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16:00
as someone who has had headaches multiple times fom weed, I will better stick with ibufen
I will take my kids out for a drink, I would never smoke a joint with them ...
@JoeWatkins Why?
I hate the idea of a world where pot is as easy to get as alcohol ...
If I change a column's encoding from utf8_general_ci to utf8mb4, will it allow special Windows characters like Word's weird ass quotation marks?
That's purely a social thing, if smoking a joint was as widespread as alcohol to begin with, I don't think you would be saying that.
16:01
because it took away large parts of my life, ruined my ability to interact with the world ... it is a pernicious drug
if I had been an alcoholic for the last 20 years, I might refuse to take them for a drink ... it wouldn't be that strange for me to do that ... no matter how socially acceptable drinking might be
Alcohol ruins peoples' lives too.
You're ignoring the million different medical problems alcohol causes.
@Tiffany people too ruin people's lives
it sure does, but nobody is touting alcohol as a treatment for anything
16:03
many people use it as such, inconsciously tho
Take the old philosophical quote: "everything in moderation"
no, I'm not, at all ...
there is no moderation with drugs
Maybe not for you, but you're not everyone :P
Depends on the drug and the individual.
oh really
ever met a heroin addict ?
16:04
Depends on the drug and the individual.
Heroin is highly addictive.
you think there are crack and heroin addicts that moderate their use ?
Crack is also highly addictive.
@JoeWatkins as an official treatment - no. But it's quite common for people to have homemade "cold medicine", which is mostly alcohol
@JoeWatkins heroin was used as coughing syrup originally :D
everything you think you know about addiction is wrong ...
I have an addictive personality, I know what addiction is for me.
e.g. I have a problem with microtransactions.
16:07
I don't, which is why I have said nothing about addiction aspects regarding any of this
It's the equivalent of a gambling problem for most people. I like buying shit in video games and it's difficult to moderate myself.
I'm trying to curb this problem, like setting limits on myself, but I still struggle with following them.
I also take xanax which is a highly addictive drug, but I've been able to moderate myself in taking it.
If I can keep a bag of cocaine next to my bed during three months without taking any, does that make me a moderate drug user?
Moderation, in my opinion, is partaking in something on occasion. Depending on how harmful the something is, the time interval can be once a day, once a week, once a month, so on.
Smoking marijuana isn't healthy, like inhaling burning embers isn't healthy. I get sore throats from smoking so I avoid that method.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier what I should have said is that there is no moderation for an addict ... there is a difference between having a habit of taking drugs recreationally, and being addicted to drugs ...
That makes more sense, and I agree with you completely on that statement.
16:16
@JoeWatkins hmmm. that would indeed have moderated my smartassery. (no pun intended).
It's funny, taking a medication is considered normal, but it's a form of addiction in a way. The body is dependent on that chemical in order to function properly. Not even including drugs that affect the brain, but for example, blood pressure medication.
But we don't call it addiction
What encoding should I use for a MySQL table? utf8mb4_general_ci?
@PeeHaa another PHPoAuthLib question; have you ever heard of the Twitter API returning non-valid JSON?
This code:
try {
    $response = $twitter->request('statuses/user_timeline.json?'.$string,'GET');
    $response = json_decode($response, true);
} catch (Exception $e) {
    return [];
}

if (array_key_exists("errors",$response)) {
    // array_key_exists() expects parameter 2 to be array, null given
}
is erroring on the array_key_exists, as $response is null......the only way that could happen is if the content returned from Twitter isn't valid JSON, right? Which seems 'kind' of unlikely.
What would be invalid JSON?
/also, not my code btw.
malformed code?
16:24
@Tiffany characters that aren't UTF-8, chopped off response.
Anonymous
@Tiffany yes.
@Tiffany depends on the type of comparison you wish to achieve.
Or a twitter engineer leaving a var_dump() in the code....
if you want é != e, general will not be sufficient
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I want to stop receiving error messages from people pasting data from Microsoft Word into some text fields, since Microsoft Word likes to use special characters, because it's special.
16:26
hmmm nvm
@Danack or the return value from request is not valid json
Thing is, I never used to get these error messages before I switched to a new webserver. The old database was encoded correctly (wasn't done by me). The code hasn't changed in that regard.
I guess I'll just leave it utf8mb4 and monitor it. Hopefully the error messages stop.
tldr; yeah utf8mb4_general is ok to manage all characters, if sorting is important go fo utf8mb4_unicode
(slightly slower, (that is, unnoticeable))
Is there a nice validator class around there in the internet that I can use?
16:29
@Leigh Although my instinct is to blame the API, at the same time I'm going to be really surprised if Twitter managed to send responses that aren't valid....
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I don't think sorting will be an issue, but I'll keep it in mind.
@Danack What happens on timeout? Severely invalid request? Some certificate validation stuff?
Anonymous
Does anyone understand why there are so many ways to create Android app, using like phonegap, cordova, xamarin, react native and the endless number of tools?
Anonymous
I mean, why do these alternatives exists? Is Java/Android Studio really that bad?
16:30
I believe it's called, divide and conquer
Things can happen between you requesting, and the string being returned, does $response before json_decode look valid?
@samayo Something like Phonegap lets you make an app once and it'll work for Android/iOS
@DaveRandom yeah, I have similar, but also prevents null decode.
You don't have to rewrite it in Objective-C, or whatever language Apple uses now.
16:31
Validator classes anyone?
Validator for what?
@Tiffany stackoverflow.com/a/766996/576767 actually forget general. just use unicode.
@Leigh Can't reproduce, and don't have enough info to actually debug it.
Also @Danack, what PHP version?
16:32
@Tiffany form validation.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier hmm, thanks
Anonymous
@Tiffany Do you have experience in Android/iOS app making?
@Danack you know the string null is valid json, and will decode as simply null
Anonymous
I need to create a small app, without wasting time to learn ... much
@DaveRandom PHP 5.4.45
16:33
@samayo You don't "waste" time learning.
@samayo Very, very, very limited. I had to look into it a few years ago using what a vendor was offering as a template to work from.
Anonymous
@CoderDudeTwodee Not when you are too busy, you don't even have time to eat.
I think they were using Phonegap at the time.
@Danack actually I just looked and the recursion limit in json_decode() was increased longer ago than I thought
@samayo stick with Android, because IIRC, to make apps on iOS you needed to cough up $100 to Apple to get "developer license"
16:34
@Danack I haven't ever seen that before
Doth anyone posses some nice open source form validator class?
@PaulCrovella yes, but for me, I've never encountered a situation where something is going to legitimately pass me null. Instead it's always an empty array for empty set. Null's only ever seem to happen by accident.
Anonymous
@tereško yeah, I am mainly interested in Android for that reason. But I can't seem to find a way to rapidly create a native app.
16:35
@CoderDudeTwodee there are no nice validation classes or form builder classes
@samayo you have been spoiled by PHP. There probably isn't even a trivial "hello world" example to start with
Recently switched to Machform for a form builder. I'm really liking it so far.
Anonymous
@tereško I think that's the problem. I paid someone on freelancer to create a dead-simple app in Android, and the project was about 28 MB
@samayo Most of it is boilerplate / generated code
posted on April 03, 2017 by CommitStrip

6
Anonymous
I hope so. I want to create just one app, which has a potential to generate some revenue, and I have to create it myself. But, not sure which tool to choose. Java gives me stress.
16:41
@samayo Have you look at what I linked?
@samayo Could always go for cordova depending on what you need
Anonymous
@Tiffany Yea, it's nice but I want something for rapid prototyping
How to get ASCII value of a character without using ord()?
Anonymous
@PeeHaa You think Cordova is simpler than reactnative (which I haven't used btw)?
16:45
Dunno. Probably
Try it
@PaulCrovella Let me rephrase, how to get ASCII value without using ANY built-in function
I guess the second answer does a good job
too much writing,ugh
thanks
Hey guys!
How to build a home by hand without any tools?
Eeeeew that's looks like a lot of work
boooooooo
@Tiffany I like that channel
16:49
@PeeHaa hahaha I know but I thought that I can just compare it like in C#
What are you trying to do and why?
It sounds like a homework assignment
"Do XYZ from scratch"
it is
@Cgdl in... PHP?
yea
it's not school homework tho
17:03
eval, empty, and isset are not technically functions, so...
function getch(int $ord) : string {
	static $hex = ['0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9', 'A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F', ];
	$ord %= 256;
	$upper = (int)($ord / 16);
	$lower = $ord % 16;

	return eval("return \"\x{$hex[$upper]}{$hex[$lower]}\";");
}

function asc(string $chr) : int {
	static $range = [];
	if ( empty($range) ) {
		for ( $i = 0; $i < 256; ++$i ) {
			$range[getch($i)] = $i;
		}
	}

	if ( !isset($chr[0]) ) {
		throw new Exception("Does this count as using a built in function?  A constructor for an exception?");
I ended up doing what I didn't want to, two arrays(one for big one for small) and checking index of big letter and replacing with exact same but from small array
I should've done it from the beginning,I just wasted time to look for an easier solution
wait, what was the actual problem you were trying to solve?
swapping upper and lower case?
yea
dude...
17:05
what
Does preg_replace accept a function? Or has some way of accepting a callback?
3v4l.org/g7UQd if you like making your computer count on it's fingers
This is relatively trivial with JS's .replace(regex, callback)
if ( $chr[$i] >= 'A' && $chr[$i] <= 'Z' ) $chr[$i] += 32;
elseif ( $chr[$i] >= 'a' && $chr[$i] <= 'z' ) $chr[$i] -= 32;
inside a for loop
17:06
@PaulCrovella Right, then there's your answer.
@Dereleased You can also xor it with space (\x20), I like that trick even though it's not actually that useful
preg_replace_callback("/([a-z])/gi", function($match) { return flipCase($match); })
And implement flipCase
@DaveRandom that's p cute ackshually
@DaveRandom Dear lord.
17:08
Job security to the max.
I solved my problem the long way,I just wanted to see if there's something like in C# where I just compare it to a number
Yes, ord()
That's literally what it is for
yes,but I can't use it
hahaha I even checked length of a string like this
while (@$string[$i] != null){
...
}
$bits = ["\x01", "\x02", "\x04", "\x08", "\x10", "\x20", "\x40", "\x80"];
for ($i = $r = 0; $i < 8; $i++) {
    $r += (2 ** $i) * (($char[0] & $bits[$i]) === $bits[$i]);
}
That is an fcall-free ord
so was the 3v4l, are you just golfing it now?
17:11
It's also horrible
@Dereleased pretty much
I wanted to make it less readable
for shits and gigs
You could make it even less readable and get rid of the array if PHP did string bitwise shifts
I swear,PHP community are all crazy people
Pretty much every programming community hahahha
We aren't the ones trying to re-implement basic functions
I am included,too
Now I'm annoyed because I feel like there's another way to lose the array that I can't quite see
I bet the solution is somewhere hidden inside dnslib :P
17:15
@DaveRandom it doesn't?
dnslib, dnslib dnslib? dnslib
No, I really thought I RFC'd that at one point as well
Hi guys
is there a way to return type hint an array of object
no, sorry
@DaveRandom shift yer bits
17:17
@DaveRandom I just converted it to a string and it works exactly the same
so I have to use array
@PaulCrovella can't shift strings
?
@DaveRandom
@DaveRandom test code
$bits = "\x01\x02\x04\x08\x10\x20\x40\x80";

for ( $j = 0; $j < 256; ++$j ) {
	$char = chr($j);
	$ord = 0;

	for ($i = 0; $i < 8; $i++) {
		if ( ( $char & $bits[$i] ) === $bits[$i] )
	        $ord += ( 2 ** $i );
	}

	print "$ord \n";
}
@meda yes, although you can docblock Thing[] and most static analysis tools will understand it, you just can't get the engine to enforce it for you
17:18
ok
sucks but thanks
@meda It does indeed suck, but there's a lot of history behind this particular issue and there as a good reason it's currently like this, specifically it would mean an O(n) check at call time because arrays themselves can't be typed
@meda Or just create a collection class
It may or may not be fixed at some point in the distant future
@Dereleased sure, could string index it but not loads of difference, ideally would drop the lookup table
@PeeHaa yeah this would be the work around, but unfortunately Im using someone SDK
17:20
@meda So you cannot create classes? :P
just for the sake of type hint? @PeeHaa
:P
@meda Type hints themselves are not the goal
Type safety is
yes safety right
/**
 * Returns a collection
 * @return BecSchool[]
 */
public function getSchools() : array;
I tried Dave's suggestion
should be safe right?
snap
17:23
All you know is that you get some list back
All that is enforced is that you get some list back
so yes, all that you know is that
The only way to be 100% certain is to have collection classes
ok,
Suppose I have an API route at /user

A GET to that request should display a list of all the users that the requester has permission to see. Should those permission checks be in the model, the controller, or in route middleware in MVC?
wouldn't that be /users? </nitpicky>
... nvm.
@DaveRandom grumbles
17:31
@FélixGagnon-Grenier No. Your endpoints should not be plural.
The URI should contain specificity if you want to filter on a GET.
@Allenph why not?
@PaulCrovella It's mostly just convention, but it makes sense. The same convention is used in relational tables.

/user Gets a list of all users.
/user/[ID] Gets a specific user.
At least, that's what I've read.
evenin
@Allenph that "convention" used in relational tables has adherents on both sides too
I've never heard that
how does an endpoint that returns users (plural) being /user/ (singular) make sense ?
17:40
@JoeWatkins Because that way you use the exact same URI and just use verbs and specificty or lack thereof.
Complexity is reduced.
@PaulCrovella I didn't know anyone even argued about the table names. It's the user table, not the users table.
The table is not plural.
you don't seem to know lotsa people
^ Also true.
tbh, I disagree on pretty much everything you just said ;)
17:42
reading user but having to think users is not near less complex in my book
also, GET /users[/:id] is elegant enough for me
checks should be done in controller whatever, you should not get as far as loading a model that you do not have permission to access
@Allenph conflating collections with single instances does not reduce complexity
@JoeWatkins That's the problem. This is a multi-tiered system with different permissions to manipulate child users in certain ways.
So, I load the user model, but whether or not they have access to only themselves, or their children, or some of their siblings is what I need to check.
that's not a problem, access control is part of the controllers responsibility ... control, controller ...
a model with the responsibility of access control has more than one responsibility, obviously ...
^ Good point.
Just seems like it's going to thicken up my controllers.
17:48
try squashing them in between two heavy books, or having an extremely fat person sit on them ...
as you can tell, I have nothing sensible to say about that ... except don't invent problems that don't exist ...
@JoeWatkins I'll see if I can get a rocket sled.
sounds frightening ...
@Felix I watched a documentary you might enjoy about a guy named Derek Paravicini, youtube the name
woa, interesting indeed, ta!
If it works for cars, it might work on controllers.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier there's a part where he repeats chords played by an (I think full size) orchestra, more notes than he has fingers, so he translates it into melody that uses all the notes, it's extremely remarkable ...
17:59
this stuff induces two very contrasting emotions in my brain; extreme motivation to be a better musician, and extreme demotivation of pursuing any musical goal
yeah, there's a bit of that ... on the other hand, when you consider the damage that had to be done for his brain to be wired that way ... I wouldn't trade a functioning brain for one like his ... it makes him no less remarkable, maybe more so, I can't decide ...
> Legally, it's far more difficult to damage people in Australia than it is in the United States.
18:17
@Gordon that was an interesting read
@JoeWatkins yw
I guess the device (that recv'd govt money) never got approved or made, since I never heard of it
could probably find diy instructions online
The God Helmet is an experimental apparatus originally called the Koren helmet after its inventor Stanley Koren. It was developed by Koren and neuroscientist Michael Persinger to study creativity, religious experience and the effects of subtle stimulation of the temporal lobes. Reports by participants of a "sensed presence" while wearing the God helmet brought public attention and resulted in several TV documentaries. The device has been used in Persinger's research in the field of neurotheology, the study of the neural correlations of religion and spirituality. The apparatus, placed on the head...
I've heard of that one
out to get wife, lata all
18:50
If a resource is denied on a GET in an API do you guys typically just respond with a 401 or include some kind of generic error also?
@Allenph If there was an authentication problem I response with a 401, if authentication was successful but the user does not have the require roles/permissions to view the resource then I response with a 403 forbidden
@Allenph "denied" in what way?
"I don't know you" should be 401. "I know who you are, go away" should be 403
@ibanore I meant 403. My bad.
or 404 if the user shouldn't even know whether the resource exists
Also @Madara
18:54
Throwable not catching include and require – #74366
@Allenph There are a bunch of possible error codes, the question is what the error.
I personally like 418 I'm a Teapot
@MadaraUchiha They do not have permission to view the resource, but do have access to the route.
@Allenph So you know who they are
And you know they don't have access
That's 403
@MadaraUchiha I meant to say 403 the first time. The question is whether you also return some sort of response, or just the code.
@Allenph You usually do
18:56
Gotcha.
If it's a JSON based API for example, you return {"success": false, "error": "Not Authorized"} or something like that.
The 403 status code (or rather, the non-2xx status code) should reject/error in the client
@MadaraUchiha It's a JSON based API. I have a service which provides a standardized error object.
I'll use that. Just didn't know if 403 was usually considered "enough."
And the JSON string you return should describe the error in more detail.
@Allenph Think about it this way, 404 pages are actual pages.
@MadaraUchiha Good way to put it.
Another question, how does one go about determining if a model has an indirect relation? Is recursive looping the only way?

I have a tiered system of used. There are three tiers. There are also parents and children users in each tier. It's trivial to check if a child belongs to a parent, but not so trivial to see if a user owns a parent, who owns a parent, who owns a child.
Allo
19:33
Afternoon.
Should authorization only be performed for web requests? Using the application via the CLI does not seems to need authorization. Current I have authorization in my application layer which my HTTP API and CLI both use. I'm beginning to think authorization should be outside the application layer and only performed when using the application over the web since it is globally accessible
19:50
@tereško Have you seen this one yet? youtube.com/watch?v=S8H1gwxx1nk
20:02
couldn't it be an april fools joke?
@tereško If it is, she's really committed to it.
@MadaraUchiha emm ... "internalized jealousy"
that's my verdict
!!booze hibiki
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@JoeWatkins I've seen advertisements at my psychiatrists office for some kind of electromagnetic "deep brain stimulation" or whatever they decided to call it, for depression and the like. So I suppose it did end up existing in at least some form
20:15
such a bad day was today :-( ...! My roommate is going to go to his hometown .. I will be alone :-( ..! being alone doesn't matter, I gotta miss him kinda, I 've used to him!
20:57
I have a private field $error on which the errors are assigned on every function. Is there any reason why I should do a $this->set_error("error_msg") rather than $this->error="error_msg"?
@RonniSkansing, you there?
@CoderDudeTwodee in general, because you might later change how or even where the error state is being stored
@tereško Alright, so $this->set_error() is a better idea in case I want to change how the error is stored. I read that correct?
Thanks! :D
though, while you are at it, you should also switch to using camelCase for your method naming, since that's the style, that is used by all of the new object oriented API in PHP
21:10
You have patiently helped me a lot today, thank you. :)
@tereško Yeah I am using camelCase, I wrote it in a hurry, didn't put a backspace.
as for the "how" part of error state
instead of assigning errors by name, it is better to assign them using constants (usually class constants), which act as aliases for either string or numeric values
that too would make it easier to make small structural changes
Alright, so it would be something like $this->setError(LENGTH_TOO_BIG);?
(you dont have to search the codebase for all uses of some string, when you can just change the value of a constant)
@CoderDudeTwodee kinda. You should use class constant instead of global constant
it would add both semantic meaning and "directions for where it is defined"
21:16
@tereško I am new to OOP PHP, they work like self::LENGTH_TOO_BIG right?
inside a class, yes
on the outside it is used as ClassName::SOME_CONSTANT
Got it, thanks again!
for example Identity::ERROR_INVALID_PASSWORD
there is also a different way to handle errors states: by throwing exceptions
I have a getError() function that outputs the error messages once the form validation is done, so I guess, I don't need to let the class constants out.
you can use use them when you are comparing the error state:
if ($foo->getError() === Foo::ERROR_CRITICAL) {
     // we all are gonna die!
}
21:22
stackoverflow.com/a/1504321/6109408, here they say " Invalid entered data is really not that exceptional.". I read this couple of months ago, so I kinda ditched the idea of validating forms throwing exceptions.
how you use the and interact with error state highly depends on the approach you choose
there is no single "right answer"
@CoderDudeTwodee I never validate forms. I validate "entities".
for example, Account instance can have an invalid state
... but that's my approach
if you want to get any good at OOP, you will have to learn about SOLID principles, Law of Demeter and other things
My code kinda goes like this for now:


class PersonValidator extends Validator {

    private $error=0;

    public function name($data) {

        if(!$this->checkLength($data,3,100)) {
            $this->setError("The name must be between 3 to 100 characters long");
        }
        else  if(!isAlphaNum($data)) {
            $this->setError("Please exclude special characters in names");
        }
        else return true;
    }
and when you have learn about them, you will have to think an analyze your code
@tereško Never heard of them, thanks! Gotta go look at them.
isAlphaNum seems to be missing $this
21:26
Yeah, I am fixing it. It's an old code I wrote months ago.
@CoderDudeTwodee not sure if your setError is cumulative, but you may want to show all the errors at once. (i just get annoyed when a form validation fails, i fix the error, and then i find a new error)
That's kind of the way facebook's form validation works. They show one error at a time, you fix one, and you keep another error, they show it again.
I will have ajax to minimize that annoyance part.
that's why I said that using a method is important for when you decide to change how you store the error state
because you can store it as an array
@tereško What if I took two form values to be validated the same way? First names and surnames will usually go through the name() function, storing them as $this->error['name'] would be problematic.
@tereško I am going to use a method tho.
if you are using ajax, you can return a JSON response which has "field name" as the key and "error" as value
21:33
@tereško That's exactly what I am going to do.
that way you can associate errors to fields and know which field has to be marked as "having an error"
yes.
So how about I take $error as an array
well, then the problem seems to be in a bit different location
it seems that you are using a validator per field, which is why I got confused there
And store the errors as $this->error['firstname'], $this->error['lastname'], which will be set once they pass through the name() function.
I am not sure how to achieve them. ^
21:52
else if(!isAlphaNum($data)) {
in php it is elseif
:36455477
... or else if
php is like, "whatevah floats yer boat, sweetie"
hey guys can can anyone guide me why the text that I am typing in the text field has the same faded font as the the placeholder
Anonymous
22:21
@tereško hmm that rings a bell
@Smple_V because you are bad at CSS
Ohh man didn't knew that !!!
@Smple_V also, apparently you are bad at googling
2984
Q: Change an HTML5 input's placeholder color with CSS

David MurdochChrome supports the placeholder attribute on input[type=text] elements (others probably do too). But the following CSS doesn't do diddly squat to the placeholder's value: input[placeholder], [placeholder], *[placeholder] { color: red !important; } <input type="text" placeholder="Value">

22:49
Is it possible to make recursive function that lists all files and directories but without using built-in functions
@Cgdl you should just do your homework yourself rather than asking for help.
I can't seem to find an answer on google
so
@tereško Thanks mate for the guidance but was wondering why the text that user types in comes in as faded when its supposed not to by default
haven't made any changes in the css et all and it still comes the same mean the user input text is faded
@Smple_V probably dues to some rendering glitch or defaults being fucky
are you using some css reset or something of that kind?
22:54
nothing et all just plain simple css
can you repeat the effect in jsfiddle ?
@tereško ya it works just fine as it's supposed to
guess it's the browser thats screwed
what do you see when you inspect the input?
and have you actually set a color on the input?
nope havnt
@tereško anyways thanks mate cheers

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