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00:13
@QuolonelQuestions Eh?
class MockPromise implements Promise {
  public function __construct($resolutionValue) {
    $this->resolutionValue = $resolutionValue;
  }
  public function when(callable $cb) {
    user_call_func($cb, $this->resolutionValue);
  }
}
Or something like that
That's probably not 100% valid PHP, but you get the idea.
00:35
@QuolonelQuestions Why are you mocking a promise anyway?
You should only mock what you own. Unless you're writing a promise library, there's no reason to mock it.
 
1 hour later…
01:46
@LeviMorrison I mean, are you really positive about that the benefits outweigh disadvantages, even ignoring the possible BC breaks. … If I were to design a new language today, I'd probably still separate the symtables.
@rdlowrey There actually is no real benefit in explicit connect, as you must always expect the connection to fail between connection success and the first command anyway. At that point, connect() is basically just a special ping() which must be called at the start.
requiring an explicit connect gives you no advantages except annoying people eventually. A trivial ping is exactly the same thing than a connect, except that a ping may be done at any time
@bwoebi Oh I definitely would not.
Having deterministic-ish symbol type resolution is definitely valuable.
@rdlowrey [You may opt to not actually send a pinging message if there are other frames in the pipeline and succeed the ping as soon as the first frame in the pipeline is acknowledged.]
@LeviMorrison Uuuuuuh.
In PHP we can conditionally define types and whatnot, so it's only deterministic-ish.
what do you mean with deterministic-ish?
02:01
if (rand() % 2) {
    function Foo() {}
} else {
    class Foo {}
}
What's the type of Foo?
It's not stable so you can't know.
there's no Foo
there's Foo in class creation or instanceof context
and there is Foo in function call context
It is valuable to have context free grammars, yes? Similarly it is valuable to have context free type inference.
the caller determines the type
not the definition
@LeviMorrison I can agree with that to some degree.
But I definitely would not merge them.
@bwoebi Except the type is what defines the available operations.
Not the other way.
@LeviMorrison disagree in this instance. The operation requires a type
02:04
You are thinking templates vs generics in your head.
and if there's no such symbol with that type, we'll fail
But ultimately the operations and types must match.
And in the PHP model types definitely define the available operations.
I disagree with functions and classes being first-class citizens basically
class Foo {}

$f = Foo(); // invalid as Foo does not support the invoke operation
@LeviMorrison no, invalid because no such function
() requires a function and thus shall search the functions
02:07
Except there are times you want to refer to a symbol without it's eventual context.
we do not operate on symbols, but on names
@LeviMorrison I dislike that.
add context then.
array_map(mul2, [1, 2])
be explicit.
should be ideally array_map(callable(mul2), [1, 2]);
No, not ideally.
give context.
02:08
No, the point of unambiguous symbol name resolution is that you don't need context.
And there are plenty of times people would want to do this.
If I write $foo = mul2; … how do I locally know what type mul2 is? … without looking mul2 up with a grep.
We don't support it in PHP but in some languages you can pass types as parameters.
@bwoebi You look up the type of mul2.
Use tooling to find it?
@LeviMorrison see, there's the problem
Yeah... we're not going to agree.
You can infer it from how you use $foo or you can look it up.
@LeviMorrison You're proposing to make tooling necessary for basic navigation at all
02:10
@bwoebi Uh, no, not really.
how do you use $foo? If you use it as a function then mul2 had better be a function or you are going to hit an error.
You can still look to see how it is used.
@LeviMorrison I pass it to some other function.
Better know how that function uses it.
That's not much different from today.
foo('somefoo'); // this could be a class name, or functions or even constant
We aren't taking away anything you currently have.
We're just making it easier for tooling to additionally help us.
And to not have to subvert the entire type system to use strings.
@LeviMorrison I agree with that point, hence I'd like to see things like callable(mul2)
Besides, constants can have multiple types of values, so just because it is a constant doesn't mean you can know how it can be used
@bwoebi That's not a good developer experience.
And you have to keep replicating features for each symbol table.
You need function and constant and class/interface/trait autoloading instead of just symbol autoloading.
That simplicity/complexity tradeoff helps orient which design is better.
Unambiguous types are better for tooling, and that tooling includes the language engine...
@LeviMorrison uhm… I'd like to know ahead of time what I'm autoloading. typically funcs are in a functions.php. Then I'm going to autoload the functions.php for that namespace
02:16
@bwoebi If you want to know ahead of time stop autoloading. That statement is ridiculous.
@LeviMorrison umm, no?
The very nature of what autoloading is goes against "ahead of time".
Autoloading is "just in time" loading.
@LeviMorrison yes, I want to load just in time with the information I have ahead of time
That's ridiculous.
and that information is type and name
02:18
You could do the same with functions and constants as we currently do with classes/interface/traits.
Nothing prevents it.
@LeviMorrison I'd just seriously dislike having an extra file for each function
most functions are typically smaller contextless helpers
@bwoebi Who says you need one file per function?
You can autoload entire libraries when any class is encountered if it triggers your autoloader.
The library doesn't even have to include the blasted class you are trying to load.
I could, but that's wasteful?!
You could be wasteful with current autoloading; you could be wasteful with function autoloading.
And if you want to drop all waste (to go to the other extreme) you need to stop autoloading anyway.
@LeviMorrison uh, I prefer the middle ground
02:32
As does pretty much everyone.
The only thing that precludes function/constant autoloading from being there is existing language design decisions (in other words there's nothing inherent in function/constant autoloading that precludes it from being in the middle ground)
@LeviMorrison I still haven't understood the issue of function autoloading
We have to re-implement autoloading for each symbol table.
That's a sign of bad design.
Additionally having to subvert the type system and drop to strings is also a sign of poor design.
Another bad sign: ($this->prop)() being different from $this->prop()
@LeviMorrison I agree with strings being suboptimal, but am not persuaded about solving it by making these first-class citizens
By unifying them all three points I mentioned can be solved.
How much evidence do you need that it's an elegant solution?
@LeviMorrison well, I love that distinction. it tells me whether to look for a method or a property.
@LeviMorrison Dunno, I look at other languages where they are (e.g. JS) and it's annoying
02:40
You don't seem to really internalize the idea of simple, reusable components even at the language design section...
If $this->prop is callable why should I be forced to additionally add parenthesis if it's unambiguous?
@LeviMorrison I do but I think duplicating logic is actually superior here
@LeviMorrison to tell the reader that it's a property call
But why does it matter?
Tell me, what real distinction is there?
Both are callable, are they not?
@LeviMorrison dynamic vs const
Sorry buddy, but that's not really true.
A method is always the same method
02:42
Method calls are not const in PHP.
@bwoebi This is not true; virtual tables.
@LeviMorrison I meant method contract, sorry
In the manner you mention there is no difference in "contract"
The passed arguments must match the defined parameters, regardless of what type of callable it is.
Sigh.I'm making arguments up, I'm noticing… the real argument is really that it makes me uneasy to see an implicit global symbol being used without explicitly telling me what it is (I dislike the string syntax too…)
I don't imagine I'll win you over in a single discussion on this point either.
I just hope you'll look at the stuff I've suggested and think about it.
@LeviMorrison A single discussion, no. I may change my opinion over time though
I have seen it annoying me often enough, thus it won't be too easy for me to switch my position on it here.
 
2 hours later…
04:44
So I'm not supposed to put untrusted PHP (example GET variables..) into HTML/JS, but if I am only expecting it to be 1 of 3 strings could I just do a switch like below?
switch ($_GET['var']) {
	case 'str1':
		break;
	case 'str2':
		break;
	case 'str3':
		break;
	default:
		$_GET['var'] = null;
}
05:02
Anyone want to give a hand
I can try if it's not too complicated lol
I'm pretty new here too
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>

<?php
echo error_reporting(E_ALL);
$p1MON = strval($_GET['p1MON']);
$p1TUE = strval($_GET['p1TUE']);
$p1WED = strval($_GET['p1WED']);
$p1THU = strval($_GET['p1THU']);
$p1FRI = strval($_GET['p1FRI']);

$p2MON = strval($_GET['p2MON']);
$p2TUE = strval($_GET['p2TUE']);
$p2WED = strval($_GET['p2WED']);
$p2THU = strval($_GET['p2THU']);
$p2FRI = strval($_GET['p2FRI']);

$p3MON = strval($_GET['p3MON']);
$p3TUE = strval($_GET['p3TUE']);
$p3WED = strval($_GET['p3WED']);
can you spot any syntax errors here, I'm getting an internal server error.
What is the error saying?
internal server error
Do you not have it tell you what the error is?
You have an extra }
Either the last one or the second to last one depending on if you want the mysqli_close($con); inside the if statement or not
05:19
I see that. Let me give it a go.
Aweesome. You hit the nail on the head. Thanks Alesana
No problem
05:36
Morning
Its evening here in AUS
06:09
morning
$sql = "INSERT INTO $userName (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES ('MON', '$p1MON', '$p2MON', '$p3MON', '$p4MON', '$p5MON', '$p6MON')";

$sql = "INSERT INTO $userName (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES ('TUE', '$p1TUE', '$p2TUE', '$p3TUE', '$p4TUE', '$p5TUE', '$p6TUE')";

$sql = "INSERT INTO $userName (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES ('WED', '$p1WED', '$p2WED', '$p3WED', '$p4WED', '$p5WED', '$p6WED')";

$sql = "INSERT INTO $userName (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES ('THU', '$p1THU', '$p2THU', '$p3THU', '$p4THU', '$p5THU', '$p6THU')";
If i have a PHP function which executes this
How do I make it execute all inserts
not just the last one
hey
anyone want to help
i think the question is simple enough
I am just learning php I might be able to try to help if you would like.
Sure thing. I'm just learning too.
06:24
what are you trying to accomplish
Look what I pasted above.
the big chunk
You should use PDO
yeah but like are you making a calendar something linked to a user like overall goal sorry just want to picture what you want to create
What are you using now?
I see a possible syntax error
put a semicolon at this point:
$sql = "INSERT INTO $userName (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES ('MON', '$p1MON', '$p2MON', '$p3MON', '$p4MON', '$p5MON', '$p6MON');";
do it all the way to Thursday then stop on Friday.
06:30
I don't think it would be required depending on what he is using..
$sql = "INSERT INTO $userName (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES ('FRI', '$p1FRI', '$p2FRI', '$p3FRI', '$p4FRI', '$p5FRI', '$p6FRI')";
So first off @Caspar is there a reason it's not in an array?
it's not required. He should be using a single insert statement with the values seperated by a comma
@Alesana yeah just noticed
VALUES (....),(....),(....)
06:32
that is what I am going off of
$sql = "INSERT INTO $userName (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6) VALUES
('MON', '$p1MON', '$p2MON', '$p3MON', '$p4MON', '$p5MON', '$p6MON'),
('TUE', '$p1TUE', '$p2TUE', '$p3TUE', '$p4TUE', '$p5TUE', '$p6TUE'),
('WED', '$p1WED', '$p2WED', '$p3WED', '$p4WED', '$p5WED', '$p6WED'),
('THU', '$p1THU', '$p2THU', '$p3THU', '$p4THU', '$p5THU', '$p6THU'),
('FRI', '$p1FRI', '$p2FRI', '$p3FRI', '$p4FRI', '$p5FRI', '$p6FRI')";
and yes, please use PDO
You're prone to SQL injection otherwise.
Well goodnight guys have a good one.
@Caspar what your original code was doing was overwriting the previous statement, so only the last one got executed.
If you were to use PDO you could use...
$dbh->prepare("INSERT INTO :username (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES (?,?,?,?,?,?,?)");

$days = array();
$days[] = array('MON', '$p1MON', '$p2MON', '$p3MON', '$p4MON', '$p5MON', '$p6MON');
$days[] = array('TUE', '$p1TUE', '$p2TUE', '$p3TUE', '$p4TUE', '$p5TUE', '$p6TUE');
$days[] = array('WED', '$p1WED', '$p2WED', '$p3WED', '$p4WED', '$p5WED', '$p6WED');
$days[] = array('THU', '$p1THU', '$p2THU', '$p3THU', '$p4THU', '$p5THU', '$p6THU');
$days[] = array('FRI', '$p1FRI', '$p2FRI', '$p3FRI', '$p4FRI', '$p5FRI', '$p6FRI');
Oops I forgot to bind the username
I messed that code up badly
$dbh->prepare("INSERT INTO ? (day, P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6)
VALUES (?,?,?,?,?,?,?)");

$days = array();
$days[] = array($userName, 'MON', $p1MON, $p2MON, $p3MON, $p4MON, $p5MON, $p6MON);
$days[] = array($userName, 'TUE', $p1TUE, $p2TUE, $p3TUE, $p4TUE, $p5TUE, $p6TUE);
$days[] = array($userName, 'WED', $p1WED, $p2WED, $p3WED, $p4WED, $p5WED, $p6WED);
$days[] = array($userName, 'THU', $p1THU, $p2THU, $p3THU, $p4THU, $p5THU, $p6THU);
$days[] = array($userName, 'FRI', $p1FRI, $p2FRI, $p3FRI, $p4FRI, $p5FRI, $p6FRI);
There we go
Okay now I am going to sleep
Sorry, left for a little bit
What exactly does PDO do? I've seen it everywhere, never understood it.
06:51
2785
Q: How can I prevent SQL injection in PHP?

Andrew G. JohnsonIf user input is inserted without modification into an SQL query, then the application becomes vulnerable to SQL injection, like in the following example: $unsafe_variable = $_POST['user_input']; mysql_query("INSERT INTO `table` (`column`) VALUES ('$unsafe_variable')"); That's because the us...

ty
How does it work? Briefly
Read the first answer's paragraph titled "Explanation"
user6061856
07:07
Hey? :P
user6061856
Anyone on?
user6061856
@crypticツ f643fb3a.ngrok.io
user6061856
Hey guys I testing out my app. :P
$sql="SELECT * FROM $userName WHERE day LIKE = "%1%"";
Is that line correct?
user6061856
Caspar, wanna check it out?
07:13
Sure!!
First - would that line work for testing the number of rows under the day column with '1' in them?
user6061856
Um, I'm not sure. I haven't messed with LIKE syntax yet. It's on my list of things to do actually.
@Caspar where does $username come from?
$userName is the variable which holds the name of the user logged on.
So the script can access the table of the user.
So, say we had the table 'James'
and what happens when my username is "users; DELETE from users where 1=1; --"
Injection...
07:17
correct!
Hmm.
I won't release the URL until I figure out how to use PDO with it.
but... would that line work?
no, it has double quotes as outer quotes and double quotes around the like part
New to PHP.
As you might be able to tell.
What difference does double and/or single quotes make?
single quotes in php won't interpolate variables, e.g. $sql = 'SELECT $username' will be the literal string without $username replaced with it's value.
$sql="SELECT * FROM $userName WHERE day LIKE = '%1%' ";
So, would that be right?
07:24
that should work unless mysql wants double quotes for the like part. I can never rememeber which way around
user6061856
Sorry my internet crapped out
Antono
Whats your website
@Caspar come to think about it, what does day contain?
ah, nvm… VALUES ('MON', '$p1MON', '$p2MON', '$p3MON', '$p4MON', '$p5MON', '$p6MON');"
then like is probably fine
day is a column. Essentially, you enter info on an HTML page and it sends it off to a database. Info is stored under the column 'day', such as: MON1, TUE2, WED2...etc... Then, it resets the html input boxes. You input similar info, click enter, and I want it to trigger a modified version of the same code that sends stuff off, so it sends MON2, TUE2, WED2...etc...
thats why I want to look for if the table already contains 1
so first batch you send off is the days with 1
then I want it to recognise the fact that there is already days with 1 in the database
so the second time it sends off days with 2
Nevermind ... created a question on the forum.
Apparently i have to have $sql="SELECT * FROM $userName WHERE day LIKE '%1%'";
instead of $sql='SELECT * FROM $userName WHERE day LIKE "%1%"';
notice quotation marks swapped
07:46
I didnt follow the full conversation but : SELECT * FROM $userName means that you have one table per user ??
@Tiffany :D I'll try it when I'll have some time
also, moin r11
08:03
Hello everyone!
I have a weird question, not directly related to PHP. So, I have a PHP application that is hosted on AWS. I use route53 as my DNS service. I want to create a dynamic DNS. For ex: based on some logic, I'll want route53 to respond with a different IP. I know that route53 cannot do that directly, but I was wondering if there is some way that I change the Nameserver in route53 to make it point to my service, my service will use the logic and return the dynamic IP. Is that possible?
@Caspar obviously since putting it in single quotes means no interpolation
Yep.
Anyone still here to give a hand on something
Wes
Wes
08:19
mornin
mornin wes
else {

$sql = "INSERT INTO users (username, firstname, lastname, password)
VALUES ('$username', '$firstname', '$lastname', '$pass')";

$sql = "CREATE TABLE $username (
day VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL,
P1 VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL,
P1_WORK VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
P2 VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL,
P2_WORK VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
P3 VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL,
P3_WORK VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
P4 VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL,
P4_WORK VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
P5 VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL,
P5_WORK VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
P6 VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL,
P6_WORK VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL
I have something like this
However, it only executes the lower $sql because there are two
how can I activate both
meurning
without separate queries
I am really curious why you are creating one table per username
Don't worry about that.
It was stupid of me but too late now
08:32
its never too late
hmm..
@Gordon It's too late when you start telling everyone that Laravel is awesome
But
How can I integrate both $sql=
08:34
@Jimbo since you are here: does your offer to let me crash at your place still stands? I likely won't take it and just book a room at the catalonia but just in case.
@Gordon Yeah course. It's only a small single bed though as long as you're okay with that
@Jimbo sure, I didn't intend to cuddle :)
:-(
I also have a drawer of spare socks (Y)
@Jimbo awesome :D
how far is your place from the catalonia?
Ahh, someone give me a help.
some*
08:38
@Gordon 15 minutes by bus
Then 10-15 minute walk
hmm, that aint too far
Although at 8:10 there's a bus directly opposite my flat that goes to Palma, so remove that 10-15 min walk
I'll likely fly in on friday afternoon and leave on sunday. haven't checked flights and prices yet.
Have they even announced anything yet?
They're a bit behind
@Jimbo either last weekend of april or first weekend in may
08:40
:P
and $certainInformedPeople telling me it will be the last april weekend
Gordon
Caspar
Jimbo
Say I have something like this
if (blaba) {
oops
if (…..) {

$sql=

$sql=

}
it only executes the last $sql=
how can I get it to execute both
you have to call the method executing the query.
$sql= is an assignment. if you do $sql = "bla" and then immediately $sql = "more bla" you are overwriting the variable.
08:43
so you have to have the $result
in my case anyway...
morning
so, how's shadowrun?
I never got all far into it, when I last tried
@tereško really nice
I played the pen&paper when the first edition was released some 25 years back
picked up the computer game only two weeks ago. it's turn based strategy with medium rpg elements, basically attributes and skills.
story is nice. had a lot of surprises in it.
gameplay is simple. I enjoyed it.
I just finished the main campaign that comes with SR returns. Also played one user campaign, though that was mediocre. Will start with SR Dragonfall soonish. Also considering buying the other games as well.
@Gordon what archetype?
but obviously that doesn't mean you gonna like it :)
how does it compare to something like Arcanum?
08:53
@Trucy human decker/rigger on the main campaign. troll chi samurai on the user campaign
I have both Shadowrun Returns and Shadowron Dragonfall already in the library - got them really cheap on on of the sales (I think -80% or more)
@tereško hmm, hard to say. arcanum was more fantasy with a hint of steampunk. SR is sci-fi cyberpunk with magic. I did enjoy Arcanum a lot. But couldn't say which I liked more
mornin
I think Arcanum offers you more options on how to solve the game, the whole good and evil things. you dont have that as much in SR.
@Gordon oh. I tried a hacker for a couple of hours, I didn't like it
Not enough haking :(
08:56
also, when I tried it last time, the gear options seemed very limited
does it hold the same in the later game?
@Trucy the hacking was too easy for my taste. At some point in the game you can hire Dodger who is a legendary decker in the SR universe. Very underwhelming guy compared to me.
@tereško you get better equipment as the game progresses. it's basically balancing. also you need skills at a certain level to use better gear.
but yes, even as the game progresses, it's more like oh, I'm gonna be a shotgun guy and then you just buy the next better shotgun as it becomes available.
good enough for me though

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