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Wes
Wes
22:05
@LeviMorrison isn't that correct?
aaaaaaah, i see
You can execute arbitrary expressions that are not variables… as long as in the end you look up a variable name?
Wes
Wes
maybe variable variables work only with variables, not expressions?
$foo = "foo_x";
$bar = "bar_x";
var_dump(${true ? 'foo' : 'bar'});
nope, you are right
sorry, i don't do these things very often :B
@LeviMorrison have a look at github.com/WesNetmo/PHP-First-Class-Methods as you gave me the idea :D
That seems more complicated than how I would have done that.
I wonder what issues my simpler version would have :D
Wes
Wes
mine was very simple at first too, then i remembered that you can have a private method and a subclass with a non-private method with the same name
Ekn
Ekn
Someone I work with just commited to master and changed sooo many things. I have two branches from the original and I still haven't pulled latest master. :(
This is just too annoying.
22:14
@LeviMorrison you need help? why?
This is insane...
because the ${} mode is shit?
we know
Wes
Wes
i've added you to project collaborators though, feel free to do anything with it
22:14
@bwoebi The {$} mode has problems as well though.
@LeviMorrison does it?
It needs a variable to begin.
You can't call a function directly.
You have to begin your expr with a variable.
Wes
Wes
i still haven't decided if i like string interpolation or not, after years of php
does anyone know how i can debug ssh/vpn issues? I am connected to the vpn, but i can't connect to the servers it's protecting, when i try to ssh in i get a connection timed out error
I like string interpolation – but why can it only do exprs that begin with variables?
Or alternatively why can it execute arbitrary exprs as long as the end result looks up a variable name?
Why do we have two poor choices and no good one?
Wes
Wes
22:18
writing '. .' is not much different from writing {$ + }, just one character less
except "foo $foo foo" ofc, that is okay, i guess
@LeviMorrison i could also ask, why only variables? "foo {this_is_a_function()} bar"
22:37
@LeviMorrison so, that's fine then?
@Wes I wish this were possible
Wes
Wes
just two more characters and you have "foo ".this_is_a_function()." bar"
@Trowski while we're at it, why are you not doing a separation of once and repeated timers? (by classes - you're currently doing it by boolean?)
Wes
Wes
ie we possibly shouldn't use string interpolation, except in its simpler form "a $foo b"
@bwoebi Good point, that might be better.
@Trowski any update on coroutines? It should be probably something like in amp, just in methods and be an Awaitable
22:45
@bwoebi Later tonight... so probably when you're asleep.
@Trowski Can you recall me your tz please?
-6 (-5 for DST)
It is 5:46 PM right now.
Ah okay
What's yours again?
So same as parts of US…
+0200 (DST, normal is +0100) … 00:48 here
@Trowski I really don't know about the supports() issue … For one part I don't want to have the Filesystem API standardized (and even if we do, it shouldn't be directly on the Loop). … So, we really ought to have a way to expose the underlying resource …
So, it really ought to be some sort of Loop::FEATURE_UV which specifies that the getUnderlyingLoop method must be available
22:55
@bwoebi How about a simple function like getLoopHandle() that returns the underlying loop resource or null?
@Trowski yeah, that's what I meant… we just need a supports, because we need to know what type of handle it is
The fs driver can do nothing with an libevent handle
@bwoebi You can use get_resource_type() to inspect it if it's non-null.
Is that a builtin function?
Yep.
wow
never heard of that
in that case…
everything I just said is nil
and we really can just expose a getLoopHandle() function
22:58
Which would return a resource or an object (such as EvLoop).
Or null for NativeLoop.
yeah, we'd just need to check for is_resource($foo) && get_resource_type($foo) == "uv_loop"
Exactly.
As for signals... I don't know if I care to have a function to check for that.
@Trowski Why hadn't you mentioned that earlier? Would have made everything quickly resolved :-D
...
@bwoebi I think I assumed you were aware of it.
nah, interface is as said not an option because depending on pcntl conditionally
… well, except if you do class NativeSignalLoop extends NativeLoop implements SignalHandler … but meh :-/
23:16
like it? :-)
@bwoebi Meh is sort of how I feel about that as well.
@bwoebi Looks good.
@Trowski do you maybe have some input on github.com/async-interop/awaitable/issues/7 ? I don't know really…
@bwoebi You know, as written, it throws an exception.
@hakre when the callback throws an exception
@bwoebi Set up the Loop::defer callback under the assumption the loop will be run.
23:26
@Trowski That's an option
That's what I did in Icicle.
It just shall be well-defined
user2044560
@rdlowrey Ah, I think that is the reason why we don't agree; I disagree fully with your statement. Performance is certainly very important, but API and maintainability is more important to me.
@coderstephen Well, that's actually how Amp was born
The point is not starting to code and then building a crippled API around
but rather inventing an API, coding a bit, seeing what's going to be extremely inefficient and redesign/rethink parts of it as appropriate
@coderstephen maintainability depends a lot on the degree of degradation per quantity of code
If I can save 20% time by rendering 50 LoC unreadable, okay
If I can save 20% of time by rendering 500 LoC unmaintainable and unreadable, that's more questionable
@coderstephen do you already know my preferred function: github.com/amphp/aerys/blob/master/lib/functions.php#L127-L295 ? :-D
debugging that thing was hell, but now nobody needs to like ever change it and its semantics and behaviors are well-defined and well-tested
23:43
it's pretty large. isn't it possible to decompose it a bit?
@hakre yeah, it's mainly one big loop
well, it's spaghetti code
but the variables are all shared inside that loop … no way to meaningfully decompose that
at least it should be possible to decompose the loop
the loop body
You can decompose it all, but perf will surely suffer
user2044560
23:45
@bwoebi That's my point exactly. Designing the API should incorporate macro-opimization into it. Figure out what the bottlenecks are, and design the API to work well.
yes, at least the level of decomposing you'd need to make it actually readable (i.e. create objects to share state, proper queues etc.), all perf improvements are lost
user2044560
Micro-optimizations, like "we can have one less object in memory this way" is not helpful. It hurts the API more than it benefits the performance.
@coderstephen There I agree
@coderstephen one object less per function makes a difference if you're going to have millions of them alive at the same time.
It depends on the impact the single micro-optimizations will have
the try-catch logic is easy to pull out
@coderstephen and that's when you have Aerys running under real heavy load with watchers etc. flying around everywhere
user2044560
23:48
@bwoebi If you're referring to watcher objects, I agree that using watcher IDs vs objects can be a necessary tradeoff, since its an O(n) memory optimization.
@hakre right, but this is not where readability suffers. The issue is the do-while loop itself.
user2044560
Micro-optimizations outside of the loop, like anything that is accessed less than once a second, or anything user-created, is much less helpful.
@bwoebi oh readability is a very high goal with that one, perhaps just separate concerns first :)
@coderstephen not concretely these. Similar for when()
the do { ... } while (!$isEnding); is perhaps a candiate for a generator
23:50
4 mins ago, by bwoebi
yes, at least the level of decomposing you'd need to make it actually readable (i.e. create objects to share state, proper queues etc.), all perf improvements are lost
@coderstephen Totally agree. I'm exclusively talking about particularly hot code, being executed tens of thousands of times per second (or being particularly expensive in general)
I just mean, considering exclusively the loop, the most used function is actually cancel, disable, onReadable and onWritable
The $generators variable is only before the loop in the head
user2044560
@bwoebi But better macro-optimizations can eliminate "hot code", that's my point. From my understanding as example, responseFilter() filters the response in real-time, yes? Then that's hot code.
@hakre true, it gets assigned to $filters then
@coderstephen exactly. It's the manager of Middlewares
user2044560
@bwoebi It would be more optimal performance-wise to get rid of the hot code altogether. The less code running, the better. Why not buffer the response and perform all filters at once at the end?
@coderstephen because we might want to stream the data
buffering is taking up memory
user2044560
23:56
@bwoebi Memory is cheap. </opinion>
you don't want to eventually buffer 1 MB of data, per request, if you're a image manipulation service
else you're dead at a few k req/s
@coderstephen main memory, yes… caches, very much not.
user2044560
Again, macro-optimization is better. No one is sending a 10000k webpage, so buffering isn't so bad.
user2044560
@bwoebi Hmm, that I agree with. Serving up image files and such is different.
And the comment on top is adding too much negativitiy. it can be shortened a lot.
the function is not that large
it's only a do loop a foreach one
and indentation is pretty straight forward
user2044560
@hakre I took it to be humorous... :D
23:58
for a complex function it actually looks pretty sorted
@hakre We made it as nice as we could
I'm just not having enough context to understand for what it is for
@coderstephen right. You never know what the user is going to do. Also for simple file serving… (aerys\Root)
user2044560
@hakre Agreed. While a few comments could be added, I certainly don't question the quality or indentation.

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