@Andrea i now realize that might sound offensive. i did not think you weren't being honest :B i had the feeling some people would consider a joke suggesting to change a recent rfc for mostly subjective reasons
and i respect the fact that you are open to community's feedback, contrarily to what i'd have expected for the above reason
> If a given nameChoice returns FALSE, then all larger values of nameChoice will return FALSE, with one exception: if FALSE is returned for IntlChar::SHORT_PROPERTY_NAME, then IntlChar::LONG_PROPERTY_NAME (and higher) may still return a non-FALSE value.
The Typed Properties RFC argues against matching the return type syntax since "if a ternary was used it would be really hard to see what was happening."
However, wouldn't the type go before the assignment operator?
Rather than `public $bar = Stuff::BAZ ? 20 : 30 : int;` it would be `public $bar: int = Stuff::BAZ ? 20 : 30;`
Not that I'm in favor of matching the return type syntax, but I think this is a bad argument against it.
maybe @TheodoreBrown but do you actually prefer after the var name?
btw what happened with multiple declarations? public int $foo, $baz, $bar; === public (int $foo), $baz, $bar; public int $foo, $baz, $bar; === public int ($foo, $baz, $bar);
@Wes I prefer the RFC's syntax (before the var name), but I don't think the return type syntax would be confused with a ternary since the type would be before the assignment operator.
i think it must be consistent with possible _future_ typed variables
function baz(){
int $bar = 10;
$bar : int = 10;
}
i think the former is better because the other would require a lookahead (right, Bob?) #pretendingtoknowaboutparsers
Last year, I would open a RFC for the pipe operator. Instead of, I just wrote a Github README and talked about it here, and it got lost by some time. This year, it has been formally proposed, but not by me. ^^
However, I imagine that with more practical examples and better arguments, it can win.
For the new rfc, I would refer to a syntactic addition of function-use-aliases to solve problems like this: https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/1927
There is no other way to access variable-variables or dynamic variables in the scope of a function without creating an alias outside of its scope, creating garbage variables.
Maybe with an inline-alias, it could preserve the scope to the local function without importing all sub-variables:
well
#1064 - You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'Rar!' at line 1
@PeeHaa so... Jeeves web server. I'm torn between setting up a front end in aerys in the same process space as the bot (which would make data access easier and eliminate the need for some kind of RPC) or just having it work off a back-end database and use stuff like pgsql listener channels for IPC
Where the chat client simply gives you a node API to interact with chat (auth, join rooms, leave rooms, an Observable for messages, etc) and the bot uses that to respond to commands
Well as it stands every piece of executed code - everything that makes the bot do something - is in the Jeeves repo. If we let people do arbitrary things with it (with our running instance) then they might do things that e.g. get the bot user flagged
I'm just talking about an API that allows people to set plugin settings and enable/disable plugins for a room
ugh, which we need to authorise somehow
so it can't be public, the auth will have to be done in the front end
Damn, I don't understand why people continue using ORM so much, especially with more complicated projects which required almost most of the times > 3-4 joins
@Ekn I was reading something about sleep cycles the other day. And by reading I mean watching. Supposedly genetically some of us are able to cope with the lesser amount of hours or different patterns. Which suggest why some people are more successful with those weird sleep cycles like ubermans.
Also it hints at why some people say "I only need 5.5 hours" and others "I need 8". We say you can learn to deal with less but maybe not.
I don't think any of it was conclusive but it was what was told.
@Fabor I think it depends on a lot of processes in your body. When I train on a regular basis and eat better quality foods, I am more energetic and need less sleep. I've had also like months where I used to sleep 4-5 hours without a serious effect on my daily life
Btw, Trivago are hiring over here, you should see their offices... they have a star wars room. And the people are just awesome, super into what they're doing
@Fabor My optimum is 7hrs I think. It's really not healthy at all to sleep just 3-4hrs when you work a lot same day...yet living in this place makes it easier for me to deal with long nights or less sleep.
@Ekn Yeah. Sleep can suck. They say it takes the average person 7 minutes to fall asleep when they're really trying. Sounds like poppycock to me. Took like 3 hours last night :P Naps can be considered part of the cycle though. I'd definitely recommend batches of 1.5 hours if you do.
@DaveRandom @Fabor Wish you guys had been here, and @PeeHaa, would've been brilliant :-) Maybe next PHPNW we can get together for drinks, antics, shenanigans etc
@Ekn Haha, guy who owned it didn't speak a word of english. But when I started taking pictures of his bike and showing him mine we had a mutual understanding of awesomeness :)
Also, I'm getting a StackOverflow t-shirt. My moaning for 3 years paid off.