I know what would be fun... ice cream at 1am, because why the heck not
Yay. Finally determined that K8S pod disruption budgets have to match the pod in the controller and not the controller itself \o/ that only took 2 hours
I completely forgot I was on camera at the R11 meetup and started trying to comb my hair with a brush attached to a power drill... the funny thing was, I was using the actual live stream video of me to try and line it up with my hair.
Uh well... I had the drill pointing upwards with a spade bit on the end, and then I'd put the hole in the brush handle over the top of the spade so it spun around it (like a ¬) and was trying to spin it so it would brush my hair, but not be legit attached to the drill and rip my skull off if it got caught
lol was watching @Danack's live stream and i though ooof there's a lot of background noise, and then just after that he starts speaking about background noise
> The at() matcher has been deprecated. It will be removed in PHPUnit 10. Please refactor your test to not rely on the order in which methods are invoked.
@SebastianBergmann would you accept a patch to use automatic-releases in phpunit? It doesn't follow your CHANGELOG.md naming scheme, but I think it can be fixed long-term
@NikiC at() always confused me and should never have been implemented in the first place. That being said, in your case I would use an anonymous class that implements NodeVisitor and records the information you're interested in.
@SebastianBergmann That's what I was thinking as well ... only complication here is that I don't just need to record, but also return different values at different points
sometimes when I'm naming variables or whatever, I'll need to specify up" and down` (like arrow_up or whatever), and to have my code line up neatly, I'll often abbreviate down as dn.
That was an irrelevant piece of information.... until I just realized that dnisup, upside-down. 😲 🤯
I follow the group of elephants-object do you know? Where discussing general oop arguments ... So my doubt is, following the CQS "principle" how to design the return object of the query method?
ok, my doubt is how to design which class? obv depends but in general way the query method as you decide which object return new o already presents in the codebase
more clear ?
more extreme, for me, return a boolean value it's bad for example, because the semantic it's null. So I think, ok, I create a return TrueValid, FalseValid, Etc Object but this object, it's strange and maybe itsn't correct
TIL, that the LHS of instanceof can be the name of a class (doesn't appear to be documented; neither in PHP manual nor in lang-spec). However, that yields slightly different results than using an object.
@BruceStackOverFlow how is a "boolean" object better than boolean, it will not contain anymore information, but will be more bulky. boolean is usually enough as a primitive type, other languages do have object for them like Java with Boolean, but they offer some extra functionality, which I doubt you need in your case.
@salathe ah, thanks, but supporting literals is not what my issue was about. Actually, @mega6382 is right; it's just checking whether a string is an instance of a class, and that evaluates to false.
@Derick Can you explain to me what "Difficulties with Userland Parsers" means? I've heard of this claim that <<>> is somehow easier to parse but I really can't understand why that would be the case.
@NikiC wrt to zend_throw_exception_hook changes, as now a zend_object* gets passed in, how do I now read properties with zend_read_property(ce, ***), as that requires a zval* still? I don't think you can get to the zval* from the zend_object* ?
arg >Warning >This extension is EXPERIMENTAL. The behaviour of this extension including the names of its >functions and any other documentation surrounding this extension may change without notice in a >future release of PHP. This extension should be used at your own risk.
@BruceStackOverFlow Two pieces of advice. i) avoid using the SPL ii) stop worrying about abstract problems. Get on with writing some code that does something useful, then think about how to make it better later.
Some parts of SPL are very specialised and don't have much useful purpose (I'm thinking of RecursiveTreeIterator, for example), other parts are horribly "designed" APIs (e.g. DirectoryIterator, the whole exception hierarchy), others are super useful (Countable, spl_autoload_register), etc.
Not sure if I can do this or not, but I tried asking in the JavaScript chat for help to a simple question, but those narps are useless. Is anyone here knowledgeable of sorting/grouping array to then loop over it?
Thats what I did and that chat, but those narps never answer, and if they have something to say its flirting back and forth over completely unrelated topics. Unreal.
My apologies, but that is my table that is currently sorted/grouped by Program attribute, I want to then group inside of the Program by the deliverable. How can I achieve this? There are going to be way more than two deliverables per program, but of the two Deliverable topics that will remain the same count.
I have a grouped/sorted array based on its "Program" attribute which is great. But now I need to sort by a different attribute (Deliverable) inside of that grouping, is that possible? And if so how can I accomplish that?
Here is a picture of my table.
See how it is organized by Program? Inside o...
I feel it's necessary to provide a different point of view about the events zgoforth just described happening in the JavaScript chat. He pasted that block of code in the room accompanied with a question, and then pinged me (and only me), even though I haven't chatted in that room in over a month. As per room policy, I asked him not to ping random people...
I figured it wouldn't hurt to provide some context, as this isn't the first time someone went to another room to complain about JS chat room rules being enforced
Is there a more type-specific version of GC_ADDREF for zend_object* ? ZOBJ_ADDREF or something? The former is fine, I just like to be expressive where possible.
@Alesana I was one of the lead developers of Drupal 8, then had a falling out with the community because Drupal leadership are closed-minded bigots who feel faking a rape accusation is the right way to respond when called out for being bigots. Also, Drupal 7 and Drupal 8 are essentially entirely different systems, so which of those you're looking at makes a huge difference.
If you still have questions after that introduction, I can try to answer. :-)
@Crell Thanks for reaching out. Yeah I kinda heard what happened, that's insane that those type of things would have any bearing whatsoever on your development projects
I was considering a few different job offers, one of them was with Drupal, but I decided that it wouldn't be the best decision for my career even if I did enjoy working with it
I just accepted a job offer for Magenta and Larave about 10 minutes ago
Thanks guys! It's a large corporation, one of the bigger ones in the world
Yeah seriously haha
They're not big in technology though so there's just 2 devs (plus me) and a project manager
It's in the entertainment industry, so they said sometimes it feels like they're an agency for the different people who have contracts with the company
I won't disclose the company until I start there though :P
@Tiffany Thanks! I think for me what it was is that the last year and a half I spent migrating legacy monolithics into Laravel microservices, and most the companies I was talking to are in the process of doing that. I think it was really just the luck of the draw
Hence why I namedrop it. ;-) (Platform.sh hosts all kinds of stuff, including Laravel and Magento, and Magento Cloud is a Magento-focused whitelabel of us.)
I have a friend who has connections in infosec, so I may end up switching to that... he sponsored me for a ticket to a virtual conference from the Diana Initiative
You can do Symfony work without certifications, certainly. But yes, AIUI it's intended to be "easy if you're already a solid Symfony expert, very hard if not."
I'm also taking this new antidepressant that is the first one out of like 6 different ones that my body tolerates. I don't know if it's working or not though because I started it at the same time as the Vyvanse
I will not go back on SSRI/SNRI again. NDRI seems to work for me with mostly mild side effects and I don't have to deal with brain zaps if I happen to miss refilling in time
Brain zaps, nausea and vertigo were the worst with Effexor
@Danack From what I remember, Swift has a model where a function either can throw an error, or cannot. And then it has a system for handling errors when calling another function, where you can either 1) propagate any thrown error (caller must be marked as throwing), 2) get the function's the return value as an Optional type (so it'll be empty if it throws), 3) panic (abort) if the caller throws. Rust has an error-handling system that's functionally the same but a bit different syntactically.
@Danack Swift definitely has so-called “first-class functions” yes. I am not sure how they handle throwability in that case but I would assume it's no different. I will check though.
I assume the callback must marked as throwing if it intends to throw, and the caller must also be marked if it wants to throw. But the thing is that Swift makes it easy to translate between different modes: if the callback throws, the caller could choose to panic if that happens, or it could return an optional, or handle the error. likewise the callback could not throw, but the caller could translate it returning an optional into throwing an error.
@Danack Yes, but they don't do callbacks as strings, they have dedicated function types for that. Closures that throw must also be marked with throws as @Andrea mentioned.
Can we just tell everyone that using Closure::fromCallable(string) is 3x faster, whether or not that's true? Maybe we can trick people into letting us kill bare strings as callables.