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00:38
How has everyone's Saturday been?
Wes
Wes
01:01
@StatikStasis opposite of this youtu.be/8DNQRtmIMxk?t=20
01:13
@StatikStasis wanted to be productive but body's been off and on feeling bleh
Been in bed most of the day :|
I try sitting up at my computer and read/learn programming concepts and my head revolts
I wish more US pizza franchises offered smaller pizzas at a reasonable price. I don't want a large pizza, I can't eat that by myself, but large pizzas are discounted so much most of the time that they're as cheap as small pizzas.
 
1 hour later…
02:25
@Tiffany oh no... =/
@Wes LOL
 
3 hours later…
05:26
posted on July 01, 2018

New Cyanide and Happiness Comic

 
1 hour later…
06:52
morns
@Tiffany So, I take it that nobody has designed the tutorials page yet, want me to give it a shot?
Wes
Wes
07:06
dev.to/sadick254/… that's the kind of articles i should write
mornin all
@Wes trait provides no advantage there, the same can be done through inheritance, without any issue.
08:00
mind-pop Psychology Informal. a word, phrase, image, or sound that comes into the mind suddenly and involuntarily and is usually related to a recent experience.
 
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09:11
@NikiC This should be the proper fix: github.com/bwoebi/php-src/commit/…
 
2 hours later…
11:27
Is "id" (PK) a candidate key?
@bwoebi hrm
I think it's pretty ugly
 
1 hour later…
12:46
@rightfold I didn't even know Petri nets existed - looks awesome, and very specific too!
@rightfold currently, I have non-distributed either optimistically- or pessimistically-locked aggregates where all write interactions are handled, and they are just a dumb state machines
@rightfold note that in an ES system there is no "filtering events". Things can either happen or not happen. If they happened (even if it was not supposed to happen: biz logic bug), the event is there and it is supposed to be saved.
Playing around with informatik.uni-hamburg.de/TGI/PetriNets/introductions/aalst during docker-compose build :-)
user1804599
13:08
Nice.
user1804599
13:24
TLA+ may also be interesting.
@NikiC feel free to commit a better API which has no more clutter than the current one
@bwoebi is there hope for 7.3 for this?
and yes, sorry if it's already 'been asked
I think we are pretty close to being done with the patch
@Ocramius Unfortunately I don't think it will make it
At least not if we stick to the current schedule
dang.
13:30
But it may be too late however
if we delay 7.3 a little, then yea
@NikiC I'm btw. close to be finished with the type sources refactor, will probably commit today
nice
13:54
mornin
14:18
@mega6382 sure
make it spiffy
or what is it that CFH say? "make it pop"?
will try my best, :)
thanks
14:23
I need to add header anchors, unless you want to do that. I don't care either way.
meh, I am not even sure what I am gonna do, I am just gonna try some random things and hope the end result is something nice.
14:42
Anyone have a better name for BidirectionalArrayIterator? I wish it was just ArrayIterator and we could rename ArrayIterator to ArrayObjectIterator but that is probably just a dream.
// Complete signature, just implemented
final class BidirectionalArrayIterator implements BidirectionalIterator, Countable {}
I might make it seekable but I don't want to do much more if any because then we're back to the mess that ArrayIterator is.
I'm not sure where - if ever - people actually use seek on an iterator...
user1804599
ArrayBiterator
@LeviMorrison I'm not sure I understand why it's necessary to implement it as a separate iterator
You mentioned that making ArrayIterator bidirectional is not possible, but I didn't get why
@rightfold Iterates over all bits in an array? ^^
It might be possible. Ensuring that you don't change the behavior of a bunch of its methods is going to be a pain given its implementation.
Which leads to point 2: I hate how bloated ArrayIterator is. Those methods are not just unnecessary, they are undesirable.
I want a "clean" iterator that just does iterator things.
I can understand that ^^
Also ArrayIterator currently always copies the array :D
If it does then that's a hard blocker for me...
14:55
We should be able to change that. Should do that either way
I guess if we can change that it might be fine.
Making ArrayIterator less terrible is good but I doubt people would be okay with me deprecating all those "helper" methods...
Meaning, we are limited in how much better we can make it.
My implementation is a fairly straightforward pointer walk. You should probably review it; I don't actually know if it is correct. It seems to work but I need to add more cases, like deleting items out of the middle before creating the iterator.
evening
@NikiC I'm joining a conference call about generics. If you are interested and available right now I can ask if I can invite you. I'm sure they would be interested in having you.
I have finally reached civilization again
user1804599
Which wasps nest were you in? Python or React?
15:01
@LeviMorrison with whom?
Rasmus Shultz and Nate Brunette. Nate has been working on an impl. I do not know how complete it is, that is partly what the call is for.
Trying to agree on what we should and should not include in v1.0, and implementation strategy.
what medium are you using?
It's a Google Meet URL, I think.
ok
Shocker, we are having issues joining the same call.
15:15
curl_*() fail to fall back to global namespace if called from within a namespac – #76559
Hi
Quick question, I don't know what keyword to use to get the answer on Google so I'll ask here :
What does the following code ?
"MyClass::class"
43
Q: What is ::class in PHP?

YadaWhat is the ::class notation in PHP? A quick Google search returns nothing because of the nature of the syntax. colon colon class What's the advantage of using this notation? protected $commands = [ \App\Console\Commands\Inspire::class, ];

What is it supposed to do ? I see this a lot in Symfony
Oh thanks !
user1804599
@r00t Google recognizes such punctuation just fine: google.nl/search?q=php+::class
user1804599
I believe it's a new feature in Google from a few months back.
17:40
@rtheunissen Can I check something for your RFC:
// Safe version of in_array
function array_contains($needle, array $haystack) {
	foreach ($items as $item) {
        if ($item === $needle) {
            return true;
        }
	}

	return false;
}

$value = new Money(5);
$values = [new Money(5)];

var_dump(in_array($value, $values, true)); // true
var_dump(array_contains($value, $values)); // false
That's a correct interpretation of the RFC, right?
18:06
@rightfold finally
@Danack not quite, because === shouldn't be considered at all. I just replied to your comment on reddit. :)
So would the output of:
var_dump(in_array($value, $values, true)); // true
var_dump(array_contains($value, $values)); // false
be that with your RFC applied?
Would be true and false.
So yeah that code snippet won't be affected at all.
<?php

class Fraction {
    private $num;
    private $den;

    public function __constuct(float $num, float $den) {
        $this->num = $num;
        $this->den = $den;
    }

    public function __equals($other): bool {
        if ($other instanceof Fraction) {
            return $this->toFloat() === $other->toFloat();
        }

        return $this->toFloat() === (float) $other;
    }

    public function __compareTo($other): int {
        if ($other instanceof Fraction) {
            return $this->toFloat() <=> $other->toFloat();
__construct* typo sorry ^
19:21
> When you use the <=> operator, the return value is normalised to either -1, 0 or 1 which is consistent with the current behaviour. So the object you're returning in compareTo will be converted to an integer(1) which will make $c be 1. Attempting to call echo $c->shape then makes no sense.
@rtheunissen I think it's actually important that this is not what happens.
The conversion should be done by whatever attempts to use the result, such as the sorting function.
Similarly with == it's the if () that is actually doing the conversion to bool.
\o @Sara
@LeviMorrison so compareTo and <=> should evaluate to the same thing regardless?
Hmm so instead of saying return -1, 0 or 1, you have to return a value < 0, a value == 0, or a value > 0 to indicate direction.
So returning an object is valid, and there's no conversion internally?
Yes. The conversion is done by whatever uses the result, just as it already is.
if() already converts to bool.
@rtheunissen Does the existing internal handler for compare expect a zend_long or a zval or take a zval* as an out parameter or something?
Takes a zval*
That's what I thought - we can already return whatever and the caller is responsible for error conditions.
The internal compare function does normalise and ZVAL_LONG to it
Hmm we can't do that when we compare op2 against op1, because we have to invert the result with * -1 after the normalisation.
/* Comparison and equality
 */
typedef int (*zend_object_compare_t)(zval *object1, zval *object2);
typedef int (*zend_object_compare_zvals_t)(zval *result, zval *op1, zval *op2);
typedef int (*zend_object_equals_t)(zval *result, zval *op1, zval *op2);
Those are the 3 objects handlers for comparison now.
<=> "returns 0 if both operands are equal, 1 if the left is greater, and -1 if the right is greater".
19:41
@rtheunissen Not sure what you mean. Things like $a < $b would act differently in the future if we allow individual overloading.
So... is there a case where this doesn't work for $a <=> $b?
Surely that should always evaluate to a bool though.
So if you overload it would be :bool
I'm saying... NotComparable < Comparable would call compareTo on Comparable, and the result would need to be inverted before returning.
We can't invert generically.
I think we should maybe require that compareTo returns a numeric value, maybe even be as strict to require -1, 0 or 1.
Again, < does not matter. If we overload in the future < would need a new code path to do something specific to that operator.
We're strictly speaking about cases with <=>, I'm pretty sure.
> Things like $a < $b would act differently in the future if we allow individual overloading

It would still have to result in a boolean though. In no world would $a < $b = 5
Just like <=> would never not return -1, 0 and 1, right?
No, that's not true.
I guess it's operator overloading vs definition of equality, addition, difference, etc.
19:49
VectorType([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) < VectorType([0, 1, 2, 3, 9, 5]) ; // could return VectorType
I would vote no so hard on that.
This is the precise reason Python switched away from the old model.
There are types where logically the operators act on an element-wise fashion.
That example is the new model though..
That example would use lt
19:50
Yes, it used to use __cmp__ before, which is equivalent to <=> for us.
Which is the new model, rich comparison.
But I'm saying that if PHP introduced __lt
And the potential result of that call could be non-boolean
For us <=> must work the same in old and new models, otherwise it will be a BC break.
Yeah and imo always return -1, 0 or 1.
In both models.
// If this is valid
VectorType([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) < VectorType([0, 1, 2, 3, 9, 5]); // VectorType
// this must also be valid
VectorType([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) <=> VectorType([0, 1, 2, 3, 9, 5]); // VectorType
That should be a boolean result right there.
"Is this value less than that value?" "Here have a vector instead". wtf
Hard no on both of those, sorry. :/
19:53
This illustrates the limits you are imposing. Why does < mean comparing and returning a singular value?
It compares the left to the right.
A to B
And tells you yes or no.
Except for that last part I agree.
It should tell you yes or no for every value, not just the first n of them.
If you want to apply < to every element in your vector, you would use a method defined on vector that does that.
It's not the responsibility of an operator ever.
Why?
This is a very important concept in numeric computing, which is actually what my day-job is in.
if () needs a boolean. You can do if (new stdclass()) today. Is it an error? No, not even a warning.
Because you'd be throwing all semantics out the window otherwise.
19:57
welcome to php
"<" isn't an operator really, it's not just a little arrow to the left. It's a shorthand way of asking "less than".
I agree. The part you don't seem to get is that for some types asking if a is less than b does not result in a boolean, like this vector example.
I get that you're saying it doesn't always result in a boolean.
This is why Java does not do operator overloading, and has behavior overloading instead.
I understand what you're saying. I just don't agree with it.
19:59
You want Java.
language.
I really don't want Java. I just want to be able to read and comprehend code as "is a less than b", and not "is a left caret operator whatever that means b"
A vector A less than vector B? I don't know. But don't tell me it's vector C.
Your words show that you do want Java's approach, not C++'s or Swift's or Python's or...
You should do a more rigorous examination I think but the trend seems to be overloading operators, not Java's approach.
For some of them yes. But not comparison.
Python is a particularly important language to keep in mind because it is dynamic and interpreted like PHP, not compiled.
20:03
+,-,*,/ would make sense for lists, vectors, matrices etc
But < and <=> and > are semantically in a very different box.
The same rule shouldn't have to apply to all operators.
Could be __lessThan($other): bool, and then also __add($other) mixed;
But then you have to justify why < is any different from +.
Easy, it asks a question.
+ is an operation
I don't buy it.
Questions do not always result in binary answers.
yes/no questions do though
which is what this is
You are adding the constraint. I do not see why it is there intrinsically.
20:11
Do you know if you can add return types to magic methods?
I'm fairly certain the answer is yes.
@rtheunissen Why?
Just wondering about potential future overloading of cmp operators
Is it good practice to create a new, shorter, variable to hold the value of an array value?
For example:
$some_value = $long_array_name["some_value"];
@sweg_yolo_69 depends. I normally do if I'm going to reference it more than once.
@sweg_yolo_69 if that new variable might be used in a few places, or if the new name "some_value" described the value better?
20:17
Thank both of you @Danack and @rtheunissen
20:33
so, what's up
the sky
:P
21:29
Anyone know how to make a connected users page?
How do I track if someone leaves the page?
Have a flag of last activity or keep track of active sessions
Wdym?
I can't rely on browser to send "I left the page" because if the browser is force quit or crashes it won't send the message
@PeeHaa
You could hire people to stand guard at your user's places
And phone you when they are leaving their device
What is it you are trying to do?
And also
@PeeHaa Great idea! The PHP functions send_guard() and demand_ransom() will work great.
Do you know how sessions are normally handled?
21:33
Sorta
I am trying to avoid using a Websocket (If possible) to keep track of users connected to page
Do you need this info real time?
Again: what is it you are doing?
why is it you think you want to track users leaving a page?
Ok fine you caught me its bit of an X-Y problem
Long story short....
I made a website that has videos. My home TV has a web browser (powered by Chromium) that I use to play the videos.
Unfortunately, scrubbing through the video, playing, pausing, toggling full screen, etc. are a big pain in the ass.
My idea is to connect the TV to a mobile device and create almost like a remote on the mobile device.
It would have a play, pause, and a fake video where scrubbing on that video will change the video on the TV.
I am trying to avoid a Websocket.
Wrong language mate
@JBis Why?
21:40
I was thinking SSE maybe.
Because I am lazy. And the setup process is hard.
Also most are written in Java (I think) and I don't know Java
@JBis Can your browser on TV run javascript?
It's powered by Chromium and maybe chrome itself so yes
@JBis If so, then your best bet would be to track if the user is active through JS, and ajax that with PHP
Yes, my original idea....
So track activity with JS
21:43
I don't understand
The TV won't consistently send a "I'm leaving" message
or any device for that matter
the best you can do is this
172
Q: JavaScript before leaving the page

kd7I want to make a confirmation before user leaving the page. If he says ok then it would redirect to new page or cancel to leave. I tried to make it with onunload <script type="text/javascript"> function con() { var answer = confirm("do you want to check our other products") if (answer){ ...

Depending on your TV's web browser support, there are a lot of ways you can track it
Like...
A manual way would be to do some calculations with JS, then send a keep-alive message to your PHP listener
"some calculations"?
So basically do some math with js, if it succeeds send keep-alive
21:45
Huh?
Anything that would work if the browser is open
Hmmm.
What exactly are you trying to track here? The page being loaded on your tv?
There would be a device selection on the phone.
Finally finished the second part of my bachelor thesis, featuring a "real-world application", an RSS feed reader built with #comonads as UI components. A Real-World Application with a Comonadic User Interface https://arthurxavierx.github.io/RealWorldAppComonadicUI.pdf
21:47
I want to track if the TV is on the page or not (a viable selection)
i love functional programming. it takes smart people who would otherwise be competing with me and turns them into unemployable crazies
Hopefully this doesn't sound too dumb @sweg_yolo_69
@JBis just have some ajax on the page ping the server every 5 seconds? When it stops, the user is no longer on the page...
@Danack Yes, another idea I was thinking... But...
I get the part about sending the AJAX request every X seconds, but the PHP script will only be activated when a browser makes a request, so how will the message be sent "TV 123 left" to the mobiles
And how will it be stored?
I guess SQL for storage.
21:54
You're making a custom app for your TV, you don't need a full blown DB to store some info
So then how will it be stored?
Create and delete files
18 mins ago, by Danack
why is it you think you want to track users leaving a page?
You haven't said what you're trying to achieve yet btw.
@Danack I did
... I now make a living hiring functional programmers. You may consider yourselves victorious.
@wm @cra ...like, "they can leave the house" functional, or the other kind?
No, you didn't
21:55
I need an connected TV's page
@JBis you didn't explain why you need to check if a user is active on a page
@JBis you explained everything up to that part
@JBis but not that
@JBis when someone says "you haven't said why you're trying to do something" either you haven't explained it, or you haven't explained it to a level where people can understand.
If the user is not active on the page then they shouldn't be listed on the mobile phone page
Only active TV's should be on that page
Does that explain it?
21:58
@JBis I just skimmed what you said above. You should get it over you heart to use websockets. Otherwise you are just going to be torturing yourself for nothing. If this is for personal use, you could probably get a node js app to do what you are trying to do with php in minutes. There are loads of libraries that make web sockets cake.
@GiantCowFilms I guess that would also solve the problem of sending events from mobile to TV
Yes, the application you are designing is very event driven.
Hmmm...
@GiantCowFilms @sweg_yolo_69 @PeeHaa @Danack Thanks for your help! I guess I'll have to use WebSockets.
 
2 hours later…
Wes
Wes
23:33
@PeeHaa ive seen worse
The pizza? Or the comment? :P

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