "rules" it should somehow report it to the user.
@ircmaxell they have an issue tracker, they answer to every ticket, they will fix it. Zend Studio costs more, they don't have a working issue tracker, they don't answer to every ticket and they can't fix anything because they're dependent on eclipse
@NikiC Well, it comes down to trust. Automated refactoring only works if it works 100% of the time correctly. Even at 99.99% enough trust is broken where I either need to verify the refactor, or write tests to ensure that the refactor works. And at that point, I might as well refactor myself, since the tests are going to need it to be written...
@markus I just somehow dont get it, should the method return a error message or should the class gather the errors to an array. After every method call to this class, it should call getError() or something just to know if everything went right.
@PPPHP wrong user input is not an error, it's just wrong user input, the user has to know about it and correct it's input. the system doesn't do anything with it until it's correct input
@PPPHP the method itself should not return an error message... if you're talking about the validator, certainly not, a validator should only return a bool
Actually, no, I'm using a book to re-enforce my point that automated refactoring is only worth while if the refactoring process can be trusted. If it can't it's actually worse since there's a false sense of security
automated refactoring must never change behavior. Otherwise it's completely pointless and worse than manual refactoring...
@NikiC that's what a DIC should always be but often isn't... but that's besides the point. I'm just saying. believe me, if you write a larger framework, you want to have docblocks for everything
@Gordon No, I'm talking about extract method is used for a method without tests that you want to test. So you simplify the method to make it testable (extracting the functionality). Imagine properly testing a 1000 line method. Not easy or possible in most cases. But if I can automatically extract that out into a dozen or so methods that are literally functionally equivilant, I can start writing tests for those. And once they are written, I can start manually refactoring to simplify it...
@Gordon I'm actually not aiming at anything, @NikiC just said he doesn't like DIC's but he doesn't know what an external agent is and I said then he isn't entitled to talk about DI
of course with a ;)
everyone can talk about it :)
when aiming to understand what DI really is, one important factor is to understand the difference between DI as an internal agent vs. DI as an external agent
he picked a good subject to get in on, I think a good 20% or so of questions on SO these days should be redirected to one or both of those answers of his
@Gordon I 'promise' we'll get back to the topic, it's hot and very interesting and very misunderstood and abused... but I need my sources to argue successfully
Back in September, Socorro received a security bug relating to the method we were using for processing inputs for the duration of certain reports. The vulnerability included a proof of concept, with an alert box popping up on production when the link was followed. The Vulnerability I was quite surprised at the root cause of [...]
@Gordon if there are no cookies set, $cookie will be an empty string, if cookies are set, $cookie will be name=urlencodedvalue of the last cookie in the array .... if that outcome was intended there would have been easier ways to achieve it :D
@ircmaxell Btw, dataloss warnings will not fix the casting type hints. E.g. we clearly don't want an implicit bool cast on an array to throw a warning (we do want if ($array) to work after all), but type hints shouldn't accept array() as bool ;)
@markustharkun its part of a more or less transparent proxy so i guess sending just the last cookie value is not intended. and of course there is unit-tests.
@markustharkun i wouldnt bet on it. its not a big project, but the task description sounds like major hacks and lots of pain. and im not sure they will accept my hourly rate.
@ircmaxell so the book suggests that for a very complicated refactoring that has no safety measures in place one should opt for an automated approach? i mean, i understand why you argue it has to work 100% in that case, but i'd still argue things that require extra care and knowledge should be attempted by experts only. automation is for trivial tasks.
@NikiC Just cut out it and pasted it back. Looked like everything is okey. Just for test, added a comment line inside method and after saving, it immediately disappeared from structure box.
lol. turned out that cookie snippet above wasnt from the client but from a service provider. i called them to ask whether it was intentional to send only the last cookie and they said its not used anyway. they "think they used it for debugging or something"
Everybody likes strict type hinting. Except when it comes to agreeing on how it should be implemented, because half of them really want weak hinting based on their replies
> My argument, wasn't so much about how PHP handles typecasting, but rather where the onus is on unexpected values. 123 should equal (==) "123" - as that could come from a POST var, for example.
@Leigh Well I thought about making a talk after I have refactored my own 10 year old PHP code showing it actually. There's even PHP 3 code in there IIRC.
So I won't call these snippets really embarrassing ;)
The xdebug intergration in PHPStorm is quite nice, I tend to not use var_dump much any longer.
@PPPHP either throw an exception and catch that somewhere in the application stack to convert it to something the user can see or use a Notification object
user895378
15:56
@LeviMorrison Oh well, no Traversable StdClass typehint just means a manual check:
user895378
if ($traversable instanceof Traversable || $traversable instanceof StdClass)
@Gordon Okay, thanks, I'll try to figure it out. About the exceptions, I've read that they should be used if something truly exceptional happens (what ever that means).