what if i have two implementations of Foo, will you implement twice Foo1::constructFromShit($shit) and Foo2::constructFromShit($shit) which also also tightly coupled. shouldn't it be FooFromShit($fooFactory, $shit) ?
If it's some sort of primitive where there will never be another implementation, tight coupling is fine, and "named constructors" (when there are multiple ctor signatures) increase readability
Anyone used the OneUpUpload bundle before? I've done a custom code for chunk upload before with plupload but never with this.. seems more robust/tested.
@Tiffany I would say that the rule with static methods is that as long as 1) it does not tightly couple you to a piece of business logic or a framework, and 2) it is stateless, then it's probably OK
@DaveRandom Okay, so say I have a SendMail class, and there is a method that sends the mail... I'm trying to think of something that could be an example
@Patrick no, it's the "recorder events" thing. Why is it an array? What happens if I log in with the correct password and then with the wrong password? Why failed attempts can be negative? Why can the the attempt time be null, when attempt count is non-zero? And I know that it all is bullshit, but as I said it - things like that make me itch
@DaveRandom in which star trek there is an episode where it is explained why all species in star trek look more or less the same? is it tng, the tkon empire or something?
@PeeHaa I get that it's part of why that what makes it confusing, but wtf does $response do in $index, why is that returned? why is $user found, and nothing done with it in the same function? or is it used somewhere else in the class? but again, I'm guessing this is what makes it so shitty
@kelunik yeh I don't think I really understood DNAME until today, when I made one to see how it behaved
I have put a conditional in there to short-circuit the alias resolution when the server sets the recursion available flag, because that basically indicates that the server tried to resolve aliases as well and failed
I don't really like the implementation though, putting properties on exceptions like that feels dirty
but the alternative is a fucking huge refactor that I can't wrap my head around rn
@DaveRandom something that made me snicker about the second chapter was "use pronounceable names" and he spells out variable names... our entire ERP codebase violates that so bad, but it was written at a time where there was a limit on the length of package names, and they just never refactored it.
@JoeWatkins Can dktapps have access to pthreads too? He's been quite helpful recently (specifically with the Windows and sockets stuff). Also, the 7.2 release is now being tracked here, where we hope to make a 3.2.0 release over the weekend :)
The database containing all the customer data (explicit images, chat logs, sexual orientation, email addresses, passwords in clear text, etc.) was basically readable for everyone on the internet.
Any idea where could this typoe of error could come from ? -'2015-03-22T13:22:40+0100' +'2015-03-22T13:22:40+0000' (this is phpunit testing) it appears that the timezone is idfferent
@Allenph tbh, you might be better off just avoiding that fight, and just finding a better place to work. They don't exactly sound like they want to learn new things. Also..........a lot of ecommerce sites are built using non-solid code, because it can be quite hard to integrate solid princinples with a plugin based architecture, which most ecommerce sites use.
@Danack I'm currently looking for another job, but I've put a lot of time in effort into getting them to at least consider it. I want to finish out the fight.
So in a little admin panel, I have a config file that defines ADMIN_ROOT = __DIR__, platform guy decides to move the config file somewhere else on the system and symlink to it
@PaulCrovella I used to work in a print shop, printing statements and the like, on high speed Oce printers. They used paper that had the guides on the side but was just a big solid piece two pages wide. If you were printing something with a MICR number on the bottom, and you were more than 1/8" (~3mm) off, you had to redo the whole batch
However, the way we are currently doing it, if we say 10 people reserve a seat, only one seat will be shown as taken. I realise this could be fixed by running the query one time for each box, but i feel like thats very suboptimal.
say they got off track somewhere in the middle, you had to back the job up to a thousand or more pages before where you needed to resume just to deal with the runoff
We had a fleet of Xerox 5k/h printers and 3 Oce 26k/h high speed, that was about a third of the room. Another small section was dedicated to cutting special things like coupon books (for payments). Half the room was just envelope stuffers
envelope stuffers can blow me.. we trialed some for a bit, considering expanding, but they were such pains in the ass it wasn't worth it
any special runs that needed that got sent to another bindery nearby
the fanciest our shop ever got was saddle stitching.. and that was thanks to a busted ass used stitcher picked up on the cheap, and a crazy meth head who kept it working
@DaveRandom Not a that huge refactor, but we couldn't simply use the output of query() in resolve() or would have to expose more details in query() results.
I'm trying to access Auth::user()->id in a base controller to log something but it is returning false when I run Auth::check() before it, I know for a fact I'm logged in?
question do you create release branches like checkout -b v0.5-rc1 or just tag a global dev branch tag -a v0.5-rc1 then add further features to the same branch until next tag?
and finally merge into master, and tag that v0.5
hmmm, actually, what might make sense is to create a v0.5 branch, tag rcs on that branch until satisfied, then merge that branch into master, from which the actual release gets tagged
I think that's somewhat how it works with php-src?
@Jimbo (or anyone) do you know of an example where using prepare in Auryn is a sane and required thing to do, on code that isn't just absolutely terrible?
@Danack No, I think it was just configured to automatically do that, that's why I used prepare I think, otherwise I could have done it in the delegate.
@kelunik I'm not hugely happy with the Record class tbh, apart from anything else I don't think it would be possible to implement DNSSEC with it. The thought has occurred to me that it might be worth making a lower-level API, more tightly coupled to libdns, as a separate lib, and having amp/dns be restricted to just resolve() (i.e. the only thing that's actually used internally by other amp core components)
This is kinda weird. At my workstation PHPStorm recognizes tests which throw exceptions and doesn't show warnings for them when I'm using expectException, but it is here, what gives :x
I suppose query() is OK for other simple stuff actually, like MX lookups
but it's certainly not good enough to do DNSSEC, and as this issue with recursion handling shows, sometimes the application needs to inspect the message, not just the records
and actually even with MX it's an "inefficient" API, because 99% of the time you are going to want the A record for the resulting MX, and 99% of the time the initial response is going to include that in the additional records
I'm still not happy about putting a property on an exception but it will do for now
(largely unrelated)
OK @kelunik how about this: resolve() and query() currently both just return an array of answer records. Can we implement a wrapper class that can still be treated as an array of answer records in the sense of ArrayAccess/Countable/Traversable, but exposes some of the other properties of the message?
@ircmaxell Just removal for now, because proper variance can't be implemented without requiring autoloading for some situations and changing autoload rules.
that said @kelunik, we could return instances of IPAddress, since that's what's inside the RData, then you can do (string)new IPEndpoint($address, 12345) and you get a nicely formatted string for use in a URI...