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yc
yc
01:45
hi, is anyone interested in helping me with a very small xml/array parsing issue?
sure
go ahea
ahead
hey, yc, are you there?
crickets chirping
que?
nobody wants my help :(
oh well
well, bye
 
5 hours later…
06:29
anybody ?
 
2 hours later…
08:47
anyone there ?
what's wrong with below line $add_stuff = ' <b><a href="mailto:' . get_comment_email(); . '">umar</a></b>';
 
4 hours later…
12:21
Blah
 
1 hour later…
13:28
Yep
lol @GS_Guy and the syntax error.
yah, gotta love quotes
hehehe
sux though, simple question but nobody here to answer at the time
13:30
gotta love simple errors that are hard to spot (well, not hard once you get some experience)
yea, that's the kind of problem which could easily drive someone crazy
We all had that problem a few hundred times though.
haha, yea, and sometimes still encounter them today :)
Yup...
My favorite is the $var == 'foo' instead of assignment...
haha, or worse the if $var = 'foo'
13:33
After I switched to Ruby then back to PHP, I kept forgetting semicolons.
That one cost me an hour of debug time at one point (since I kept glossing over that line)
yea, ruby really spoiled me too
Eih, I like the semi-colons. I prefer them to needing to escape new lines
(as in Go or JS)
but that's JMHO
yea, I like them too sometimes
Time for an argument. haha
13:34
but sometimes they get in the way. I mean how many extra keypresses is that over the course of a day :)
@ga
@GabrielEvans: no, no argument :)
I don't think an argument is necessary... Everyone has their preferences (and that's fine). There's no one right way. If there was, we'd all be using that way now...
(sorry, hit enter too early)
We all have our preferred styles, and so long as we're not working on the same project together it doesn't matter who uses what
Just jokes. :P That's the nice thing about programming. We have a limitless number of options.
Yup...
13:36
which is both good and bad, sometimes
Part of me loves Python, but I really don't like the lack of control blocks {}... I get around it fine, but I always feel something's missing
Like when your job has their own conventions you don't entirely agree with.
That's quite true
yea, that can be annoying. Or if a coworker applies his preference to the whole codebase
but for the most part, as long as you stick to a convention, it really doesn't matter which (since once you're used to it, there's little hit on readability with most sane conventions)
13:38
We have a CodeSniffer ruleset that nobody follows, for example.
yea, it's hard to switch conventions from what you're used to
but the problem comes in with inconsistent conventions or just plain stupid conventions (for example, I saw a project that required all conditional includes to use include. But most of the time the proper semantic include would be require_once. So we either needed to do a lot of extra error checking, or violated the convention)
+1 for autoloading.
haha, sounds like a convention designed by management rather than coders
It's a bitter sweet moment when the management also codes.
13:40
Well, sorta. It was designed by a coder with very little real-world experience...
(who was deemed by management to be the "Lead Dev")
ah, even more dangerous
haha
He's still with the company, but no longer in that position (no longer managing anyone or anything)
so I assume the project has now reworked its conventions?
You can talk to them about your design and they won't stare at you wide-eyed and say, "Sounds good. How much will it cost?" but they'll have their own, usually wrong, opinion.
But thanks to our giant codebase (including installs of each app), we decided it was best not to switch for current projects...
13:42
ouch
what kind of project is it?
it's not THAT big, the 3 main apps are only around 40k to 80k lines each. But we have literally 500 to 2000 installs of each app
They are data presentation applications. Research is done, results are entered, and the apps display the results and other information to clients
ook, I guess I can see why it would be kind of hard to change part way through then
yeah. The apps themselves aren't bad (would take a day or two to port a new style to), but then we'd need to port that to each install, and test each install to make sure we didn't break anything (we have a mandated manual QC for every install we touch)
wow, yea, not very practical then
Yup, but we agreed that when we rewrite the 3 into one main app (they are quite similar) in the coming months, we're going to switch conventions then...
13:46
nice, at least the rest of the programmers (besides the original convention creator) agree
He even agrees. I think he just didn't think when he made the original. When we presented the new convention and the rationale for it, he agreed 100%...
I remember at my last job, I asked, "Are you guys unit testing?" in the interview and the lead developer's response was, "What's that?"
nice...
yea, sadly we don't do much unit testing where I work either, but it's because the codebase is in such constant flux it would drive us all mad
I interviewed for a dev firm a few years ago. I asked what their testing practice was, and they replied "we have a full QC process in place". I asked what was included in that, and they replied "we have a full team of personnel who visit the websites".
After the interview, I went on their own website, and found like 5 major bugs... I turned it down...
13:49
haha
I soon discovered there was no version control either and all of our coding would take place over FTP to the datacenter next door.
@William: I can understand that, but surely there's a stable core at least?
LOL
QC is a buzzword which usually means 'we poke it with a stick'
That job didn't last very long.
yea, there are some core tests in place
13:50
New game: Count the number of WTFs in @GabrielEvans's post...
Did I break a record?
Well, I count at least 3...
Let's keep it going then.
haha, we need at least 10 before it is record-worthy
13:54
It would be truly epic if you could get more WTFs than words in the sentence...
I tried to copy everything to my workstation to do my development locally and within a minute my connection was killed by the sysadmin who thought I was hacking them.
...4
Actually, I'm on the fence about that one.
it depends...are you in the same department as the sysadmin?
13:55
He was in the room next door.
Sure, it's a WTF that the sys admin would kill your connection when trying to copy. But on the other hand, at least he's actively monitoring his systems (unless that's ALL he did that is)
actually, yea @ircmaxell, good point
I redact my point @GabrielEvans, sorry
Especially considering that he killed it within a minute
which means one of two things: He was watching the FTP connection monitor when he logged in, or he gets a notification when someone logs in
Monitoring it.
Did he do that often?
13:57
I guess that wasn't very bad. lol
It's just that he was incredibly paranoid but nothing else was ever really maintained.
It depends
now if he had watched as someone else SSH'd in, grabbed the code, sed replace letters with other random letters, then renamed all the files, that would be a different story
ROTFL
Well, time for a meeting. Be back in a bit
good luck, don't fall asleep
What's funny is that, in my first week, I found a bit of code in the core of their CMS that was sending logs over Jabber to someone they'd fired years ago.
See ya @ircmaxell
13:59
haha, yay for expiring accounts
Not really logs. More or less, passwords.
even more dangerous :)
firing a sysadmin is dangerous
it's like getting rid of the lead animal trainer for a circus
lol, this was a developer. And what was entertaining is that this was in the first 15 lines of their index.php. And in years, no one had noticed it.
haha
wonderful backdoors
And of course, since there was no version control, you couldn't just svn blame it.
14:02
was it a major leak? Or just a legacy system slowly dieing out
This was being used on about 500 client websites.
ah, so major
man, I am glad I don't code for clients
Also used on their shopping cart systems.
wow, that sucks! And worse, you couldn't directly prove it was him, I guess
I stopped coding for clients after that.
No way to prove it when you don't have logs from that far back, version control to see who added the code, and it's going to an outside source that he could easily proxy to.
14:05
yea, I work in a university doing coding work/server maintenance, and although the demands are a little wonky (based around faculty rather than students), we don't license out our stuff so code can always be changed if need be
speaking of which...I should probably get back to work
nice chatting, talk to ya later
14:57
That was interesting...
The meeting?
yeah... a Q3 business review...
Any fun?
Eih
Mostly financial and business planning info
So no, not my definition of fun
You can always take advantage of those meetings and turn them into a good nap.
15:02
not really. In a room with 6 people, it's easy to notice someone napping...
And I love it, the new business manager (think CEO, but not really) wants to outsource everything... The email system, website development, and a bunch of other things... Keep in mind, in the company we have 1 dedicated sysadmin, and 2 sysadmins that are also developers (we have 3 offices around the world)
We've been running email in-house for the past 5 years, averaging 99.99% uptime. He wants to integrate the systems, so he's trying to use it as an excuse to outsource it (rather than re-implement the current system centrally)
I could see having hosted email, but anything else sounds silly.
I did a cost breakdown.
over a 5 year period, it's $250,000 more expensive to outsource Exchange than host it internally...
Not to mention that we should be able to have better uptime than the outsourcing provider (with 3 way geographic replication, vs the provider's single datacenter)
Not to mention the SLA from their provider is CRAP (7 hours downtime per month - 99% uptime is 3% off the months bill)
Makes sense. So he wants to outsource it but does that mean that they're going to?
I could understand if we didn't have trained Exchange administrators on staff already. But we have 3
That's my fight now. I'm pushing to do it in house (it makes sense for several reasons, including more than I posted above). He wants to outsource. It's ultimately his decision, but I'm stacking the deck against it
But whatever... In due time it will all be sorted out
15:51
/me wants to experiment with one or two of these: engadget.com/2010/10/28/…
But I'm not wasting my own money on it...
Pretty sweet.
Imagine running a MySQL DB on top of that...
man that would sing...
Perhaps my next server build I may be able to find room in my budget for that ;-)
It's gotta be cheaper than a SAN drive array ($8k just for the controller... Another $5k in drives)
"For the 960GB version you'd probably have to sell your second-born too."
A quick google shows $3300 for the 960gb
so price per gb is really high...
But it's still cheaper than a raid 10 array if you have performance needs
Still expensive lol
15:59
(the same array in SAS would be about $3k in drives alone, yet alone the controller)
absolutely. But not outside of reason in the server market...
I can't help but fantasize how nice that would be on a desktop.
Hrm, I wonder if you could do a RAID 1 between the PCIe SSD and a 3 drive SAS array... That way you get the high MTBF of the SAS drives, and the high throughput of the PCIe drive (at least for reads)
Oh god, that would be fun... But I wouldn't use 95% of the bandwidth...
lol probably not
And I'm not dropping $3k to find out :-P
But if you want to find out, you can buy me one and I'll be happy to report back! ;-)
Sounds like a win-win, huh?
16:06
If only it was that easy...
Am I in the minority in my distaste for short-style tags? <? foo and <?=$bar?>? I can't stand either of them...
I'm in agreement.
ASP tags are wayyyy better <% %>
ROTFL
I tell ya, sometimes I wish PHP supported some form of preprocessor macros... Man the power you could do with something like that...
(and also the horrible WTFs, which is why I only wish it sometimes)...
What kind of macros?
Are you familiar with C macros?
Nope. Desktop development is still on my list of things to learn.
16:12
Basically it's a second level programming langauge
it lets you do simple modifications prior to the actual compiling of the code
lol I just Googled that page.
so you could do:

#ifdef IS_WINDOWS:
exec('dir');
#elseif IS_LINUX:
exec('ls -l');
#else:
exec('foobar');
#fi
But it can do much more... Things like modifying the language itself...
Sounds like fun.
So you could implement operator overloading...

$foo = $a + $b;

Could become dependent upon the types of `$a` and `$b`, etc...
did markdown stop working?
Looks like it.
16:19
eih, whatever...
16:31
hey, has anyone ever set up smtp mail (specifically Zend_Mail) with mediatemple? i keep getting back <>: missing or malformed local part
Not with Zend or MediaTemple, but I have setup SMTP quite often...
what backend does Zend_Mail use (if you know)? is it opening raw sockets? Or is it using some other library?
i think <> means my setup is wrong but i'm not 100%
it's a syntax error from the SMTP server
works fine if i use my google mail smtp, just not these ones from mediatemple
Hrm...
The best thing would be to see what Zend is sending over to the SMTP server (the network traffic)
16:38
maybe i'll just ditch the smtp and stick with the standard mail
it's friday
lol
it's using raw sockets...
what does tht mean?
Ok, try this...
somewhat annoying because i am getting an email telling me an email didn't send
edit the /zend/mail/transport/smtp.php file, and change the line const DEBUG = false; to true
16:40
(the error is using standard)
is this in production?
nah
oh ok... so enable debug, and then try sending an email. It should print out all the SMTP traffic in the form of:
S: Data Sent
R: Data Received
cool one min
Well, looks like markdown is working again
16:53
Does Markdown show up in the starred chats area?
I have no idea...
I can't edit the one that I have in there, so dunno. But it would make snese...
17:15
...you'd think a school would be able to keep track of their students' gender in their files.
Well, that depends. Most schools have students writing their software for them (after all, free or cheap is better than having a professional team do it, right?)...
Ah, if that were true the system would be written by me.
Well, in my experience it is. A professor is responsible for design and management, and they recruit students to work on it either for credit or really cheap (typically minimum wage)...
<- high school
Ahhh
even worse... They are typically managed by the lowest bidder...
17:18
My school district is frightened by anything open source but complains they don't have the funding.
And that's definitely true.
Rule #1: Don't post something on the internet unless you don't care who reads it...
Unless it's 4chan.
You just broke rules 1 and 2...
No, I didn't. That's only if you speak of the board that shall not be named.
18:00
ahh
lol
18:10
I win. :P
I really prefer the "Teach a man to fish" method of answering questions on SO...
(well in general, but especially here)...
Hm...needs modernization for the Internet.
Give a noob the answer; you have answered his question for today. Teach a noob to Google; and you have answered his questions for a lifetime.
or something like that
Fix a bug, and that's all you did. Teach how to debug, and you fixed them all...
18:16
We need a collection of programmer quotes. lol
...other than bash.org.
bash.org is mostly a collection of troll smackdowns
532
Q: Great programming quotes

epatelThere are a lot of great programming quotes out there. Which do you like? Today (Sept 12, 2008) I heard a new one from a friend, Lars-Gunnar, he said "Gud finns i Emacs" (in Swedish). This basically means "God is in Emacs". Still laughing about it here :) What he meant was that a function "gud i...

Starred.
It's closed, but it's still great...
> Always code as if the guy who ends up maintaining your code will be a violent psychopath who knows where you live.
> Linux is only free if your time has no value.
> It should be noted that no ethically-trained software engineer would ever consent to write a DestroyBaghdad procedure. Basic professional ethics would instead require him to write a DestroyCity procedure, to which Baghdad could be given as a parameter.
18:22
Unless naming conventions prevent camelCasing in which case it would be destroy_city.
quite fair
and more likely it would accept an iPlace object, of which Baghdad is an instance of...
> Python is executable pseudocode. Perl is executable line noise.
This made me laugh...:

C You shoot yourself in the foot.

C++ You accidently create a dozen instances of yourself and shoot them all in the foot. Providing emergency medical assistance is impossible since you can't tell which are bitwise copies and which are just pointing at others and saying "That's me, over there."
Speaking of which. If I were to learn a compiled language, would you have any recommendations?
searches SO for a dozen questions asking this
For what use?
Jon
Jon
I had a question on confirmation emails in PHP.
What's the q @Jon?
Jon
Jon
18:31
I'm wondering how to get started with that. Is there a quick tutorial somewhere? Googling didn't help.
What did you try googling?
Jon
Jon
Perhaps I used the wrong search keywords...."confirmation email php"
@Jon are you wondering the process of sending a confirmation email or how to send email at all?
Well, what's special about a confirmation email? What are you trying to confirm? Registration I assume... A quick google for "PHP registration confirmation email" yields: dmxzone.com/go?6497
unless that's not what you're looking for...
Jon
Jon
Well, my app is something like this. User A chooses a timing for a meeting with User B. User B should get an email with a link to confirm the timing. Once User B does that, User A should get an email confirming his choice.
18:36
It's the same concept as a registration email... The only real difference is the action taken upon confirmation...
But the premise is the same...
Jon
Jon
@ircmaxell: I'll try looking up the free link you gave me. Thanks a lot!
No problem...
Jon
Jon
11.1k is amazing!
Not to sound conceded or anything, but two reasons. One I think it's important to help "teach" the new generations of developers so they hopefully be better than we are. Two, the best way to learn (and hence better yourself) is to teach...
ROTFL:

> If Java had true garbage collection, most programs would delete themselves upon execution.
Aw, looks like Markdown isn't working again.
Jon
Jon
18:42
@ircmaxell: Great! You are an excellent example for new developers like me. I too wish to spread the culture of teaching and helping.
++
Oh, my new favorite:

> Better to train people and risk they leave – than do nothing and risk they stay.
Jon
Jon
lol
Go Microsoft!: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms859728.aspx [in] Must be zero, or equal to **MAPI_UNICODE**. In either case, however, this parameter is ignored.
That would be a great job, writing documentation.
if you say so...
Quite true (from experience that is): There are two ways to write error-free programs; only the third one works.
Alright, new code-golf problem of the day:

Create a PHP program that will output the same results if the top half of the code is switched with the bottom half.

Trivial Example:

<?php
echo "Hello World\n"; //Bottom Half
?>
<?php
echo "Hello World\n"; //Top Half
?>

Becomes:


<?php
echo "Hello World\n"; //Top Half
?>
<?php
echo "Hello World\n"; //Bottom Half
?>
19:13
Or one quote I would add to that if I could: My job is not to write code, it's to solve problems. So if you don't understand the problem, how can you expect me to solve it?
 
2 hours later…
21:23
<?php if(checkStatus($show["bID"]) == 1){
echo "asdhaha";
}
?>
function checkStatus($userid){
$timeoutIdle = 300; // 5 min
$timeoutOffline = 500; // 8 min
$row = mysql_query("select last_access from users where id='$userid'");
$read = mysql_fetch_array($row);
$last_access = $read["last_access"];
$thetime = time();
if($thetime - $last_access > $timeoutOffline) {
return 3;
}elseif($thetime - $last_access > $timeoutIdle) {
return 2;
}else{
echo 1;
}
}
Why wont this work ?
instead of "asdhaha" output i get "1"
 
2 hours later…
23:07
@Johnson because on the line it says, "echo 1;" try replacing it with "return 1;"

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