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10:01
it's first and foremost a bugfix
we are allowed to break bc for bug fixes, especially very stupid ones ...
@JoeWatkins :)
it looks to me like more left over crustiness from 6.0
present before that, but was "fixed" in 6.0 incorrectly ...
speaking of which, the discussion period for my binary string rfc is going really well! As in, not a single response! Which I guess is a good thing in this case :D
yeah, no noise is usually a good thing
you should move forward with it as quickly as possible ... come April/May it will be too late for 7.2 features ... which sounds like a long time, but it isn't really ...
thank you @DaveRandom
10:07
Only one more week until PHPUnit 6: https://github.com/sebastianbergmann/phpunit/wiki/Preparing-for-PHPUnit-6 Avoid surprises on release day by updating your composer.json etc. now.
Wes
Wes
friday challenge (???) question: (can you find an use case for | have you ever used in your code) non-public __construct? answer may seem obvious... but still, are you actually sure you need it?
i will try to prove you that you only need public __construct's :B
@Wes you mean other than named constructors?
Anonymous
I prefer the Friday challenge of get as drunk as possible
where the different functions have wildly different parameters.
@JoeWatkins I will, but I still have to wait one more week to complete the minimum 2 weeks of discussion. Next friday I'll open the voting
Wes
Wes
10:11
@Danack do you actually need named constructor? are you sure it's not just functions that delegate to the actual constructor? because multiple constructor to me means multiple internal state representations, and one shouldn't do that...
cool ... that's usually when everyone kicks off and says you are trying to ruin php ... it's not so surprising that nobody has said anything yet ... shit doesn't get real until voting doodle appears, for some reason ...
I've never used private ctor in php, have elsewhere, and think there may be internal classes that do
@Wes This is my thought too, but then @Ocramius advocates these sorts of things (I think), maybe he can weigh in
there are good reasons for wanting them to exist, but they clash with what we consider best practice in PHP (don't use statics) ...
But I've never used a named constructor in PHP...
If I want to build something differently, and it's an optional parameter, then why is it in the constructor signature?
Or use a Builder
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins why aren't those classes just abstract classes?
abstract class = non public constructor. the two things are redundant, no?
10:15
no
Wes
Wes
why?
i love discussing these things with you guys. you are my fav rubber duckies :P
why what? they're not equivalent. it's potentially possible to instantiate something that has a non public constructor.
tbh you lost me at "abstract class = non public constructor" ...
\o
Wes
Wes
@PaulCrovella how? again, keeping in mind that named constructors don't really have a reason to exist (unless you prove me wrong :P)
10:20
Anyone can always use reflection. We're ignoring this possibility of course right
Wes
Wes
yes
@JoeWatkins Because you can't instantiate an abstract class perhaps?
Wes
Wes
abstract class means non public constructor (regardless of the constructor's specified visibility)..
in other words it doesn't make sense to have abstract class Foo{ protected __construct(){} }
Anonymous
@Trucy don't get me wrong, I agree Laravel is poop. There's just better ways to go about it :P
Wes
Wes
abstract alone says the constructor is not public
except that if you set the constructor to protected you are then forced to make it public in the non-abstract child class
10:23
@JayIsTooCommon I figured it :) You're point is good enough
@Wes any method of that class (or possibly subclass) can still call the constructor. just because you don't believe named constructors have a reason to exist doesn't mean they don't exist. keep in mind that I'm calling your equivalence incorrect.
https://github.com/prehp/pre-short-closures
https://github.com/prehp/pre-plugin/blob/master/autoload.php
Wes
Wes
as such, it doesn't make sense to have anything else than public constructors
@Wes in theory you're correct. In practice - people find having non-public constructors make it easier to write code.
@Trowski @Ocramius @bwoebi Did you vote reetrant on HashContext for a particular reason? (It pretty much breaks convention with all other security code)
Wes
Wes
10:24
@PaulCrovella i'm not advocating for anything, let's just say, excluding named constructors, reflection and other possible hacks, why would one have non public constructors?
@Wes can I have a horse in this story? I've always wanted to have a horse.
@Wes singletons, which everyone hates, but they can be used appropriately in some circumstances (e.g. flyweight pattern)
@LeviMorrison @bwoebi possibly of interest for a polyfill github.com/prehp/pre-short-closures
@Danack won't that extract($context) overwrite superglobals?
10:31
@DaveRandom Just saw it - didn't grok it. Have stupid work stuff to do.
"stupid" qualifier is redundant
Oh - do I get killed in this story?
Wes
Wes
just stick to programming. no boar hunting :B
@Wes It doesn't make sense for constructors in abstract classes to be public
it's valid, but logically nonsensical
Wes
Wes
@DaveRandom abstract makes the constructor effectively non public
as such bother to making the constructor non public explicitly doesn't make sense
because eventually you'll need a public constructor in child classes
10:35
@Wes I think you may be confusing 2 separate concerns. Abstract means non-instantiable. Non-public constructors means only I can instantiate myself.
Wes
Wes
@pmmaga only use case of non abstract class and protected constructor is:
class Foo{ protected function __construct(){} }
class Bar extends Foo{ function __construct(){ $this->foo = new Foo(); } }
but why would one do that?
@Wes I disagree, because I believe in code with semantics that are as strong as possible
@Wes why do you believe that's the only use case?
Wes
Wes
again excluding static constructors @PaulCrovella
why are you excluding things arbitrarily?
you've presented an "only use case" with "why would one do that?" while ignoring others, which makes it seem like you're just looking for a strawman
Wes
Wes
10:42
because i think static constructors don't have a reason to exist. there is always a better way. i've yet to find a case where named constructors, singletons, etc are actually the best option
and in general i think static members don't have an actual reason to exist
Also ftr there are very much valid use cases for non-public constructors in language that support package-level visibility, without them there would be no way to have public abstract classes that cannot be inherited from the outside
Wes
Wes
but i am not trying to convince you about this, so let's just exclude static stuff
@Wes well, for a real world case, singletons are used extensively as flyweights in minecraft. good luck with those billions of blocks otherwise.
How are you all doing? been some time since I was here last.
We're arguing about OOP
so, same really :-P
you?
Wes
Wes
10:46
@DaveRandom referring to php here but curious about that, can you write me an example?
Doing just fine, looking for a job, but hopefully my job interview on Monday will go well
Break a leg!
@PaulCrovella We're talking about PHP specifically here though
@DaveRandom You're on about C# again aren't you
@Jimbo so?
Announcement: I hate query builders, they can all fuck off
10:52
public abstract class BaseEntity<TEntity>
    where TEntity : BaseEntity
{
    internal protected Entity() {} // cannot be directly instantiated or inherited outside lib
    public abstract TEntity Clone();
}
public class ConcreteEntity : BaseEntity<ConcreteEntity>
{
    internal ConcreteEntity() {} // still cannot be instantiated outside lib
    public override ConcreteEntity Clone() { /* make a copy of myself */ }
}
@Wes ^ something I have done more than once
*Announcement*: *I hate query builders, they can all fuck off*
Anonymous
Wonder if we could detect and remove markdown
it removed some of it, sorta
@JayIsTooCommon It's already "parsed" from markdown
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins how you can hate writing
select(['*'])->from('table')->where('table.a', '=>', 100)
it's clearly better than writing
SELECT * FROM table WHERE table.a => 100

</irony>
10:55
@PeeHaa did it and I haven't really applied any though to it
:P
Feel free to make it better.
Anonymous
ohai p
In my defense: it was an awesome idea in my mind
Well @Wes the Clone() example is contrived for simplicity, but the point is that you do it to reference the concrete type within the abstract class
Wes
Wes
\o
10:56
@JayIsTooCommon hey man
Wes
Wes
@DaveRandom dunno what that does, but adding methods just to make stuff public to something else looks wrong to me. not saying that there are better alternatives, just that sucks :B
@JoeWatkins You mean ORM?
@Wes I do understand what you are saying, but I prefer the explicit clarity of declaring a thing which can only accessed by inheritors as protected
@JoeWatkins I agree, they inhibit the utility of the DB
Wes
Wes
i love contemplating the meanders of oop. or should i say, i love procrastinating
11:05
@Wes How do I do a join on a subquery?
Wes
Wes
@Leigh nobody knows. aren't all fluent interfaces like that? :B
I don't know what they're all like, the few I've used make me hate all the ones I haven't used too.
Wes
Wes
lol
i've seen once:
$b = $a->sub()->sub()->sub()->do_something()->do_something()->super()->super()->super();
$a === $b
how would you like to use that? :B
if you hate using them, trying working on them some time.. "why the fuck are we returning $this everywhere? oh right, because we're assholes"
We all hate multiple indirection, why the hell would we accept "fluent interfaces"
oh wait, we don't, they do
11:11
@Wes useful in DSLs
@Wes Law of Demeter
disgusting
Yes you are, but the code is fine
:-P
semicolons are in short supply, so you have to make cuts somewhere
11:15
@DaveRandom I see your boy is teaching you some new comebacks ;)
@DaveRandom Imo the async twitter api works also fine with the fluent interface cc @Leigh
Wes
Wes
$obj&>foo()&>bar()&>qux();
equivalent to:
$obj->foo();
$obj->bar();
$obj->qux();
It's because it's a DSL
yes
Wes
Wes
is DSL the standard justification to any "your api is bad" arguments? :B
11:17
$obj->foo();
$odj->bar();
$obj->qux();
@Wes no, it's a justification in very specific circumstances where a DSL is a thing which actually makes sense.
Wes
Wes
i actually thought i could return $this; on many occasions. if you take CQS seriously you can do that, perhaps :B
Also look at linq extension methods
foreach ($it->where()->groupBy()->select() as $element)
Wes
Wes
with($obj)->using()->magic()->methods()
__call($method, $arguments){ $this->obj->$method(...$arguments); return $this; }
My main objection to with is that I have only ever seen in VB, and I don't want to be writing VB. I would not object to having it exist in PHP.
"I don't want to be writing VB" is the understatement of the century, btw
Sep 6 '12 at 11:32, by Leigh
@ShyamK I'd rather cut my arms off and write in assembler by smashing my face into the keyboard before I'd use ASP.
2
nice to see I've kept my integrity (and my arms)
Also I appear to have been hanging out with you dorks for far too long
11:24
No shit
inorite
Waaaay too long
53 mins ago, by DaveRandom
"stupid" qualifier is redundant
You say that....and yet:
Does anyone have any experience of how to mock Timber so that I can test some shit in Wordpress.
/and yes, new job time.
Wes
Wes
why don't we have coal powered smartphones yet? if i don't keep all the phones i use for testing websites under charge all the time, in just few months battery will go flat and will never recharge again.
11:25
Also I appear to have been hanging out with you dorks for far too long
Anonymous
@Leigh it's cooler now that i'm here though?
@Danack Congratulations :D
@JayIsTooCommon It's ... on average more baby faced
Wes
Wes
congrats @Danack :B
Anonymous
*man faced.
baby man
11:26
man baby
Wes
Wes
bieberfaced
Anonymous
@Wes aw, thank you <3
Wes
Wes
:B
o/ happy friday 11
@Wes I went way too far down the battery-tech rabbit hole when the Note 7 thing was in the news, tl;dr in ~20 years it's likely that the problem of battery lifetime (number of charges before useless) will have largely disappeared, but it is likely to take that long based on historical research timescales before the bleeding edge largely-theoretical-but-working-PoC tech makes it to commercial markets
Anonymous
11:32
hoi ekin
Also interesting, in the nearer future, but likely not particularly useful for smartphones etc is forbes.com/sites/jamesconca/2016/12/09/…
Potential for e.g. pacemakers that will outlast their owners by a factor of thousands there, though
Wes
Wes
@DaveRandom it's ridiculous... now good luck finding the battery of a 2 years old phone -__-
@Wes dx.com?
I am not liable for any damage done in case of it blowing up
I never really understood why batteries die until recently, an analogy I saw was that there is something inside the battery that acts like a sponge which soaks up ions, and just like a sponge bits of the edge fall off over time and it become less absorbant
Wes
Wes
@PeeHaa i don't think it'll be cheaper than buying a new phone...
11:35
It is
Wes
Wes
+ shipment?
@DaveRandom If you were constantly being charged and discharged repeatedly over a period of time, you'd wear down too... oh wait :x
@Wes Shipping is mostly free
Also the Note 7 thing was basically down to "fast charger" tech, because the flow of electrons into it is so fast there's more risk of a sort of bottleneck effect, and you start to get metallic elements inside the battery accumulating into a sort of filing-shaped thing (called a "dendrite"), if you are unlucky this will bridge the contacts and short the thing out, and then you get runaway heat increase and then you get fire.
Unless customs needs monies and tax the goods
Wes
Wes
11:38
@PeeHaa you are not the first trying to kill me with explosives, tho :B
Wes
Wes
6$ shipment included. it can't be :B
@DaveRandom i want to know why batteries go down so fast and eventually die (also fast) even if the phone is off
i swear it's been less than a month since i last charged this, and it's been turned off since then. now i recharged it, but battery dies within minutes
You should leave rechargable batteries discharged rather than charged
Think about it this way: when you fill a space with energy, in whatever form, there's a much higher likilhood that something unpredictable will happen
Wes
Wes
but i heard ni-ion batteries last longer if never completely discharged
Not aware of that but doesn't mean it's not true
it's a complicated topic
Also I have noticed that phones will tend to turn themselves off at around 2-3% battery remaining unless you are actively using them, maybe that's why
i.e. if I leave my phone on the side and forget about it and it runs out and turns off, generally when I plug it in it claims to have >0% battery
whereas when I'm screwing about with it and it dies it says 0
11:46
@DaveRandom there were also some just straight up manufacturing flaws apparently - e.g. pointy bits of metal where there shouldn't have been pointy bits of metal, that punched through the insulating tape between layers. Or some batteries just didn't have insulating tape inserted at all.
i thought that was to ensure it could complete a clean shutdown
@PaulCrovella maybe that too
@Danack probably, or this would happen more often, although not sure how they managed to screw up the relaunch in that case
I read a couple of really deep articles by a battery tech research scientist, trying to find them
Sounds like it's a really delicate balancing act they do with every battery design to make a thing that is maximally performant without danger of catastrophic failure
i.e. it was bound to happen eventually
@DaveRandom Is there any more sources for your "connect the dots" ?
@Gordon I wondered that myself a moment ago, will look now
@DaveRandom that would be a huge story if true
11:54
@Gordon the first quote is from the dossier that buzzfeed published, that's the only contentious one.
The other two are tweets which you can easily find
The quote is actually in that dossier (I just checked). There are of course many and varied opinions on the information that's in it.
I guess we will hear more from it in the next days if true
Anonymous
jesus
yes my son
12:12
@littlepootis son?
Oi @tereško
E_TOO_MANY_DADS
@littlepootis are you assuming mine and tereško's sexual orientation in 2017?
you could have 2 dads :)
@Frondor it is a badly written codebase, that contains multitude of violations of OOP practices and principles and it has extremely ignorant community backing it up
@Gordon Added ref links to post if you want them
Anonymous
Jan 10 at 14:28, by JayIsTooCommon
we should have a !!canon why is Laravel shit
Anonymous
12:19
if someone could write one first..
I wonder if it would be possible to phrase a question so that it asks that and doesn't get closed as subjective :-P
@pmmaga I lost the argument with anatol, and also, I don't think we can have it in 7.1 either ... I'm not even sure if it's a good idea to fix it at all now ... I need nikita and bob to do reasoning ...
Anonymous
@DaveRandom @MadaraUchiha :)?
@bwoebi may I if you can take a loot at
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=73926
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=73927
12:41
@JoeWatkins Look at her! She'll be disappointed if we don't fix it at all.. :P But yeah, let's wait for their feedback.
Seems to be a gap in the market if anyone needs a toy project to work on. There seems to be 2 PHP Kubernetes APIs, one unmaintained, and one that depends on Laravel. So both unfit for production
13:13
there is a market for managing kubernetes with php?!?
Wes
Wes
Did you know that #bmw cars are using #php? https://t.co/au1aoPCCss
Hi, I am having one to one table in doctrine ORM (users=> OneToOne => Profile)
When I fetch user repository, profile object comes empty {}
$this->entityManager->getRepository(Users::class)->findAll();
response {username:'gowri',profile:{}}
Why I am not getting actual object
I am doing this in zend 2 - apiglity
Can anyone have any idea
@Gordon Sure, 1) There are PHP developers, 2) Companies deploy to kubernetes, 3) ??? 4) Profit
Fetch type in doctrine ORM is EAGER for profile
@Wes Waiting response from BMW :-D
13:22
If I remove fetch type
I am getting like below
`{
"__initializer__": {},
"__cloner__": {},
"__isInitialized__": false
}`
Wes
Wes
I heard NASA uses #nodejs in their space suits. #php https://t.co/2y6UqLKqSa
2
Did you know? Tesla's autopilot is developed in PHP with a Laravel framework.
@Jeeves what do you think about Laravel?
!!uptime
@Ekin I have been running for 1 day, 3 hours, 28 minutes and 3 seconds, since 2017-01-26 10:05:24
and now you killed @Jeeves
13:33
@Stricted Yes.
@Ekin It's crap and should be avoided.
Comma might be.
@Wes interestingly, no PHP here: github.com/edent/BMW-OpenSource
Guessing the server the BMW contacting has display_errors on
@Wes yes, I'd be opposes
Anonymous
@Leigh heh, interesting
Wes
Wes
@Ocramius what if i add kittens in the rfc?
you can't oppose to kittens
13:47
@Ekin errr what happened?
@Jeeves is @Ekin bullying you?
@PeeHaa Yes, do you?
@Jeeves i would never do that
@PeeHaa But you just did.
13:48
@Wes lol
ooooooh
Anonymous
@DaveRandom @PeeHaa removePings should just be a helper, yeah? As it's used cross-plugin quite often
@JayIsTooCommon What is a helper?
@Jeeves are you having a nice Friday so far?
@Ekin I know right!
Anonymous
13:49
@PeeHaa god you're such a vamp
What is the key difference between PHP5.3 and PHP5.5 in terms of mysql performance improvement?
ugh thanks @Ekin
keep breaking the poor guy my crap regex patterns :P
Sorry :D
Already forgiven :)
@JayIsTooCommon woah. WTF is that !?
getNormalisedStackExchangeURL
With a s????
Goddamnit @DaveRandom
13:50
Uhm that's DaveRandom
Anonymous
damn foreigners and their z's.
Anonymous
#brexit
heh
@Leigh it feels awkward to have an stream operation being finite … it just felt more right; I saw no real arguments against it … thus… Is there some good reason why not?
Stupid brits with their impossible to understand language
13:51
impozzible*
Even the french are better
No
That's a lie
Anonymous
@PeeHaa :O Take that back!
@JayIsTooCommon Have a problème with les french?
Anonymous
@Trucy just French init
@bwoebi My main concern is the one I stated on-list. Re-using a finalised state is most likely a bug. It's pretty rare to want to generate hashes of partially streamed data.
13:53
@JayIsTooCommon yes I think that may be a helper
@JayIsTooCommon init?
Anonymous
!!urban init
[ init ] lazy way of saying isn't it. used by roodboys who's reputation precedes them, only before they trip over it and make a total fool of themselves. used at the begining or end of sentences by roodboys in groups.
"just French isn't it", I still don't get it
@bwoebi Most hash algorithms perform operations on the state to prevent them being continued after finalisation (Length extension attacks exist on SHA1 for example).
Which is why there is a need to clone it before finalising
13:54
!!issue Fix "what do you think about..." pattern - chat.stackoverflow.com/messages/35334011/history
@Jeeves Also assign somebody else to that issue please
@PeeHaa Do you like Star Wars?
You are weird
Anonymous
I think once we get rid of the ping it might actually improve it's responses
13:56
yeah probably
Anonymous
lol
@JayIsTooCommon We talked about this once
I forget what happened
I think @Ekin was doing something (?)
@PeeHaa Yes. "S" for "Suck it, 'murica"
Anonymous
nah it was with me, but originally I think we were just going to add the regex as a helper, but might as well add the method
@DaveRandom Oh hey Chris is here so I can do my daily reminder
DNSLIB? @DaveRandom
However @PeeHaa I will concede that camelCase is wrong there
14:06
:D
Anonymous
me too
Anonymous
Review my poop @DaveRandom @PeeHaa
Anonymous
why is cC wrong there?
Never try to get into sales @JayIsTooCommon
You suck at it
@PeeHaa yes yes I am trying to do it, I have now started it twice and burned what I did because I hated it
I think it may be time for libdns rewrite #2 after this
@JayIsTooCommon Well just by personal convention I use lower_case_with_underscores for bare functions
Mostly because that's what php-src is like
14:09
Hm, reckon if I expire someone's password and set their shell to nologin, they'll not be able to access the server?
Anonymous
ah ic
@JayIsTooCommon Any specific poop you want me to review?
The PendingMessage one?
Does it work?
@Sean If their shell is nologin, they can't access the server
Anonymous
14:10
@PeeHaa yes, but I also said the same about !!issue, and !!github and !!lmgtfy
ok if it works...
Looks good :P
Anonymous
:D
Anonymous
lol
This review is brought to you by let that @DaveRandom look at it, because I am lazy ltd
Maaaaaybe you can squash the commits for us?
Anonymous
I linked Jeeves code to a company the other day to prove I do OS work... Didn't really end well.
14:13
That way @DaveRandom will have an easier time reviewing it
Anonymous
how does one squash commits ?
git rebase -i HEAD~number of commits
p
s
s
s
s
s
@Trucy They'll still be able to tunnel for things like SFTP
But SFTP won't work if the password is expired, since the first thing they get is a prompt to change their password.
Anonymous
@PeeHaa okies, local is at home so will do it then
@Sean oh, right. But if they have a ssh key, they can connect via SFTP
14:15
Almost, even with an SSH key they still need to reset their password
but without access to bash I don't think they can lol
Time to give this a test
You can connect to SFTP with an SSH key
The usermod command modifies the system account files to reflect the changes that are specified on the command line.
Note: if you wish to lock the account (not only access with a password), you should also set the EXPIRE_DATE to 1.
Yeah
Their password is set to expire, it's already expired
Normally if you SSH in you'll get a prompt to enter your current password, then set a new one, but with nologin I'm not sure if it'll ask
With a key or with a password
Oh, this, I don't know
Anonymous
!!wotd
shivoo: a boisterous party or celebration.
14:26
@Leigh dunno… perhaps to incrementally verify validity of data, to be able to resume at a given point?
cloud foundry is weird
@bwoebi that's possibly the only use, but there's better algorithms for that.
@Gordon hi
:P
@FlorianMargaine your stuff runs on that?
not at all
14:29
@Leigh What would you use for that in PHP?
@bwoebi If you need to verify blocks, hash blocks
hmm okay
hash(a), hash(b) will give you the same verification as hash(a), hash(a . b), with the bonus of not having to hash the whole thing if you just want the second block :)
yeah that's true
@Leigh will switch my vote then
But I do totally understand your point, context re-use there means you don't have to go through the overhead of creating a new context for each block
@bwoebi If you think there is a valid use-case for it keep it as-is. Literally wanted to make sure people had a reason for voting that way
(i'm sure some names on the votes just see the word "reentrant" and go "oooh shiny, vote")
14:34
@Leigh no, I think you pretty much invalidated the reason why anyone would do that
@FlorianMargaine so what does your stuff run on?
@Gordon most likely viagra..
@Naruto pretty much
@Gordon proprietary software, mostly
right now we're using mostly LXC to run the actual containers, but we look around if something better comes up
@FlorianMargaine knew it! ^^
@FlorianMargaine so basically you are using docker and consider moving to rkt?
14:44
@Gordon lxc != docker
docker is shit
@FlorianMargaine basically
we're looking at runc right now, but it might go nowhere
189files changed in /tests and still not done with this folder :D
I just meant that we're running containers in our in-grown software, how we run them doesn't matter for us
damn how many tests have php?
14:53
15752 on master
and yes, running the tests usually takes longer than compiling php
i have alot to do :D

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