« first day (4184 days earlier)      last day (992 days later) » 

06:59
@PatrickAllaert @ramsey kind reminder for 8.1.5RC1...
 
1 hour later…
08:04
Who works on ext/curl, whom can I "prod" about bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=51634?
hmm
I guess I could have a look tomorrow?
That would be amazing!
08:23
Ping me tomorrow on my first day? :-D
08:55
@cmb What's the news on zlib? I was hoping to make an xdebug release today.
cmb
cmb
I'm still working on the build automation.
OK - any rough estimate?
(I mean, I'm not in a hurry with a release)
cmb
cmb
Should be done by the end of the day. Hopefully ;)
Wes
Wes
09:07
\o
 
4 hours later…
13:21
o/
14:30
o/
14:51
o/
@bwoebi haven't run them yet. Don't do this stuff on work computers, so only really touch it on weekends (if at all)
15:14
@cmb @RemiCollet @Derick All my fault. I should have asked Ben to tag 8.1.5RC1 (was my responsibility). I'm sick since Sunday and have totally ignored my calendar.
@cmb How much do we care about the description block on a doc PR when doing a squash-merge?
I wouldn't ever do an automatic squash merge. The PR should either already have it squashed, or it should have been split up into separate commits that stand on their own.
I don't think I've ever seen a drive-by contributor have a pristine PR on GitHub.
I'd tell them to fix it, or do it myself.
Neither of these involve clickity click buttons and automatic squash mergers
cmb
cmb
Well, I'm usually happy to be able to review individual commits (especially after an initial review), but often it makes no sense to keep that history.
15:25
What I did yesterday for a few was squash-merge and remove the extra commit messages from the detailed message, as they were pointless.
cmb
cmb
IMO, that's fine. Sometimes the additional messages matter, so that I convert them to a list.
@cmb Yes, then you can merge them by hand.
(Or ask the submitter to do so)
15:48
@cmb @RemiCollet 8.1.5RC1 tagged, uploaded and manifested
cmb
cmb
ta
16:04
Would anyone object to me switching most of usort()'s examples to use spaceship? There's only a half-dozen or so comments talking about it (many of which I already removed).
I think you should add them, but do not forget the docs are not only for the latest release, so you need to mention when the spaceship operator was added.
Roger. (Though, it was added in 7.1 so all supported versions have it.)
cmb
cmb
The manual is currently supposed to document PHP 7.0.0 and up. Since the spaceship operator is available as of PHP 7.0.0 (not only as of 7.1.0), there shouldn't be a problem.
Would a short-lambda be allowed in an example?
might be good to show examples of both, so that people don't get the idea that usort requires those things
people who aren't familiar might think that uses some magic syntax with lots of arrows in it
16:20
I suppose on every sitepage you check for the existence of a session and act accrodingly if one is found or not...there is a reason i am asking this...but first let us get this clear
every page that needs access to the session, yes
ok then....suppose now you work with facebook social login and and the JS SDK....the question is if you look also in every page if the app is authorized or not
depends what you want to know
I just want to get the users email
from facebook graph api
unless you mean sth else....
by saying "depends what you want to know"
well, every page that needs that e-mail address, needs that e-mail address... so if you don't know it yet, you need to fetch it; but once you've fetched it, you can put it in the session
or, you can store whatever token facebook returned when the user logged in in the session, and grab the e-mail address when you want it
16:27
Give or take caching, which I would strongly recommend...
fron your answer I conclude that yes on every page there might be a call to grap api to fetch the e-mail....AM i correct?
it's really up to you; as Crell says, the other thing to consider is caching the API calls
w caching you mean i do it once and do not repeat it...correct??
store the results somewhere
yes, so there's really three options:
- store just a token in the session, and call the graph API whenever you need the e-mail address
- store just a token in the session, call the graph API the first time you need the e-mail address, and use a separate cache to remember the response
- store the e-mail address in the session as soon as the user logs in, which is basically a convenient but not very scalable cache
Yes. Any time you're getting data from a 3rd party API, assume you should fetch it once and cache it somewhere locally. (Your DB, a redis/memcache instance, whatever. Implementation will vary.) Then refetch it periodically to keep it fresh.
Yeah, storing the email in the session as well is a not-terrible option, depending on exactly what you're doing. (It could also be terrible, depending on what you're doing.)
16:33
And also assume that the third party is not always available, or slow.
either way, it seems unlikely that every page needs the e-mail address, unless you're displaying it in a page header or something; so getCurrentUsersEmailAddress() would be a function somewhere that hides away this logic, rather than something that happens in a generic startup routine
I think I am getting the picture here
A whole bunch of the comments on usort() talk about using subtraction to compare ints/floats since technically any positive/negative value works the same. I don't recall if that changed very recently, or if we were just discussing changing that very recently. Anyone recall? (Did that happen in the stable-sort change in 8.0?)
there is one last question though...why use token to store in the session???
@Crell That always worked, I think.
Since the PHP 4 days.
16:36
Right, but I don't recall if it changed recently.
changed to what?
@DimitrisPapageorgiou if you don't store the e-mail address, you have to store something that can get you the e-mail address; otherwise, you'll have to keep popping up "please log into facebook" messages
@Crell I think numeric values all still work, but true and false used to sort-of work and are now explicitly rejected
@IMSoP Ah, that was what changed. I knew there was something subtle there.
ok...
@IMSoP usefull advice
16:56
all in all...as I understand implementations vay from developer to developer..and there is no silver bullet
vay=vary
cmb
cmb
17:16
@Crell Would need to be accompanied by a note that this is only available as of PHP 7.4.0. Probably best to only use it when it's actually about arrow functions for the time being.
18:13
@cmb Well I've merged about 5-6 PRs in the last 2 days, but added 3 more for you. At least it's still a net reduction. :-P
 
1 hour later…
19:36
Some of the "advice" in comments on the variables scope page are... well, they're something.
They're the kind of thinking that got PHP the awful reputation it had. :-)
" Beware of using $this in anonymous functions assigned to a static variable." - Just... why? What were you doing that this became relevant???
Oh my god, what are you even thinking??? php.net/manual/en/language.variables.scope.php#88689
Perhaps rather than deleting they should be preserved in a museum, so people never forget
I left the 21 year old comment in place. It's harmless, and amusing to see something that old.
@Crell yep, doing that as well, though it typically is preferable to do include generateSomePath($arg);
But... wow some of these comments are going out of their way to be dumb.
And then there's the comments that repeat exactly what another comment said 2 years earlier. And another 2 years before that. And another 2 years before that. And the 18 year old comment that is first on the list, and yet someone still felt the need to repeat it.
/me would support rm -rf on all doc comments
19:52
maybe we need a way of tagging them as "NOT RECOMMENDED" or "This post has been downvoted by an administrator because it's f**king crazy"
foreach ($GLOBALS as $key => $val) { global $$key; } I should make a T-shirt with that on it.
Half of them will be gone after the next rebuild, as I've deleted the worst of them. :-)
"I spent a while replacing all my ereg() calls to preg_match(), since ereg() is now deprecated and will not be supported as of v 6.0."

Oh my.
Dear god, the preg_match page is filled with "here's this barely tested regex that worked for me in 2008 so I'm posting it here." Do we want, like, any of those?
Should comments be nuked completely?
I mean, they're occasionally useful as 10 year old bug reports? But that's about it.
Though to be fair, I did find a useful algorithm on the xml_parse_to_struct() (or whatever it is) page that I was able to modify into an actual useful function.
There's plenty of alternatives for such things now though. It was nice 20 years ago, but doesn't make sense anymore IMO.
20:06
Yeah, we should perhaps discuss it on the docs list.
"My function get_key_in_array() needed some improvement:" - So why the frak are you posting it here???
What is the first comment in php website?
Probably something long deleted by now.
20:46
Huh. Like this, which is apparently true but I did not know: php.net/manual/en/function.array-search.php#126453
weak typing, the cause of more problems than it ever solved.
Yep.
Just nuking anything that has a negative score would remove a lot of flotsam. There's stuff with -10 + votes that's 17 years old. That has no reason to exist.
(I just deleted a bunch of them.)
OK, well, I think I've deleted close to 300 comments in the last 2 days. I'm going to call that good for now.
I'll wait for the next note status summary to see what is left in the top pages...
21:07
@Crell wait, you found a use for xml_parse_into_struct()? I've always wondered why that function came to exist; it feels like the debug output from someone else's parser
the contortions required to actually get any data back out of it are painful
They are. But I was trying to parse an arbitrary XML string into objects, and if you look at it from the right angle and do some preprocessing on it then it actually kinda works, and is actually easier than any of the other APIs I found.
That's part of a still-unfinished XML deserialization routine. I'll probably port it back to my still-unfinished XML Schema to PHP class generator library at some point. :-P
I would have thought SimpleXMLIterator or XmlReader would give you a better base for that
I couldn't get the fully generic logic working for either.
Non-bespoke XML parsing is a PITA.
21:23
btw, one of your tests is invalid XML, I'm surprised it parses at all
<beep:Point a="A"><boop:x b="B" c="C">1</boop:x><y>2</y><z>3</z></beep:Point> - those prefixes aren't bound to any namespace
I don't think that one is running yet; I hadn't gotten to namespaces.
I mean to be honest, you probably just want to straight-up use SimpleXML; it has a few quirks, but "traverse some unknown XML" is basically its job
as in, don't bother creating a custom XmlElement class
here's it basically passing your initial test: 3v4l.org/b8jlI
21:47
Wait, since when does 3v4l have built-in assertions???
Wait, no, duh, that's your own code. Ignore me.
@Derick @Girgias @IluTov @MateKocsis Congraulations! We expect great things. :-)
6
will try :p
to be fair, getting all child elements in document order regarding of namespace does seem to be fiddly; add it to my long list of things I'd like to add to SimpleXML some day if I have a) the time; and b) the C skills
It also needs namespace support, which IIRC is either missing or busted.
neither, just slightly fiddly
the trick is to mix in a bit of DOM, and you get this: 3v4l.org/F7ajY
if you know the namespace you're looking for, it's much easier: $root->children('http://example.com/foo')->something
SimpleXML's biggest flaw is it's lack of discoverability
it's that little bit too magic, and if you don't know how to invoke the magic it looks like there's nothing there
22:04
Congrats to everyone who got funding
whereas DOM's problem is that it's not magic enough, and ends up needing a lot of boilerplate
I'd take either over trying to write my own API from scratch, though, any day
22:45
@Crell Fingers crossed :P
@IluTov Might I ask Do you expect to be working fullish time on it?
@MarkR No, my contract is 40% and can't exceed that. I continue being 60% employed by my previous employer.
about 16 hours a week then?
What will happen in the future, I don't know. I really value a work environment which is my primary reason for staying there. It's sure as hell not for the projects I'm working on there :P
@MarkR Yes
when you say you can't exceed that, do you mean you can't can't exceed that (i.e. no voluntary time) or you can't exceed that and get paid for it? im just curious how you made it work, feel free to tell me it's confidential
22:55
@MarkR I can exceed, it's just unpaid overtime.
ah that makes sense then
well im sure you'll continue to make an impressive contribution, im glad you're getting compensated for it now.
@MarkR Thanks, I hope I won't disappoint ^^ It's definitely gonna take some time to get a broad understanding of the whole code base.
Do you have things in mind you want to hit first, development wise? or is it a case of just having time to immerse yourself and poke around everything trying to learn
@MarkR I've probably spent the most time on bugs and PRs so far, I enjoy it and I think it helps seeing and learning new things. But I also have a few RFCs that I'd like to work on.
Good stuff
23:19
What I desperately need to get better at: Going to bed at a reasonable time ^^ Sleep well!
g'nite o/
natta

« first day (4184 days earlier)      last day (992 days later) »