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00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 23:00

15:01
@PeeHaa /me adds eyes
\o/ ty
Also don't forget about your mouth to tell me I am stupid and more important how to improve it :P
@PeeHaa /me adds mouth to tell @PeeHaa about his stupidity
@PeeHaa the part which is confusing me is that you write echo and it suddenly executes asynchronously. You are not including a desynchronization primitive basically. Also, the echos still happen in order like magically, but not the request
It reads like you were describing threading with a mutexed stdout @PeeHaa
ugh fuck
@kelunik also complained about that
And suggested to comment on it it is pseudocode
I need to somehow show the flow in a way people recognize what's happening
And that seemed the easiest and most clear way to me
15:09
except you are basically describing the wrong thing
Not sure if it helps if I dedicated a paragraph about the fact that's not real code
@bwoebi ?
no it doesn't
Please explain
@PeeHaa "threading with a mutexed stdout"
The thing I am trying to show is what a standard asynchronous flow is
15:12
Then bring in some keyword, like async or whatever tells the reader that something will run asynchronously from the rest
That could work indeed
basically, make the scenario also a bit more complex by adding: "established TCP connection", "sending request", "receiving data" on each step of async request()
Not sure if that's not going to confuse people in the intro
show the user that it actually two synchronous flows with contexts inside a single thread (i.e. alternating between the flows)
I was thinking about showing that in the follow up post which will show the callback/promisea+/yield based flows
15:16
@PeeHaa I just found the "0-1-2-3" very confusing
Evenings o/
The countdown you mean?
you could explicitly add "waiting"
yes
@bwoebi Good one
@Saitama o/
@PeeHaa I think it would be clearer if async_request had a callback that did the echo
Its kinda coming out of nowhere right now
15:18
@NikiC I basically already have just that in the next post. To show the plain callback approach
^ +1
I could move it to this post too
@PeeHaa do that
@PeeHaa As long as it's not too advanced, show the user multiple times the same code example
it will make it easier for him to follow instead of having to learn a new example each time
15:23
Converted to callback based examples
makes more sense now
k tnx
Damnit. They don't fit anymore next to eachother
@PeeHaa the counter disappeared at the end?
Besides the counter the opening { also fell off :)
ah ok
@PeeHaa decrease font-size by one px!
15:32
Already did that :D
We are such css ninjas
hehe
very important question: sushi or pizza?
timer still doesn't fit though @PeeHaa
Ugh fuck
Right
Sushi
@tereško neither
15:33
@bwoebi I don't like it another px smaller though :(
I dont want to make food today
I blame you guys for this
@PeeHaa Me neither
@PeeHaa use a shorter URL :-P
wait :D let me try shorter function name and http instead
ha!
Lemme generate again
\o/
package fails to build from ports tree – #74552
15:37
Regarding the "use the same examples throughout" remark @bwoebi. Can I just use the last example?
@PeeHaa where?
@PeeHaa and you should use http on both examples :-P
aaaargh
:P
You said
20 mins ago, by bwoebi
@PeeHaa As long as it's not too advanced, show the user multiple times the same code example
I mean, where do you want to use the last example?
So can I just use the example with the several echos?
@bwoebi Make the first two example the same as the last two
@PeeHaa ah, yes.
15:40
kk
Done
Anonymous
@PeeHaa Good post
@PeeHaa small nit: you have a long pause between restarts of the examples
like 5 seconds
Not just like 5 seconds
Exactly 5 seconds :P
Will make it smaller
@PeeHaa hah… I've just estimated it without looking it up
Anonymous
Why is asynchronous important anyway. Every PHP script need the output of a previous code before it begins processing the code below.
15:47
:D
@samayo right, but you sometimes need outputs of multiple previous codes
and you can put that in parallel
also: servers, where each client has it's independent task (in general, everytime you can single out tasks from a stream (be it a stream of frames or clients)
Anonymous
I guess for servers it makes a lot of sense. Even though I though they spawn processes to handle multiple requests
@samayo that's crazily expensive
@PeeHaa Nice post - looking forward for more complex examples
tnx
Will try to keep it up and not bail out after the first post :P
Anonymous
15:54
How asynchronous works under the hood would be best.
16:17
@PeeHaa the output just shows up as a dark box?
@Patrick browser?
firefox and chromium (ubuntu)
Weird
What does your console tell you I did wrong?
TypeError: document.querySelectorAll(...).forEach is not a function
min.js:30:495
lolwat
What version are you on? :P
I could babel it for you I guess
16:21
47, ouch :D
I guess it should update it sometime
:D
Still weird though foreach has been supported by any browser for a looooong time
besides IE that is, but I don't support people using IE. They cannot be helped :P
Nah forEach works
Must be something else
lol my firefox crashes on startup
@PeeHaa nooooooooooooooooo
17:02
17:17
@Ekin reported
let's see if that works
Anyone that use Laravel, can you help me with this? stackoverflow.com/questions/43819682/…
@Patrick @PeeHaa qsa returns a nodelist, foreach is an array method.
Any recent browser has foreach in the proto
minor: We have paused webhook deliveries while performing network maintenance as of 2017-05-06T17:25:53Z
Oh wait. he doesn;t have a recent browser
:D
That's it :P
17:29
its only in FF as of November last year, and Chrome as of May last year
that's hardly "any recent"
At least a half year
I call that recent
there was a time when 'recent' meant released in the last ~2 years
before version numbers became fucking meaningless
Yes ignore version numbers
Just make sure you don't walk around with broken and vulnerable software
@Stephen you sound old.
What do you guys think of Laravel?
17:40
Maybe good if you're making a prototype that you'll throw away at the end of the week.
@Danack How did you people browse the web before there were browsers?
:P
gopher
The Gopher protocol /ˈɡoʊfər/ is a TCP/IP application layer protocol designed for distributing, searching, and retrieving documents over the Internet. The Gopher protocol was strongly oriented towards a menu-document design and presented an alternative to the World Wide Web in its early stages, but ultimately Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) became the dominant protocol. The Gopher ecosystem is often regarded as the effective predecessor of the World Wide Web. The protocol was invented by a team led by Mark P. McCahill at the University of Minnesota. It offers some features not natively supported...
Wes
Wes
@I'll-Be-Back it's awesome compared to hemorrhoids
also, evenings :B
@Danack :D
Wes
Wes
17:50
seen that tweet @Danack ? i'm desperate. agh. maybe something hanna barbera?
god i can't remember where i've heard that
@Wes I think i might be able to track down the composer....sounds like a western
Wes
Wes
it's a fun thing i believe... not a western. pink panther kind of movies, or a cartoon
@PeeHaa yes, but i'll never actually finish it, as you know
Just keep it simple. Maybe PH or just P
Wes
Wes
whats that
The thing for in the logo :P
Wes
Wes
17:59
eh?
the logo is for what?
My blog
@PeeHaa or Pee?
Wes
Wes
can i do a cowboy
that swings a lasso
pleasepleaseplease
No and no :P
Wes
Wes
:D
how do you embed a youtube video in SE?
18:04
SE?
Wes
Wes
stack exchange
apparently just by adding the link in a line alone :B
no special markup
@bwoebi Only reads? php -r '$handle = fopen("test.c", "w"); var_dump(stream_set_blocking($handle, false));' yields true.
@kelunik sure, you can set the stream in a nonblocking mode, but the actual read/write will still block
Evening
Wes
Wes
@Danack gave a better description of it here movies.stackexchange.com/questions/72771
18:19
How do you make a chat message fixed-width again?
Wes
Wes
prefix it with 4 spaces  -> there is a button as you write the message, an orange button just near the textarea. or CTRL+K
Isn't there a keyboard combination, or a button on the UI?
Aahh. SO-Dark-Chat does not have the button! shakes fist
@bwoebi But why? Why does it work for network I/O, but not files?
@Wes Ctrl+K, that's it. Thanks.
@kelunik because that's how it is. (note: just regular files/devices, not pipes and fifos) … I cannot tell you why … it's just observed behavior.
Wes
Wes
18:25
did you take a look at the logos bwoebi? :D
@PeeHaa what's wrong with your pr0n hub logo
Nothing wrong with it. Just wanted something different for meh blog
There's a button?
also o/
shouldn't this be commented out?
probably it doesn't matter if it's left like that though
also php.ini-production does not mention it's deprecation, although suggests it shouldn't be enabled on prod
Wes
Wes
@Ekin yes
php.ini is a mess
@Trowski Can we merge the byte-stream refactoring PR?
18:46
hello, in php extension I'm using `php_var_dump`. I'm executing the php through lldb debugger. Where will the output of the php_var_dump be, which in turn uses the php_printf.
I do not see it in the stdout
!!lxr track_errors
@Danack Nothing went wrong but I couldn't find a suitable definition
asdasd
!!lxr track_errors
@Danack Nothing went wrong but I couldn't find a suitable definition
19:07
anyone using lldb in mac for php debugging?
19:20
Nite all
And happy Sunday all
hello
Wes
Wes
hello Hello
second one (maybe i'm perverted but the first one looks like a butt crack)
Wes
Wes
lol
@pmmaga i've eventually successfully pulled from your repo. i will write the tests.
@kelunik should i add them in parameter_type_variance.phpt as it's basically the same rfc extended to abstract methods?
19:28
@NikiC I eventually printed the &data->This, and the output is huge class. What exactly should I look for.
@JAamish Nothing, just that it's a huge class ^^
@Wes that's a cute mustache
I have no idea what the problem might be
apart from __call or similar
So the __call, should it be implemented by each class
Searching for __call, I did not find anything
@NikiC Another question is - php_var_dump output is sent to the browser.. is there a function with which I can dump and get that back as a string
uh dunno
does lldb support .gdbinit?
19:31
@JAamish var_export with 2nd param true.
If it does you can just use printzv
Nope, lldb does not support .gdbinit :( but I just figured out that I can directly invoke the php_var_dump function from lldb. I can survive with that
well that's shitty
I think at least on 7.1 we have some apis that print to string
You can try zend_print_zval_r_to_str()
yes! The most of afternoon, I tried installing gdb with brew, and signed by gdb (huh) and spent so much time setting up gdb. Eventually it seems mac has a new dyld (dynamic loader) version 15, which is not working with the latest gdb!.. :(
both var_export and zend_print_zval_r_to_str likely would work. Will try them
@NikiC it has its own thing :x
19:42
@Wes which tests?
Wes
Wes
@kelunik abstract method type dec variance
@Wes Just add different test cases
Wes
Wes
@kelunik even if they are redundant to some other tests?
@Wes Yes, why not? It allows different things, otherwise the RFC wouldn't need to exist.
Wes
Wes
i would hate having that in my tests
19:53
@Wes Why does it matter?
Wes
Wes
redundancy, poor organization
@bwoebi you poor mac users
I love that @Wes
@Wes Why does that matter for regression tests?
Wes
Wes
20:08
it doesn't. i'm just saying, if there is the opportunity to keep them organized, why wouldn't you?
@NikiC It's not too bad. Only no zbacktrace. :x
There are other things lldb is better at
@Wes That's really funny :-D
@bwoebi do you use lldb for php debugging?
20:34
is there a way in mysql to get a column's value for a specific row
@Hello Yes, and it's called SELECT query :)
sorry my question might have sounded stupid but I meant "by only specifying the row number" if theres a way to do that
I feel like I complicate things too often for myself
You can query and then in PHP choose whatever row you like.
But how would you know which row from query result to choose? They may have different order each time if you won't use ORDER BY clause.
I am trying to allow a user to enter a number in an input field, which will remove that specific row in a mysql table (IDs could be out of order so I can't remove based on that)
so even if the ID in row 2 was '5' but they enter 2, it won't remove that row
:O
20:50
@Hello that's a really poor UI
depending on what information you have there, the interface should either have a list of entries, with delete button OR some type of select-element, where you can choose what to delete
expecting the user to enter ID manually is a really bad strategy
Hello, just a simple question but I don't know where to ask.
Which language ist the best for text and Icon based web games.
For example there is a game called hackerexperience Legacy
if one action is finished it actualises itself
a link to the website if you want to look for yourself at the game. Maybe you find out which programming language it is and maybe you can tell which programming language is the best.
21:19
@JAamish yes
@bwoebi then do you have any equivalent in lldb for printing zval, hashtable etc
how to do look into the variables
@JAamish dumping it manually
with direct following of pointer etc.
you mean using the frame variable
Okay, I am able to look into the variables in the hashtable by manually doing it as well. I just found that lldb has a python interface, but using that I still haven't figured out how to increment the address
nah, p myzval
@JAamish increment what address?
I want to print the hashtable, with its key and val
In the hashtable, there is a arData. I saw that .gdbinit, they add +1 and keep printing for num_elements
21:24
yeah, for now I'm just explicitly accessing ht->arData[0].key->val and ht->arData[0].val
hmm yes, it would be good if that can be looped automatically, just like .gdbinit. Within the python interface, that does not work
probably need more time to understand that python part of lldb :)
@bwoebi I found this - stackoverflow.com/questions/18468126/… - but here as well, the answer is not on how we can loop
LOL
Wes
Wes
Teenager Billy Monger who lost both his legs in a Formula 4 crash says the support he received was inspirational https://t.co/RoTJiWtQi1
extraordinary kid
21:33
does anyone have a solution to my previous asked queston or am I wrong here
@JAamish essentially you can do a simple for loop and then call lldb.debugger.HandleCommand("command") with command containing your loop variable
@bwoebi how do you mean. Inside the python or outside
inside
but that command has to go to the next element in the arData right
do you have any small/simple example
script
def dump_hashtable(ht):
    for i in range(0, lldb.frame.EvaluateExpression('(%s)->nNumUsed' % ht).GetValueAsUnsigned()):
        if lldb.frame.EvaluateExpression('(%s)->arData[%d].val.u1.type' % (ht, i)).GetValueAsUnsigned() != 0:
            if lldb.frame.EvaluateExpression('(%s)->arData[%d].key' % (ht, i)).getValueAsUnsigned() != 0:
                print '%d: %s =>' % (i, lldb.frame.EvaluateExpression('(%s)->arData[%d].key->val' % (ht, i)).getSummary())
            else:
                print '%d: %d =>' % (i, lldb.frame.EvaluateExpression('(%s)->arData[%d].h' % (ht, i)).getValueA
@JAamish something along these lines ^
eih, .val, not .value
dunno, that thing is annoying
it's definitely nothing to "quickly write"
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