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00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

16:00
> A sequence of zero or more non- <newline> characters plus a terminating <newline> character.
OK I'm going to go and fuck with Bruce Willis for a bit now
16:14
news.microsoft.com/features/… that's one cool engineering project
@Ekin I hope it works. I'm worried what could happen if the containers are damaged in any way, or if maintenance needs to be performed on the hardware inside. Hopefully it's cost effective.
@Ekin But why?
@MadaraUchiha space
and I'm guessing submerging it in water will help cooling costs dramatically
but there's the side-effect of it heating the ocean.......
or you know, if humanity ever decides to make an underwater city
@PeeHaa I knew that was related to C as well right?
@DaveRandom thanks for the explanation
@NikiC any plans to revive the typed-ref-properties branch? saw the commit referenced in IRC / Travis message and got curious :)
16:19
@Tiffany That doesn't seem plausible.
@StatikStasis It also didn't seem plausible that we might be heating the planet
But here we are...
@Tiffany Unless you mean from having entire cities underwater.
Put enough of these babies down, and I'm sure it'll have some kind of effect.
great barrier reef is dying because of the increase in temperature in the ocean
i joined the wrong channel it seems :D
16:21
@beberlei no, you're in the right channel, just off-topic right now, sorry
and Nikita might be busy :P
We're off topic 90% of the time. =D
@Tiffany Oh I agree- I'm just wondering how many of these it would take to affect ocean temperature. It seems like it would be... a crazy amount.
@StatikStasis probably
I doubt one would make that much of a difference, but if we're deploying hundreds or thousands...
@MadaraUchiha natick.research.microsoft.com the FAQ section
> Project Natick is focused on a cloud future that can help better serve customers in areas which are near large bodies of water (where nearly 50% of society resides).
next thing will be deploying data centers in corn fields in middle America </badjoke>
when should I use " pairs and ' pairs ?
for strings
16:28
The effort/cost to pull those up to replace parts is going to be incredible...
Does bash have an option to set a directory as an environment variable?
Wes
Wes
i always use "" because often you want to use stuff like \n, \t, etc
wat
Must be an italian thing? :P
@beberlei yeah, we're working on it
Wes
Wes
i hate having to convert 'foo' to "foo" just because i want to do "foo\n"
so i always default to double quotes
except in regexp
16:34
lol
Wes
Wes
what part of my explanation doesn't satisfy you
Why italian?
foofoo... now I want a latte.
actually it's easy with visual code
ctrl+D
Wes
Wes
@PeeHaa do you use single quotes?
16:36
Yes
Wes
Wes
lol i am so so sorry for you
$sql = <<<SQL
select *
  from $tablename
 where id in [$order_ids_list]
   and product_name = "widgets"
SQL;
Why?
Wes
Wes
see how ridiculous it sounds
is it possible to use heredoc without putting the closing tag to the first column?
Wes
Wes
16:37
what do you do when you want to write a "\n" ?
'must use single quotes' . "\n"
It's just weird saying you don't want to make exceptions, with the follow up sentence abut making exceptions
@Wes Nope. I don't do hard rules only x type of quotes
Wes
Wes
where did i say i don't make exceptions
Use it unless it doesn't make sense
I read "i hate having to convert 'foo' to "foo" just because i want to do "foo\n"" as that
Also the times I actually need to manually add a newline somewhere make it so it's not really I worry about :P
how can I declare objects as return types?
there's no such optione there
Use the official docs instead of random internet articles
16:43
Heading out- be back in a bit.
@Wes Macron is so far inside Trump's head we're going to need to send a rescue party: twitter.com/CBCPolitics/status/1005441276773314560
Wes
Wes
> French President Emmanuel Macron gestured to Trump to his seat at the rectangular table — across from Macron's own place — and then winked at the U.S. leader.
AHAH
he is totally attracted by trump
this is amazing lol
@Wes someone is getting laid tonight =oD
Wes
Wes
16:57
lol watch the video, they are flirting
or rather, macron is flirting
@NikiC actually not, if we consider it like +($a[0], $a[0] + 1) where we do a FUNC_ARG fetch … there we actually do unwrap the reference first before executing $a[0] + 1
So, for consistent semantics it probably should properly unwrap that
@DaveRandom Thanks I think I get it now
@Aurelius it will be on 7.3
Wes
Wes
17:20
someone needs to do preg_match(<<<RE/.../RE, $subject) :P
@beberlei Nikita and @bwoebi were talking about it in the last couple of days, Bob may also be a good person to ask (?)
@DaveRandom Quick question again and sorry, I looked for the utmp.h for the Mac Os and it looks like this:
#define UT_NAMESIZE 8
#define UT_LINESIZE 8
#define UT_HOSTSIZE 16

struct utmp {
char ut_line[UT_LINESIZE];
char ut_name[UT_NAMESIZE];
char ut_host[UT_HOSTSIZE];
long ut_time;
}

So the format to pass to unpack should be:
Z8line/Z8name/Z16host/ltime
right?
@Mehdi seems fine yes
Thanks a lot!
also, as that is divisible by 4, it won't have any alignment padding on 32-bit
17:29
Anyone here with a Mac Os or is there anyway I can find a utmp sample file to test with
not sure about 64
Yes that's what I assumed, no padding
the final long may be padded to 8 bytes on 64-bit, should be easy to tell from the output though
that matters when you are reading all records in the file, as there is no delimiter, just a fixed length
The padding only occurs if data will be mixed in a register right?
however it should be obvious just from looking at the data
@Mehdi yes but iirc there are potential complications w.r.t 32/64 in x86
there are some cases where is doesn't pad "for backwards compat" iirc
17:33
I see that it's a little bit complicated, thanks.
tbh this is delving into an area of which I only have a tenuous grasp (at best)
char is 1 byte right. In 32 bits a register can hold 4 bytes, why isn't the 'char's padded to 4 bytes each in the last example (mac os)?
@Mehdi because the scalar unit is char for that element
it's an array of chars
if the array size was not divisible by 4, it would be padded so it was
8 chars then right
an array of 8
I forgot that it's an array
Also relevant stuff to know when unpacking data based on C struct defs: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/bit_field
that's about sub-byte alignment
i.e. you can declare a struct member as char, but also limit it to 3 bits if that suits the range of values it might have
17:37
I definitely need to learn C++
well this is C, my understanding is that this sort of thing is considered very bad practice in C++ unless you have a good reason to do it
I don't really know much about C++ though, my C is not much more than rudimentary
Here is the solution used by a student to solve the task I'm trying:
$file = fopen("/var/run/utmpx", "r");
while ($utmpx = fread($file, 628)){
$unpack = unpack("a256a/a4b/a32c/id/ie/I2f/a256g/i16h", $utmpx);
$array[$unpack['c']] = $unpack;
}
that was written by someone who doesn't like writing code to be read by other people :-P
Yes, because there are multiple tasks per day
So I think they don't care about readability
irrelevant imo
all code should readable-first, not working that way means that when you find your code doesn't work, you can't debug it
it's hard enough to reason about the high-level task without adding cognitive overhead to the low-level stuff as well
17:43
Makes sense, I can't seem to read the format he used to match the utmp.h in a mac, assuming he is using an iMac
I mean sure, it doesn't necessarily need to be pretty, but naming things a/b/c etc is just silly
it doesn't take any more effort to give them semantic names, doesn't make it work and worse, and makes it a million times easier to reason about
I agree, doesn't take much time to name them correctly
The exercise here is to simulate the 'who' command using PHP and without calling the who command, but what I don't understand is. This school is assuming no prior knowledge, they say "you need to know how to use a keyboard and a mouse"
IMO this exercise is a tough one for someone who has no background
18:42
@DaveRandom do you not use www-data or whatever? I notice that you have an nginx user and group on the lxr server, but my VPS does not. What's the difference between them?
I think I see it...
in /etc/nginx/nginx.conf, there's user nginx
18:59
the name of the user is not important
it's just a separate account for running an internet-facing service
"www-data" is a retarded type of name, that seems to come from Ubuntu
I'm on debian but... practically same difference
my nginx conf files are owned by root, the way @DaveRandom has the lxr server set up, there's an nginx user and group, so seems like the logical way for me to go, but not entirely sure what all that changes going that route. Probably will have to do some reading.
blah, going to work on this later, not completely focused
19:38
in wordpress i can not navigate to any menu after landing on dashboard, rather woocommerce setup wizard pop up, i have tried the not now option, also tried the setting completion. But even though it is taking me back to the woocommerce setup.
Any idea how can I fix it?
19:52
@masud_moni nope, but you'd be better off asking over at wordpress.stackexchange.com
20:06
@DaveRandom I actually compiled the code from my manpage and got 400 byes, but got 384 when I done sizeof in gdb for struct utmp
didn't count either ...
evenin
20:36
wrong curl_getinfo time values – #76438
20:54
@JoeWatkins yeh I later realised that would be your first instinct, I actually cottoned on to the fact it would be padded pretty early on, just took me a lot of head banging/shouting to remember that padding is done at the base type level, not struct level (I was expecting it to be padded at the end)
Btw that def on the man page I linked last night seems to be universal for Linux afaict
At least every linux-based os I have readily available has the same fed
*def
Fucking autocorrect
I once had a temporary access to AIX
granted by an IBM employee
My dad used to work with that a lot iirc
0
Q: class not found error for class instantiated from string variables

helloI'm trying to create a new object in Laravel using the construct below: (code in my view) $class_string = '\\App\\Services\\'.ucfirst(strtolower($user->format)); $format_object = new $class_string(null, $user->year,$user->title); When I dd($class_string) I get \App\Services\Apa which is corre...

21:13
@hello fully qualifed class names don't have the leading \
@DaveRandom That didn't solve it.
We are looking for individuals, able to unveil the hidden message. Good luck.
68747470733a2f2f6962622e636f2f6352684c5954
can someone solve this?
Got it from reddit, seems to be some secret org :O
context: old.reddit.com/r/codes/comments/8ptn8q/… he seems to be posting those numbers multiple times, sometimes its like this 98𝘓ߤ𝘓ߤ𝘓0𝘓↋↋ɐ↊ⅎ↊ⅎ969↊9↊↊ǝ9↋9ⅎ↊ⅎ9↋5↊98ߤɔ565 othertimes like this:68747470733ⲁ2𝓯2𝓯6962622ⲉ636𝓯2𝓯6352684ⲥ5954 what is this???
Well it's a string of hex digits that when grouped in pairs are all < 7f, so start with an ascii table
@stringExchange probably a troll
21:32
I'm mobile so can't be arsed actually decoding it, but I can tell you off the top of my head that 68747470733a2f2f is a hex dump of the string "https://"
...oh it was meant to be fun.
21:43
@mega6382 so its not actually like a shadow government or anything of that sh!t? :O shoot, bc just decoded it and it seems to be some kind of weird thing, the numbers are hex for this site: ibb.co/cRhLYT I have no idea what to do next,
weirdos... hoped that someone could solve this but it seems to be a troll
@stringExchange Looks like a cicada 3301 clone
22:04
playing around with nginx and apache. Always used apache. Apache process took up 16mb to load one page, nginx 2mb :D
now to figure out how to configure 404's on nginx.. redirecting indefinitely.
@DaveRandom fully qualified class names mean unique class names?
22:26
Variables in heredoc does not work properly – #76439
22:38
...
@Shafizadeh it's the full name of the class including the namespace
22:55
Ah
@Danack the heredoc thing is actually by-design, but the error message is indeed shitty and the reason it's wrong is not at all obvious... you cannot indent the closing marker more than the beginning of the line with the opening marker, and the body text must also be indented to at least that level, leading indentation is discarded in the body 3v4l.org/CTerA
23:13
Hmm... I recall that there was a way to resume program execution when catching from a trace
anybody remember if the engine can do that?
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