« first day (1979 days earlier)      last day (3196 days later) » 

 
1 hour later…
01:45
as with most of future predictions - the answer is: it's not that simple
we currently dont have the computation power (Moore's law doesnt apply any more), for most of the jobs you would have to actually create physical machines (which actually is still tricky and requires huge investment) and there is a major question of trust (subjectively and legally)
the first one is actually the hardest to overcome
- silicon circuit technology is almost at it's limits - the 10nm chips are at least 2 years away, and it looks like 5nm is the hard stop
- optical computing is in it's infancy
- quantum computers are not applicable in AI (if I am not missing something really huge)
- stacked chips have HUGE cooling problem
right, the bit that cached my eye was "Decoupling Income From Work" mainly, maybe because it's in general an aspect that is not talked when it comes to AI and machines as much as the advancements required for these
but yeah, it's not that simple and obviously not that fast
as I see it, we are in for about 10 years of major slowdown
.. oh, and another thing - the chip fabs are all booked up for next 5 years, mostly on making new phones
02:00
that's a bit saddening to hear
look at it this way: Nvidia and AMD are still stuck on 28nm GPU chips
well, if you have a few billions and you are looking for a really good investment - making a chip fab would be a really good idea
afaik the researches on semiconductors, computation with less power consumption, higher data transmission systems are on rise and those play a key role on the industry and its development. but honestly I'm not sure about how long until the next jump, if there'll be one
Intel has been promising 10nm for end of 2017
it probably will get pushed back as always
there have been 5nm chips produced, but those have been proofs of concept, nothing for mass production
02:20
10 nm – 2016–2017
7 nm – 2018–2019
5 nm – 2020–2021
that's what was noted on a side on the wiki
there will be no 10nm chips this year
and probably none in 2017
and if they announced 10nm for late-2017, then there will definitely be no 7nm chips in 2019
if I had to guess, we will see first 5nm chips in 2024 .. and that's the end of the line for silicon
It seems to me like this is very strongly dependant on the researches on semiconductors
sure, but the writing is on the wall
if you were an investor, would you throw money at making more effective incandescent light bulb these days?
no, but that's cause my main interests would be different, plus more interesting and promising things are out there
but mainly focusing on making smaller tablets and mobiles is something else
new and possibly smaller
 
1 hour later…
03:56
hmm... not sure if I should go sleep or finish SEL first
04:21
well, I'm off
it must be really late already, nite
04:36
Good morning
Guys, please help to give the solution for this case please: stackoverflow.com/questions/36051017/…
05:19
posted on March 17, 2016

New Cyanide and Happiness Comic

06:15
good morning
Wes
Wes
morning
@JoeWatkins in case you missed it gist.github.com/WesNetmo/b56320810358593ab345
i would like that solution as well
and it's possibly even better as it doesn't force you to have constructors
there's no connection between the type of A, and the requirement that the object should not have any undefined members ...
if you want a way to denote that an object should not have null members, then that's what you need, what does it have to do with the type of anything ?
but int null is not an int
it's misleading
even the docs say it's a value of type of the same name
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins what is type safety then?
06:28
class Something {
    final $thing;
}

new Something();
Wes
Wes
int $foo = null; is incomplete as it's undefined
that is a legitimate error, regardless of the type of $thing ...
but you can't do int $thing = null whatever
Wes
Wes
yes but you can do
class Something{ public int $foo; }
new Something; and pass that incomplete instance around in your code
as $foo is null
sure, because it's legitimate to do so
Wes
Wes
it is not mate :(
06:30
no it isn't null
it's undefined
I don't see the point.. when you want interfaces, you always use setters, so final something for disallowing override in sub-classes is strange..
Wes
Wes
it is in userland @JoeWatkins
no it isnt, you will never get null from a typed property ... ever ...
Wes
Wes
yes but i could be forced to do isset($typed->prop)
but anything there BUT the typed type is wrong as well as null...
Wes
Wes
06:32
which is what we want to avoid as well as disallowing other types
> yes but i could be forced to do isset($typed->prop)
that's your logical error, why are you trying to read a property before you set it if they are the restraints you placed on the property ?
@JoeWatkins let's say I make a class and distribute it, I'll have to use checks on each typed property to make the one who uses my class set them beforehand
it's boilerplate code..
Wes
Wes
hold on for a sec @JoeWatkins i believe you are against what we are asking because it would have a shitty implementation, not because it's conceptually wrong. right?
Wes
Wes
06:37
because the other day you seemed to agree with me, andrea, ircmaxell and so on
if the implementation is going to be shit/weak then i would probably accept your solution
Wes
Wes
but maybe an extra thinking effort could be made?
no, I didn't, I said I couldn't bring myself to make ordinary code exceptional ...
Wes
Wes
what do you mean with ordinary code?
remember that i lack of internals knowledge
actually, i lack of any knowledge :B
Mar 9 at 16:14, by Joe Watkins
<?php
class Manager {
	private Dependency $d,
			 Dependency $s,
			 Dependency $n;
	private Resource $r;

	public function __construct(Dependency $d, Dependency $s, Dependency $n) {
		$this->d = $d;
		$this->s = $s;
		$this->n = $n;
	}

	public function connect() {
		$this->r =
			new Resource($this->d, $this->s, $this->n);
		return true;
	}
}
Wes
Wes
06:40
java is not a good example as everything is nullable by default, though
by example you can see that it's not the type that determines that the member should always have a value, it is something else ... all we are doing here is types, not nullables, not unions, not anything else ...
Wes
Wes
private Resource|null $r;
why is that wrong. it's just what it is
what ?
Wes
Wes
encapsulation is also within the same class. "private Resource $r;" makes me think it's already set, instead could be left unset at any time
but why, just because you know the type now do you expect something totally different to your expectations of today, why should knowing the type change your expectations so ?
user924016
06:45
Mornings
if you have a member that should never be left undefined, then you need a way to make that known, I don't see why you're trying to pin it on the type ... solve the problem by itself ... we didn't set out to solve that problem here ...
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins if it was Resource|null $r; i would use isset() only on those fields that are explicitly nullable, otherwise i'm always forced to use isset on any field because i have no guarantee that they are actually set
12 hours ago, by Wes
i'm already seeing all the frameworks doing
class SomeStruct{
     public int $a; public int $b; public int $c;
     function isActuallyValid(){ return isset($this->a) && isset($this->b) && isset($this->c); }
}
it would be better if they were just logically consistent .... if you access a typed property before there is any chance of it being set, that's a logical error ... a programming error, which we raise for you, helpfully ...
Wes
Wes
but i'm not saying that yours is wrong (as the error eventually will show up), i'm saying that could be better
@JoeWatkins what me and Wes are trying to say is that it should have the same behavior as this: 3v4l.org/iMfkY
06:50
@Wes are you talking about public/protected vars? You already have that problem. typed or not. Which is why it's a good idea to hide them behind methods. If you want to write bad code, just deal with the consequences and handle those cases yourself
@Patrick same with protected/private
sure it could be better ... you could add final properties and properly enforce what you want to enforce ... but we are not setting out to solve this problem ... it's no surprise it's not solved ...
@JoeWatkins in the 3v4l above you get errors the moment you don't pass an instance of Zoo, be it a null, a 'nothing' or anything else
@SergeyTelshevsky protected is like public, since it can be accessed from outside. But private it's your own variable and it's definitely an error if you try to access it if it was not set
@Patrick no, give me a second
Wes
Wes
06:53
@JoeWatkins sorry for insisting though. i always get sentimental about php :B i'm going to dodge this conversation from now on though :D i should really work and clearly i'm not convincing you to change your mind
@Patrick 3v4l.org/JHiQh
@Patrick the whole point of the argument is to reduce defensive programming
may think protected Request $request; is private
@SergeyTelshevsky your problem is that you are using setter injection when you should use constructor injection. If you use setter injection, you should initialize a default value anyways imo
I don't like having invalid objects
I'm not denying it's a problem @Wes, just denying that we should solve it only for typed members by placing restrictions on the implementation ... it's a problem for untyped members too, it needs a solution that applies to both ...
Wes
Wes
indeed
class A{ public int $var; }
new A(); // this is not an error and what the discussion is about as it should be an error
at least according to me and sergey
class A{ public $var; }
just because the type is not known, it's not an error now ?
that's silly ...
types are supposed to be optional ...
Wes
Wes
07:01
that is public mixed $var; which is anything, null included
ah wait, I thought you were arguing for making null an allowed type... should have read the whole conversation I guess
@JoeWatkins it is initialized with a valid value (null). If you force a type and it is initialized with null (or undefined), it's not a valid value and the object is invalid imo
Wes
Wes
class A{ public int $var; }
new A(); // this is not an error and what the discussion is about as it should be an error
echo (new A())->var; // you will get the error only on property access @Patrick
which is okay, but not optimal. i'd prefer the error to show up immediately, rather than somewhere in a monumental backtrace
class A{ public $var; }
I agree with you guys then, if you define a type and it's not initialized to a valid type then it should be an error
anyways, gotta go to work
that makes idiomatic code exceptional, just because you have used optional types ...
Wes
Wes
07:06
@Patrick it's not super wrong as again the error will show up eventually, but not ideal, as passing an invalid/incomplete instance around is never a good idea
^ this, in the 3v4l I pasted above you may simply miss the required setter call in the stack, you will not know that until the conditional fails, and if it fails on production.. boom
so you'll want to wrap try/catch or isset stuff to avoid that, which would not be required if it'd blow up on instantiation
07:32
morning
Good morning and Happy Prebecca day!
7
mornin guys!
@JoeWatkins then at least make it thrown an error if the file is declared strict. You lose a lot of the benefits if you allow it to be in an invalid state. An example would be a typo in the constructor. If you don't throw an error after construction I might not notice it for quite a while and start the debugging in the wrong place
07:53
morning
Wes
Wes
\o
@Patrick @JoeWatkins @Wes I don't see why an uninitialized public int $foo should error on construction. It doesn't in Java.
Wes
Wes
@Gordon because java sucks. literally everything is nullable in java
@Wes No, an int will default to 0.
An Integer however, will default to null (lol)
Wes
Wes
yeah except primitibes :B
Sir Charles Antony Richard Hoare FRS FREng (born 11 January 1934), commonly known as Tony Hoare or C. A. R. Hoare, is a British computer scientist. He developed the sorting algorithm quicksort in 1959/1960. He also developed Hoare logic for verifying program correctness, and the formal language Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP) to specify the interactions of concurrent processes (including the dining philosophers problem) and the inspiration for the occam programming language. == Biography == Born in Colombo, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) to British parents, Tony Hoare's father was a colonial civil...
07:58
IMO having an unitialized typed property doesn't mean that setting it during construction is required to have the object in a valid state. It could be an optional property.
@Gordon agree, the solution is final properties
moin all
Wes
Wes
@Gordon if it's optional then declare it public int|null $optional; :|
Wes
Wes
or whatever the syntax will be
public int $amount;
public function __construct(int $amount) {
  $this->amount = $amount;
}
Compile error? ^
08:00
@Wes that sucks. null should be implied imo
@Gordon And Java is full of NullPointerExceptions
Wes
Wes
@Patrick and people checking for null like crazy everywhere in the code
@Patrick true, but you can work around them with the Optional type and/or NullObject pattern
@Gordon The Optional type is just a bit more declarative way of checking for nulls. It's still null checking.
Wes
Wes
@Gordon it should be implied only during construction, not after
08:02
so it looks like we gotta support weak types ...
@Gordon if it's optional, it should be declared optional. Not be optional by default. Otherwise you lose the ability to detect bugs early like typos in the constructor etc
In Java, a non primitive defaults to null if it's not initialized, if they're marked final, it's allowed for them to be set in the constructor, but not after (and obviously not again)
I don't see why an untyped prop is allowed to be null when not initialized, but a typed one should be different.
Wes
Wes
i can't believe i'm explaining why null references are bad. i give up (for real this time)
i wonder if this thing is going to be useful at all after the committee is done with it
08:03
me neither, in a system where types are optional ...
because untyped is mixed and thus allows null
so null is valid. if it's typed, null is not valid unless it's a nullable type
@Patrick you still have null checks all over the place with untyped props then
@Gordon yes but we already have that
Wes
Wes
@Gordon but only for those that are explicitly nullable, not everything
if you choose mixed, it's up to you to make sure you have the right thing
08:05
imo its different semantics to require a prop to have a value versus require a prop to get assigned with specific type
Wes
Wes
gawd
If I declare that I want a property to be Foo, it does not make sense that it can be something else than Foo unless I declared that somewhere. Otherwise what's the point of even declaring it?
you want the property to be Foo when it is assigned.
Wes
Wes
@Gordon you want the property to be Foo always, except during construction where it can be temporarily null
@Gordon no, I want it to be Foo during the whole lifetime of the object
If I want it to be optional, I will use a mixed type or nullable type
08:08
@Gordon Java's null is one of the biggest weaknesses of the language.
@Gordon or read
Wes
Wes
^ what @MadaraUchiha said
The fact that any object can be an actual object or not, completely at random, makes it impossible to program without lines upon lines of boilerplate
not true. Like I said Optional or NullObject pattern
If you enforce types, enforce them all the way, and if after the constructor the object is still null, throw an exception (or better yet, a compile time error)
@Gordon 1. even an Optional foo might be null.
2. Optional was only introducted in Java 8 for that exact reason
3. Optional is still quite verbose, because you can't really get around the issue of finding an alternative value or throwing an exception.
08:11
@MadaraUchiha after constructor?
Wes
Wes
@PaulCrovella around? how do i properly test... jsonSerialize() in php unit?
$this->assertSame($e, $s->jsonSerialize()); won't work as it's not recursive
doesn't seem to me that is a good idea to compare the strings
@Gordon I don't want a NullObject, I don't want anything Nullish. I want Foo and nothing else because anything else is a programming error on my side
shouldn't that be if there's an attempt to use it?
@iroegbu if it has an invalid type after construction, the object is in an invalid state and thus it should throw an error
anything else makes debugging hard
Wes
Wes
14 hours ago, by Wes
i'm already seeing all the frameworks doing
class SomeStruct{
     public int $a; public int $b; public int $c;
     function isActuallyValid(){ return isset($this->a) && isset($this->b) && isset($this->c); }
}
08:14
13 mins ago, by Madara Uchiha
public int $amount;
public function __construct(int $amount) {
  $this->amount = $amount;
}
Wes
Wes
you can pass the invalid instance around and check all the time if it's actually valid
that should be disallowed imho
assuming the value of $amount isn't set in the constructor, I don't think my code should break
After all, I didn't attempt to use the int
Wes
Wes
why care about types at all then
Wes
Wes
function test(int $foo){} can you pass a null here? no. then for the exact same reason you shouldn't be allowed to use an incomplete object
08:16
I still disagree. If I have a ctor like __construct(Foo $foo, int $number) then I can see from the signature that the object requires a Foo and an int to be in a valid state. If the ctor would raise because some other typed class member is not initialized, the contract is incomplete. I would need to look at the class code or run the code to find out what is needed to put the object into a valid state. That's hidden dependencies. The ctor sig should tell me what is needed. Not the compiler.
Morning.
@Gordon If we had ctor overloading, sure. But we don't, and while that specific example is clear, there are cases where you might want to provide the ability to set a property via the ctor, but you might also want to allow it to be set later.
@Wes the string is the purpose of the function, so I don't see a problem comparing them... then again I don't know what the problem is comparing the returned structure either (recursion shouldn't be an issue as you're testing that one particular object rather than everything it contains)
it depends on what you've got going on really, there's no one right way
@DaveRandom yes, later. but that wouldnt be possible if typed props cannot be null.
08:20
'nin @Oldskool
Well that would be silly, null is definitely a valid value for any vector type
is undefined == null? I don't think so.
Depends on the context
Wes
Wes
@PaulCrovella hm. will probably write an helper
yesterday, by DaveRandom
@Wes Null is (should be) a typed nothing, void is an untyped nothing
IMHO
void === undefined
08:24
@Wes thinking about it more, you should probably test at least the string, if not both - you want a test to fail if the implements bit is removed even if the method is still there
public int $amount;
public string $name;
public function __construct(int $amount) {
  $this->amount = $amount;
}
$name is not null, it's undefined
yes, it is
public ?string $name;
what does ^ mean?
xor... to the power of... that thing above
08:25
and it's obviously not required for the object to have a $name to be in a valid state, else you'd have set it in the ctor, preinitialized it or required it in the ctor sig.
Yes
But, I expect to get a warning/Exception if I attempt to use $name before defining it
what we could do is use the null juggled type when a typed prop is not set
@JoeWatkins @Wes how about that? ^
so a public int $foo without a value would give (int) null when accessed
it wouldnt work for classes though
Wes
Wes
nah implicit conversions are evil
@PaulCrovella indeed, or explicitly check with instanceof. hum
public function getName() :string {
    return $this->name;
}
@Gordon object variables should default to null anyway, and since we don't have class casting it doesn't break the principle rule
08:30
will return null if $name is unset?
Monginr
Wes
Wes
@DaveRandom should default to null only during construction - unless they are explicitly nullable
@Wes that'd work too... out of curiosity why are you using that interface anyway? (I treat building json much the same as building html - it's a view's thing to do with data)
@Wes object variables are implicitly nullable. That's true in a lot of languages.
explicit nullability is for types that have a non-null default value
Wes
Wes
lot of languages suck, then :D
2
08:33
:-P
I promise it does make sense when you get used to it
Wes
Wes
@PaulCrovella honest answer is "i prefer json output to print_r and var_dump" :B
Moin
Kinda hard not to geek out a little when Phil S hangs around chat :D
Morning @Sean
@Gordon I'd like to extend this, in terms of the language spec, by having a construct a la default(type), which has the same behaviour as (type)null currently does, and (type)null is redefined to yield default(type)
08:39
o/
@DaveRandom which often is for technical reasons (at least in compiled langs)
@bwoebi Regardless, it does make sense and is going to be comfortable to a lot of people
@DaveRandom It makes sense, but is a mistake many languages did.
and I've yet to see a better suggestion for a default value for an object var, and requiring an object var to be initialised with an instance is a bigger limitation than having to check for null
@DaveRandom you don't give it a default value. You error out when it's accessed without value.
08:42
And having a situation where a var is initialised with a value that you cannot later reassign it with is insane
@bwoebi hmmm
let me think about that
(as if my opinion matters at all :-P)
@DaveRandom you can vote later :-P
Bob's suggestion is what I've been saying... it's the best way.
@bwoebi in this case, presumably unset() and isset() work as expected, it's only explicit reads of an uninitialised state that error?
Huh, getting highlighted with a removed message. Now that's awkward :)
Where unset() effectively de-initialises the var
08:47
@DaveRandom isset, yes … unset is disabled on typed properties for technical reasons (because it actually removes a property)
Anonymous
@Oldskool Was gonna ask if you're the same Oldskool in cake IRC, but you're not there anymore :P
@DaveRandom but that's a good idea too @JoeWatkins
@bwoebi There needs to be some way to destroy the object in a property without creating a new one
That's an absolute requirement for me, non negotiable
morning!
@DaveRandom yeah, that's helpful for breaking cyclic references
08:51
Assuming that is the case then I'm on board. And I can see the problem with unset(), annoyingly it will probably need a different construct
@bwoebi isn't that equivalent to an NPE?
Ugh, allowing people to remove properties from objects was such a stupid thing to do in the first place
@Gordon Yeh, but it also prevents things like $this->prop === null and requires instead that you use isset(), which reads more explicitly
@DaveRandom ok
@DaveRandom for dynamic properties ( e.g. on stdClass) it made sense, but, yea…
good morning
primary domain name shows 500 server error and when I restarted mysql it worked can you explain whats happened please
08:57
@Oldskool your friend is back :P
@Gordon lol
sorry to bother you guys
@bwoebi I'm not sure it did tbh, objects are not (should not be) flat collections. Even a dynamic object - actually this is just a VO - should have an immutable public API
IMHO
That's what assoc arrays are for in PHP
We didn't need another way to do that
@Jay Oh, connection must've timed out then. But yeah, I'm the same guy ;-)

« first day (1979 days earlier)      last day (3196 days later) »