@bwoebi Can you tell me how I can trigger nested delayed opline stacks?
(in the compiler)
It's annoying, an opcode must delayed, but only sometimes. And then I need to access that opline to modify an operand, but at that point I don't know how much of the delayed opline stack has been moved.
@IluTov @bwoebi I was referring to smart branches in a sense that we perform jump operations from within comparison opcodes if the next opcode is a JMPZ
I don't know whether doing a respective jump operation from within a comparison opcode really makes anything much faster
@IluTov Ugh, going to have so much "fun" on making VLD work again this time.
I get so many funny emails since I started doing the podcast.
Hi Derick,
My name is Lisa I just came across your article and I really enjoyed it. It was very well written and I think you are exactly the type of person we want to work with.
I am reaching out because I own a few online casino brands and work with few online gaming platforms and I think this would be great for your website audience. Are you open to
potentially publishing our gambling related articles? This is written by us. This would involve us providing you with some gambling specific content that would contain one link
Another one that's going to get the "Fuck off" response.
weekedays i have to be up for a daily meeting at 1:30pm then i usually work through until 5 or 6am, maybe get a couple of hours nap during the day if I can
No life, few friends, an insane amount of responsibility on my shoulders, and a healthy dose of crippling imposter syndrome and probably a splattering of mild autism for good measure \o/
I mean I'm probably going to be dead by 40 but that's not going to be my problem
No amount of money is worth those kind of hours. And no company deserves that kind of loyalty (bar your own company and even that is debatable). Your should look around the market. The "no life" bit may be something of a chicken and the egg situation.
@MarkR I find this reluctance to talk about salary odd. In Norway it's even published publicly :D (Which goes a bit too far IMO). In the Netherlands people have no problem discussing it.
Seems like I'm the only person who works as little as possible (on my day job at least) :P Money is not that important to me, I'd rather spend my time on other things I enjoy.
@MarkR You can break the 100k barrier without working yourself to death. Please, no working yourself to death. If your company can't figure out how to get its job done without over-working its employees, it doesn't deserve to be a company.
I've never had a job that regularly required more than 40 hours a week, and I'm over 100k USD now.
@bwoebi Tbh I wouldn't know much, but 100k feels like a lot, the only thing I know is that 100k in Silicone valley is not "that much" due to living costs
I have the benefit that I have almost complete autonomy within the company I work for. Which is why I've resisted expanding with a team. But it's a double edged sword as its all on my shoulders
@beberlei The big problem in the UK is that house price inflation is absolutely crazy. I live in Yorkshire which is considered a relatively poor northern area, my house worth around £230k here would be half a million in the south.
I interviewed at a couple of UK companies earlier this year, I realized that what I wanted in salary (since they didn't offer health insurance) was vastly lower than what I could find here...
I was looking at emigrating to the UK earlier this year, pre-pandemic, it's almost impossible for me to get a work visa at my skill level, but if I found a US remote job that didn't care which country I lived in, I could move somewhere that health insurance isn't necessary
we've 15yr left, unless we over pay. And I might just do that due to MDB stock, and/or the bank becoming annoying if we need to re-sign up to a new fixed term (because I'm now self employed).
If you buy a house / appartment here, you can pay off the mortgage with your rent at the start (and later, obviously, thanks to inflation, you get a small return on top)
… but you need to have enough money to get a mortgage at all first :-D
Anyway, the lady of the house has informed me that she's hungry, and is demanding dinner. Time to make ourselves some curry. Photos on Twitter soon :-) ttyl folks!
What MVC really is? MVC has always become a buzz around the developer's community. It has been differentiated in so many categories. Someone may call it a design pattern OR a framework OR three-tier architectural pattern. Never really understand in which category it becomes and why need to use it? Is there any better alternative?
@MarkR Yeah, MVC doesn't really have the concept of services (I think) so often you'd end up with bloated controllers and duplicated code.
@Exception Well, IMO the whole MVC part should be rather simple, most of your actual business logic should live in reusable, decoupled, testable services.
I was working on something last night, but it led me to a question - is it possible to test curl functions using fakes? e.g. I have an object with a few getter methods that return http_response_code and returns 200, 404, 403, or whichever, based on the method I call.... I'm not sure if I'm approaching the problem in the right way either, the problem I'm trying to solve is testing what HTTP code curl receives, and trying to avoid arbitrary URLs ... if this is too rambly I'll try to add clarity
That way when you're in production you can use the concrete class that makes the actual request, and in test you can use a concrete class which returns error codes
Yes, you would perform your tests on a "new GoBoomRequesty", in production you would use a "new LegitRequesty" - and all your type hints etc would be against RequestyInterface