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14:00
@TheCodesee Sure it's valid, pointless though. !$string will do the same thing.
@bwoebi OPCache matters on CLI as well, because of optimizations.
@kelunik That's why Optimizer shall be moved out of ext/opcache…
@bwoebi if you want to do something like this, why not do it via inline cache?
@bwoebi "shall" :D
@NikiC oh
I meant MUST :-D
I think you meant OUGHT
@NikiC good idea actually
@DaveRandom preferred the one by meytal ;)
@Leigh well fair enough, but srsly, 5 years old...
My 5 year old can't do that
My 5 year old can't even sit in the same seat for that long
user895378
@bwoebi Agree ... opcache is a hack to make something that shouldn't exist (the php web sapi) less terrible and able to continue being a thing even though people should move to more appropriate technologies ... optimizer is actually valuable and shouldn't be coupled to opcache
@DaveRandom is she your daughter? she and your avatar are similar kinda ;-)
14:06
@bwoebi Go, do it!
@Shafizadeh errr... no :-P
I'm sorry.
I'm not even going to read them now, either
user895378
@bwoebi @kelunik moved back to backoff() function: gist.github.com/rdlowrey/…
@bwoebi @kelunik can you get in now ?
!!help
^^ 86.171.124.192 looks like your way in ...
6 messages moved to Trash can
14:15
@DaveRandom then read them later…
!whois 144.84.232.75
user895378
@Trowski @kelunik @bwoebi using Coroutine objects in amp/v2 we should be able to add support for golang style coroutine cancellation via contexts in the future ... any async lib using amp would need to accept context objects as well in order for it to work everywhere but it's totally doable. I see "cancellation" of in-progress operations as the last "big" functionality we're missing today
user895378
/me is going for a walk now. bbl.
@rdlowrey noooooooooooooo
user895378
@bwoebi whyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
user895378
14:20
you'd rather just timeout an operation and let it continue using resources even though you don't need them?
I expect random coroutine cancellations to be quite dangerous
the API should expose methods to explicitly cancel a specific task
(and e.g. fail the Promise the coroutine is currently waiting on)
user895378
no, that's my point, individual async libs would accept the same context so that all the operations associated with a particular cancellation are invoked
user895378
it's not just cancelling at one level and not notifying other participants
@JoeWatkins Yes, thanks.
k, going back to sleep now, lata
14:23
@rdlowrey Then every coroutine would need a try/catch block for cleaning up internal state
user895378
They need that anyway no they don't ... a CancellationException would just bubble up
no?
@rdlowrey yeah, and then the internal state of the object won't be properly cleaned up
user895378
A coroutine should handle that anyway
user895378
you can't assume all your operations "just work"
user895378
any one of those yields could fail
user895378
14:25
you should be accounting for that already
@rdlowrey yes, these which can fail, yes.
but these which aren't expected to ever fail…
Also, you usually catch a specific exception
You typically aren't aware of needing to catch CancellationException too
user895378
Sure, so there's no added difficulty to add a } catch (CancellationException $e) {
user895378
But I'm arguing that you should be
yeah, as long as you think about that
user895378
there are times when cancellation is important and very necessary
14:27
I don't disagree
but it should be the library specific exception type you are expecting
not a general Amp\CancellationException
user895378
anyway, I don't have mature thoughts around this right now, only that having the Coroutine object will make it possible to do this kind of thing
user895378
It's something we should look into
@rdlowrey Just like any other function call can fail.
@rdlowrey yes, but I object to externally managed cancellation (i.e. on Coroutine level) instead of internally e.g. if an Artax operation happens - cancelling that Artax op.
@rdlowrey Then provide an explicit API for that. Most things are not meant to be cancelable.
14:50
@rdlowrey if you cancel a coroutine directly, that's magic - if you provide an explicit cancellation API, that's explicit.
user895378
15:20
We are all violently agreeing
user895378
many things are not designed to be cancelled but it doesn't mean it shouldn't be possible to cancel them
@rdlowrey It should mean that though. Unexpected subtle side-effects may happen
@bwoebi That can happen anyway though - remote servers go away, internet connections drop, processes crash, dumbasses trip over power cables and knock servers out. It's no different to those cases. It does sometimes make sense to say "I don't care about this any more, please release the resources and to hell with the consequences".
Obviously such an API should have big fat warnings all over it
@DaveRandom These are to be expected cases though
OK, but in what way are they any different in terms of unintended side effects?
15:31
Whereas cancellation is not to be expected from inside my I/O op
@DaveRandom Cancellation would need explicit handling everywhere - while you'd anyway have your catch handler for the specific library you are calling.
It's such a fag to write it in everywhere though, and sometimes you actually just don't care
@DaveRandom Yeah, especially arguing about the former
and apart form that it feels somewhat impure
oh, everything is impure in the real world
@DaveRandom sure, but when possible, I prefer the purer solution.
OK fine, but that's no reason to disallow the impure one - because if you do that, people hack other weird things in anyway, that might as well be a one-sentence summary of the history of the web
15:42
@DaveRandom right - but then I won't have to support this as part of my code. If I happen to return a Coroutine, I do not want people to call cancel() on the coroutine I returned
If they do weird things via reflection, their issue
But when I return Coroutine, it's a public API and I ought following that public API when using Coroutine…
15:55
@DaveRandom The biggest issue for cancelation is the existence of multiple when() handlers.
@bwoebi You still promised a PR to event-loop with the META thing.
Cancellation is hard
@kelunik I know, it's on my TODO for tomorrow
I suggest you speak BenjaminGruenbaum about it, he's very involved in this exact process for JS Promises
@bwoebi As it was yesterday for yesterday? ^^
@kelunik no?
15:59
Sorry, two / three days ago.
2 days ago, by bwoebi
no, not yet, planned to do it tomorrow
@kelunik Yeah, Planned to do it Thursday … but had something more urgent to do :-/
@PeeHaa @DaveRandom You're really not interested in metrics collected from @Jeeves?
cancellations is one of the biggest reasons why we scrapped promises in favor of observables
@daviddan But they have the same issue, no?
@daviddan you mean Rx Observables?
16:14
yeah, Rx observables. They don't since you handle clean up and creation in the same place
when you create, you return a disposable that's called when the observable is disposed (completed)
I have one requirement from client that over home page there is checkbox where if user check that box then next time user visits the sites then that page will not be shown and that user will be redirected to next page otherwise everytime that page will be show for that user.Is there any way with which I can achieve this as I dont think this is possible.
@daviddan What if you have multiple subscribers?
in that case you "share" the stream, so it's multicasted. Dispose won't be called until the subscriptions go from 1 to 0
@DaveRandom Oof what's that about?
sorry wrong ping teresko
the observer will auto dispose the observable when it has completed. if you want to end the stream early, you can also manually dispose of the stream
16:32
Morning.
@daviddan In general, the multiple subscribers is an issue for cancelation. Because we currently have an interface that just consumes, it doesn't handle resolution does it contain any logic.
That's why I think it's better to resolve the original promise with an object that has further methods then, e.g. responses in the planned Artax rewrite should fulfill the promise with a response object that then has a cancel method to cancel close the connection for example.
btw.. @bwoebi How do streaming APIs in HTTP/2 work? Do they work at all?
@kelunik yeah, HTTP/2 exposes a sliding window at the stream level
With HTTP/1 we manage it via the TCP window, in HTTP/2 via the stream window
@kelunik And for sending, we can segment the DATA into as many frames as we wish
@bwoebi No, I meant the aborting.
@kelunik aborting in what case?
@daviddan Did you get the ping with the use cases for stacked loops?
@bwoebi Streaming APIs.
16:42
I did not. Do you have a link?
@kelunik Yes, in what case?
@daviddan You should find it in your SO inbox. :)
When more data is sent than allowed? Or what?
@bwoebi No, when I'm no longer interested as client.
@kelunik oh, so just emitting a RST_STREAM?
16:43
But e.g. opened two streams on the same connection. Do I have to close the connection or can I close one of them?
yeah, emit RST_STREAM
Ok, fine.
@kelunik I'll read through that
I made a better example of how cancelling and share work: gist.github.com/davidwdan/a2aeff21a3c9642fb23a7c7a02b4508b
Anonymous
!!uptime
Anonymous
!!reminders
16:50
3 messages moved to Trash
@daviddan Who runs the loop there? Observable::create?
in your case, that code would be inside of execute
Ah, you have that crazy shutdown magic, right?
yeah, to keep all of the boilerplate off of the demos
that same code is used in the reactivex.io docs
@daviddan Well, it would just be one wrapping Loop::execute(function () { ... }, right?
17:02
right
While I agree it makes the demos simpler, I'm not sure whether it makes them actually easier to follow in the end.
With Loop::execute it's clear to the reader that it's something event based running an event loop. Without it: What's that magic?
that's a valid point. I idea is that most people that use RxPHP will have some familiarity with Rx in JS or some other language, where the loop is part of the language
Aside from the "safe" argument for the PR, that's one thing I really like about it ::execute scopes to be strict: It makes it very explicit that it's running a loop.
that's true. Rx uses schedulers internally to handle async, so it is hidden from the user. for example: github.com/ReactiveX/RxPHP/blob/2.x/demo/interval/interval.php
And it makes hiding the loop harder, which is a good thing, because as soon as you hide it, you call Loop::execute from library instead of application code and suddenly your API isn't interoperable anymore, because the thing that calls Loop::execute blocks then instead of letting the user choose where to wait and run.
17:11
wrapping that within an execute could be equally as confusing
@daviddan That just emits a dummy value every 1000 ms, exactly 5 times?
Morning everyone
Well I guess it's afternoon
emits 0++
But good morning to those who it's morning for!
How do you do that with the React loop currently?
@daviddan Ah so that was new code only, currently you just pass the scheduler as always in React?
yeah, which is horrible
Am I the only one who sometimes messes up even the simplest syntax in my code, for example forgetting to put a ; at the end of some line?
I do that when I've been writing in a language that doesn't need them and then switch back.
17:18
interlingual errors like that are annoying
that happened to me a lot when I used Python, which I don't these days
That would make sense, I don't use the widest array of languages so that doesn't become too much of a problem for me... yet anyways
@daviddan Well, in the current code you actually have way more boilerplate as with the loop spec.
what do you mean?
@Andrea you're trolling us with that private key or why trollface? :-D
@bwoebi yes, I am trolling whoever finds it
17:21
Currently you have that:
<?php
require_once __DIR__ . '/../bootstrap.php';
$loop = new \React\EventLoop\StreamSelectLoop();
$scheduler  = new \Rx\Scheduler\EventLoopScheduler($loop);
$disposable = \Rx\Observable::interval(1000, $scheduler)
    ->take(5)
    ->subscribe($createStdoutObserver());
$loop->run();
I see what you're saying. Yeah, even with Loop::execute, it's less
Afterwards it's:
<?php
require_once __DIR__ . '/../bootstrap.php';

AsyncInterop\Loop::execute(function () {
  $disposable = Rx\Observable::interval(1000, $scheduler)
      ->take(5)
      ->subscribe($createStdoutObserver());
});
:35106245 hehehe
right, but in 99% of use cases 'execute' will be run during bootstrap, so you'll never see it next to the observable code
@daviddan Right, and then everything will run inside Loop::execute.
If you really want to have those demos avoid it, there's dark magic around it. ^^
17:30
@kelunik yeah. On a technically level, Loop::execute is not a major hurdle. My concern is the impact it'll have on react adopting the interop loop. The demos are secondary
@daviddan Do you mean React itself or libraries?
mostly the libraries
but at some point react will also need to update their loop
Well, the libraries are not affected by the PR, as they are only expected to operate inside a running loop. Only application bootstrapping is affected.
Should I be able to access my PDO Database handle inside a function using the $GLOBALS variable? For example... $GLOBALS['dbh']->prepare("...");. It is not working, I just want to make sure that's not the reason
that's true to an extent, the bigger issue is that if you're using react libs that haven't updated to the interop, there's no reason to use a interop loop
17:37
@daviddan There is: If you want to use interop libs.
Generally any of our libs, e.g. Aerys.
@daviddan With the adapter, you can use interop libs and use other libs via the adapter.
you would be able to use react libs within amp, but you would not be use amp libs with react without changing the way you do things ie. $loop->run()
the end goal it to have everyone move to the interop. any adaptor should only be a temporary solution
@kelunik am I correct in thinking that if there was only one event loop, this wouldn't be as big of an issue? All watchers would be tied to the same loop and as long as the loop was started before the program exited, everything would work as expected?
18:28
I bombed my exam :-(
@kelunik one neat thing that I forgot to mention about cancelling observables, is that cancelling will occur across merged streams, so you can have multiple streams merged into one and if you cancel the final stream, all of the source streams are also cancelled: gist.github.com/davidwdan/1bacde383fa82f6e9ce758d4565fcafd
bob
bob
hey peeps, I have a if - else if statement changing the query from a db, and i'm displaying the respective results in while loop one for all the if else if statements however how can I put the while loop into a variable such as $output then just echo that when the if conditions are met? thanks
@daviddan Well, we need multiple loops anyway, because we need it for tests to have a clean state.
18:43
for testing can you not just reset the state using reflection?
@mbonneau Testing is a pretty common use case, it shouldn't be necessary to use reflection hacks for it.
why is this throwing an error in php 7.1 session_cache_limiter(false);
Wes
Wes
who wrote this (simplified) sure considered himself l33t
function foo(&$lol){ $lol = "shit"; }
${$fo} = foo($fo);
var_dump($shit);
@daviddan Indeed, that's neat, but it's also a requirement, right? If that were not the case, the merged streams would emit endlessly values and never clean up.
Wouldn't mocking be considered a reflection hack in that case?
Wes
Wes
18:46
basically he wanted to control the variable name from within the function, while the function still does what it's supposed to do. clearly you can do that in a million possible ways. he choose the only wrong option
anyway... internals people, does the #329 i see in var_dump output have a formal name? eg object(Foo)#3490
like, is it the object id or something
@mbonneau If you see it that way, yes.
!!lxr var_dump
[ -MASTER/ext/standard/var.c#199 ] PHP_FUNCTION(var_dump)
@Wes object handle
Wes
Wes
Z_OBJ_HANDLE_P ? is that used to calculate spl_object_hash?
@kelunik without the take(), that example would run forever, but Rx gives you a bunch of operators to control the life of the observable like: takeUntil(), takeWhile() etc.
18:53
@mbonneau But mocking via reflection is just a way to make testing easier, you could instead just write fixtures and use those.
Wes
Wes
!!lxr spl_object_hash
[ -MASTER/ext/spl/php_spl.c#756 ] PHP_FUNCTION(spl_object_hash)
It seems like testing should be a secondary use case, especially if it makes things harder else where
Wes
Wes
@DaveRandom @Leigh not really... but he is on twitter, handles: @3v4l_org @_sjon
@daviddan I wouldn't really say it makes things harder, just different to the current way React does it.
But React also doesn't have an accessor currently.
19:00
true, but it wouldn't be too difficult to implement
@Jeeves someone drop that -
@NikiC Who?
@Jeeves I don't know, not me
@NikiC I think I is you tickling me.
Just to summarize what I'm saying: I think that having a single loop will simplify the spec and allow both the react libs and amp libs to continue using patterns that they're familiar with, which would give us a greater chance of everyone adopting the interop loop.
19:14
@daviddan What's the API you propose?
@kelunik give me some time to work something up
19:37
@PeeHaa ping
19:53
@Trowski Why does it have this union type? github.com/amphp/loop/blob/master/lib/UvLoop.php#L21
Wes
Wes
i.imgur.com/hJI1JbD.png someone ever noticed this? it seems it works, but it says it's not working (packagist github hook)
20:11
@Wes Sure. It's always if you create the hook but didn't push yet.
Well actually ... it says that always.
Wes
Wes
@kelunik yeah i tried, hook worked... i think, unless packagist fetched the repo not becuase it was told to do so
@Wes As I just said, it always shows that. It's the same for Amp and my other repos.
Wes
Wes
aaaah. okay so i'm not worrying anymore... i thought i did something wrong :B
20:27
is it a bug: 3v4l.org/ERBR3 ?
2
@EugeneLeonovich which bit?
@Danack Deprecated: Methods with the same name as their class will not be constructors in a future version of PHP; __construct has a deprecated constructor in /in/ERBR3 on line 3
@EugeneLeonovich no - that is a delieberate deprecation of 3v4l.org/GdCUn
Though it is kind of an overlap...
Wes
Wes
@EugeneLeonovich #idowhatiwant
hey dan \o
I know about the deprecation of the php4-style constructors, but it should probably be skipped for the __construct() cases?
Wes
Wes
20:33
yeah it shouldn't error imho :P
We could just ignore it until 8 and then fix it when the php4 style constructor are actually removed...
@Danack Well, I'd say it shouldn't emit that warning.
But it's a very edge case.
3v4l.org/mVaoK < That one is interesting, HHVM executes the __destruct.
Wes
Wes
lol :P
@Wes What do we do with the logo now? :P
Wes
Wes
20:40
dunno... what do you want me to do?
Today I tried a scetchy version of the older one with just the edges painted, but it looked ugly when scaled down to 50x50px.
@Wes You wanted to do a proper version of the latest sketch, no?
Wes
Wes
i'm not sure if i like it now
@Wes What do you think about a line only version of the older one?
Wes
Wes
nah
@EugeneLeonovich but why do you actually have a __construct class? :-D
20:54
@bwoebi of course not ;) I just happen to read php internals discussion about explicit constructors and tried to check this __construct::__construct() case
:-D
@kelunik uv read/write watcher on a same fd share the same poll event and that needs adequate mapping, for other watcher types it's an 1:1 mapping
@kelunik yeah, in our code it's an if/elseif chain, thus no method may be two special things at the same time^^
@bwoebi Well, except for __invoke: 3v4l.org/HMgcR
@kelunik yeah, because calling an object directly calls __invoke() method
__invoke is not a special method as is
but gets its special function only at runtime
21:12
mornin
This __invoke name for class bug is also appliucable to __construct class name 3v4l.org/O8TPY
Oh it was eearlier on chat :( I thought I found out something interesting :(
Wes
Wes
which one you prefer?
@kelunik ^
in v2 the spiral itself is the tusk... and it's an attempt, i don't think it has the correct angle.. but something like that
@bwoebi ^
21:28
v2 is weird
I think I prefer v1 over v1.5
Wes
Wes
yeah i cocked up with the angle
Anyway, good night, see you tomorrow
hello
anybody here...
i have problem with ajax call using php
21:46
@Wes v2 looks nice, especially when zooming a bit out
Wes
Wes
how about 3?
@Wes I liked the depth at the eye in v2
Wes
Wes
apart from that, the angle of the spiral i mean
looks a bit too flat in v3
@Wes is fine in v3
21:49
0
Q: How to get gujarati or hindi data from php to javascript using ajax services

ankurI want to show hindi or gujarati data to the table using DataTable.js API. i have following javascript code : $(document).ready(function(){ // On page load: datatable var url = "<?php echo base_url();?>list?job=get_companies"; var table_companies = $('#table_companies').dataTable({ "aj...

I kinda want to add array shape type declarations
does that sound useful
Wes
Wes
what's that?
@Andrea good luck with introducing PHP 4 classes (with or without methods)
@bwoebi that would be its own thing
I mean like: function drawLine([int, int] $from, [int, int] $to): void {}
or: function returnsMultipleValues(): [int, string, bool] {}
@Andrea uh, okay.
21:56
or: function returnsMultipleNamedValues(): ["foo" => int, "bar" => string, "baz" => bool]
@Andrea that's defacto a typed PHP 4 class, just without a well-defined alias
though, at the point where you have 3 string keys, it gets a bit too big for a function signature and should be aliased anyway
@bwoebi yeah, I'd want to have typedefs for this
Wes
Wes
a tuple?
@Andrea which really is a PHP 4 class at that point (given that we allow dynamic keys anyway)
@Wes in effect
@bwoebi albeit without methods!
21:58
@Andrea yeah
methods could be added later if anyone wants them
ooh that gives me an idea actually
map $foo->bar to $foo["bar"]… and the same for method calls
Like JavaScript
@Andrea good luck breaking ArrayOffset
@bwoebi only for arrays, I mean
Wes
Wes
that would make "array oriented programming" less bad. i like it
@Andrea oh okay
22:00
of course this would preclude real array methods in future, but it would be interesting
but why that $foo->bar to $foo["bar"] mapping?
@Andrea well, we could have closures
@bwoebi so you could add methods!
yeah
$myThing = ["foo" => function () { ... } ];
$myThing->foo();
this is a terrible idea
(or just $myThing["foo"]();)
22:01
I love it
Wes
Wes
lol
@bwoebi true, but it saves two characters ^^
I'm not wholly persuaded about that -> mapping
It's nice to be able to distinguish by-object and by-value
22:48
Hey guys
So I am back on the not having an imploded array as a database value thing
If I have a table offers, and I want to associate a list of countries to each row, I would think the best way would be to use an imploded array there. I guess that's not true
I don't think it's necessary to have a countries table, so would I just make a relations table that has two columns, the country code and the offer id?
Wes
Wes
23:27
countries: countryid | countryname
offers: offerid | offername
countries_for_offer: offerid | countryid
don't do implode. not because it will not work, but because it will be as slow as a tortoise glued to the ground @Alesana
Right, but I am wondering if instead I can do away with the countries table and make it...
offers: offerid | offername
countries_for_offer: offerid | countrycode
Wes
Wes
it's the same thing... except you are using a string key rather than an int
Is there any disadvantage to that? I don't see a reason to define every country for my purpose
Wes
Wes
string is slower to compare, obviously
offers: offerid | offername
countries_for_offer: offerid | countrycode
countries: primary(countrycode) | countryname
you can not have a countries table, or you can add it later...
Ahh yeah I am going to try to do it without a countries table, thanks
Wes
Wes
23:32
as long country codes are correct you are doing fine
23:44
Great, will do the same with devices in that case
Will save an extra query
Wes
Wes
devices?
I could have
offers: offerid | offername
devices_for_offer: offerid | deviceid
devices: deviceid | devicename

But instead I will just have
offers: offerid | offername
devices_for_offer: offerid | devicename

Because I am not storing any other information about the device types
Wes
Wes
what's devices
!!rfcs
android, iphone, ios, desktop, ipad, mobile
Just those 6
Wes
Wes
23:56
what's the purpose of saving that
00:00 - 14:0014:00 - 00:00

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