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16:01
@Simon "Discussion for all things PHP - You don't have to ask whether someone is here or can help. Just tell us your problem. If anybody can and wants to help, they will."
@Hiroto Why are you standing next to a woofer when djing?
we uhh, didn't have a setup, and the woofer was in front of my equipment facing the party. i had headphones on all night, but after an hour i got a headache from the bass and toned it down
after i finished i literally just plugged my laptop into my mixer's line in and stuck spotify on, and lay down
equalizing <3
Do you also produce or only mix?
interesting. open office calc tells me cell F17 (24,83) * 55 is 1365.83 while the windows calculator says it's 1365,65
i might start producing, but i'm really just practising for now.
do you access properties of the own class directly or via getter / setter?
I mean inside the class
thank you. someone answered, bt i am looking for more
1
Q: Ajax auto suggest does not show letters in sequential order.

SimonI am making a small script with javascript to find/display text from an array as I am typing. Sort of like, Google auto suggest tool. Here is Js script: <script> $(function() { var availableTags = <?php echo json_encode( $foo ); ?>; $( "#tags" ).autocomplete({ source: ava...

Guys, I wrote an article on low coupling with Symfony Standard Edition, check it out: danielribeiro.org/…
low coupling. Is that the coupling that is happening at ground level? ;)
16:15
rofl
user895378
Please don't come to the chat room to do nothing but spam and shamelessly self-promote ...
it could ne yeah
@rdlowrey not that case bro
just some article on a interesting topic that came up here few days ago
ah. its because it's not 24,83 but 24,8 periodic 3
user895378
> Have you ever heard someone say full-stack frameworks are bad because they force you to write high coupling code? Well, that’s mostly malarkey!
user895378
^ That's mostly malarkey.
16:21
@rdlowrey read the whole article and comment there
its a really interesting topic
user895378
Not to me.
well, than dont read it :)
simple as that
user895378
17 hours ago, by rdlowrey
If you don't know enough to write a usable framework yourself, you probably shouldn't be using a framework written by someone else. Of course, once you know enough to write a usable framework, you're fully aware that the popular frameworks are mostly terrible.
thats a personal opinion
based on nothing
so... =D
I would say based on experience
16:22
well, I have experience as well, and I dont think most popular frameworks, such as sf2 and zf2 are terrible
user895378
Then you don't have enough experience, IMHO.
usually, its all about architectural decisions and code design
user895378
Of which the frameworks you just mentioned do a generally poor job.
user895378
Granted, sf2 is the least egregious of the popular frameworks.
it depends on what you need
there is no big truth behind this
user895378
16:23
And you're always better off solving the problem directly if you know how to do so than using a framework.
sf2 or zf2 can be terrible for some project
and perfectf for some other
user895378
If you need a framework to write good code you aren't really a programmer.
i didnt say that at all
user895378
It's like being an architect vs. a draftsman.
i said that a framework should never decide how you structure and write your code
16:24
hey! is it okay if i ask something here ?
simple as that
sure no problem
To me that's exactly what a framework is about
user895378
^^ That.
Otherwise it would have been called a library
hmm, i dont think like that
but still its a point of view
16:25
@DaveRandom will any future version of the cv addon automatically convert closed cv-pls links into delv-pls links?
and i respect it
ah... stupid anti framework flame wars again... I'm out again
@crypticツ no
rofl
I have a website hosted on 000webhost , with MySQL databases. But i needed to access that databases from my computer's localhost. Is that possible ?
16:25
@PeeHaa but whyyyyy?
@drgomesp , please define the difference between framework and library
it depends
Not automatically. However if you do [tag:delv-pls] on a question which isn't closed yet it will do just that
imo, a library solves a specific problem
@crypticツ ^
16:26
a framework helps you to solve a larger amount of problems
user895378
@drgomesp FWIW, I'm only harassing you because you opened yourself up to it:
user895378
11 mins ago, by rdlowrey
Please don't come to the chat room to do nothing but spam and shamelessly self-promote ...
if you're not able to use frameworks to your advantage, you're probably not good enough as a developer
by your definition the library is a single file , and framework are multiple files
16:27
@markus i agree, and its exactly what i say on the article
@tereško php is flexible enough to let you decide if your library is going to be held in a single file or a large amount of files
that has nothing to do with the concept of library or framework
@markus so that guy using the DI component is a co-worker of yours?
@crypticツ if a question is really bad you can just [tag:delv-pls] the thing and it will be automatically converted from [tag:cv-pls] -> [tag:delv-pls] once the question is closed
@drgomesp so this means that your definition too has nothing to do with frameworks or libraries
try again
fooooooooooooooooooooood. brb
user895378
I don't use frameworks because all the frameworks I've encountered make coding decisions I consider to be poor. They would be a downgrade. The idea of a framework itself isn't bad. It's putting subpar code into production that's bad.
user895378
16:30
I'm not anti-framework, I'm against substandard code.
i create framework while i write the application
@rdlowrey its exactly what im trying to say the opposite
some frameworks act as a glue
and thats bad
but some are flexible enough to let you decide
^ this meant nothing
and create your own design structure
user895378
I know, it's the "Symfony Components will save us all" argument.
user895378
16:31
They won't.
no
symfony components were written to solve specific problems
I think the problem with frameworks is that there are actually people that start out saying "let's build a framework" instead of extracting the useful code from a working project to be used more generally in other projects as well. Frameworks without that kind of background have never been proven to work properly.
What do you think about Yii?
Frameworks define the limits of of the architecture , that you use for the application. They create additional order in the application by adding constraints.
16:33
@TillHelgeHelwig The latter is a library btw ;)
The most ridiculous thing are meta frameworks built to be the basis for new frameworks. :D
@user539484 it sucks
Now I'm really going to eat
user895378
So if I'm not going to use the components, and I'm not going to use the framework as glue, why the hell should I use a framework?
user895378
It seems like you're making my argument for me.
16:33
as @tereško said
aren't generic frameworks designed for faster development and 'less headaches' therefore aimed so more people can develop something without the need of understanding how to actually do programming?
@kaᵠ that's nonsense. No understanding -> no job
@rdlowrey frameworks can help you with some boring stuff, like routing, templating and wth
things that really dont matter
@user539484 generated code all over the place :\
16:34
i care about domain specific code
@kaᵠ How to do specific software architecture anyways maybe.
user895378
@drgomesp In which case, if you know how to do it yourself, you're much better served to address your problem directly.
@user539484 because it is badly written and promotes bad practices
user895378
And any sufficiently experienced programmer will have done that.
@rdlowrey again, i agree with you
what im trying to say os that you can use full-stack frameworks (not all of them) and still have decoupled and high quality code
thats a fact
user895378
16:35
I agree with you, then.
yupyup
the fact is
bbiab
bad practices may be right, the virtual attributes seems to be nice at first, but have some problems
frameworks are not perfect for every situation
i myself dont use them all the time
and you got to agree with me that we got some programmers following the new meta framework wave or no framework at all wave that are just terrible programmers who write low quality code
and the other way around as well
@user539484 php does not support virtual attributes .. i have no idea waht you are talking about
16:36
so basically, it really boils down to smart design decisions
solid principles
user895378
^ That.
ok, so you have never used Yii?
solid principles as well
and etc.
@user539484 i used it for almost a year
i did use yii
i think its a terrible glue framework
16:37
i suspect that you are talking about magic setters and getters
@tereško talking to me? i didnt get it
@drgomesp please re-read what i wrote in past 5 minutes ...
too lazy for that, but if you are talking about the constraints and architectural decisions
you are write, frameworks do that
and let you step out of that
thats up to the programmer
user895378
16:40
I don't think people realize PHP is itself a framework. It allows you to use the HTTP protocol without knowing anything about the HTTP protocol.
@rdlowrey exactly, and frameworks do the dumb job of abstracting a http layer
i dont get why
people worry to much about writting useless and complex code
that doesnt do anything oO
user895378
@drgomesp You have redeemed your initial self-promotion as far as I'm concerned ;)
rofl @rdlowrey thanks i really appreciate a good smart conversation
:)
Won't do much good overall though..because usually only people who already know are lilely to read your article. ;)
16:43
hello
user895378
@drgomesp I will now bookmark your article for reading when I have a moment, though be warned I don't use Symfony and likely never will :)
@rdlowrey smart decision, from a possibly experienced out of the curve developer
my goal is not to force people to use symfony
its just to tell them full-stack frameworks are really not that bad
at least some of them :)
user895378
> One of the greatest things about Symfony Standard Edition is that it already comes packed with Doctrine integration
@TillHelgeHelwig didnt get it, can you explain?
16:46
@rdlowrey
user895378
I hate Doctrine. Why!?!? WHY?!?? Simple DataMapper is all I have ever needed.
user895378
I don't know why people want to use Doctrine.
@rdlowrey well, doctrine is a really nice orm library
thats all
in all fairness, if you are looking for a full stack then Sf2+Doctrine is your best bet
because learning SQL is oh so hard
user895378
16:47
I guess my problem is that I also hate ORMs :)
@drgomesp In my experience well written articles about software engineering are usually promoted a lot within a certain community consisting of people who care about it and know a lot about it. And outside of this circle most people don't care and will never read an article about it...
@tereško orm is not about skipping sql
but it is
not it isnt
also it is about skipping the database architecture
user895378
16:48
ORM works really well for basic CRUD applications and prototyping. Beyond that it's a serious impediment.
@rdlowrey agreed
the thing is
in most cases, we just want that basic mapping
that doctrine gives us
in most case the mapping is anything but simple
@tereško D2 is using a DataMapper approach, so I dont see how this is skipping db architecture.
@TillHelgeHelwig and the purpose of this comment is to?
@drgomesp Pointing out that you wrote an article about a topic all your possible readers most likely know a lot about already. And people that would benefit from it will most likely not read it. Nothing more.
user895378
16:50
@drgomesp So ... I don't understand how Doctrine meshes with your premise of low coupling. If you use an ORM you're locked into it. You'd have to rewrite your entire application to get away from the ORM.
@TillHelgeHelwig thats a fact indeed. it might be useful for newcomers on the subject, though
@Gordon , that's because you wouldn't be using it in such a way. There are mostly two groups of people who are excited about ORMs : ones who make said ORMs and ones who see it as a too to avoid learning anything about SQL
@TillHelgeHelwig if i help one person at least im happy already :)
user895378
Just try to refactor your app without Doctrine. You'd have to rip out everything, guts and all.
@drgomesp I salute you for that mindset.
16:51
@rdlowrey thats a fact as well. the thing is most of the time, persistence is something we dont want to care about
like uncle bob says, the database and everything related to it is a dumb detail
what really matters is the heart, the business of your application
that code that is portable to anywhere because of the low or zero coupling it might have with any framework or library
user895378
Which is exactly why I think a simple self-made data mapper is way better than Doctrine.
and by using doctrine you chain your application directly to a database .. oh , the irony
its just the persistence layer, the detail
@drgomesp hard to achieve with a full stack though. especially when they come with some sort of Active Record for Entities or Base classes
@Gordon agreed.
16:54
@drgomesp it becomes a "detail" that all of your application depends upon. Or are you sayint that you can easily remove doctrine from your application? Have you actually tried it ?
@tereško in fact if you remove the database layer (read it as doctrine or whatever else), the application stops working
the thing is
ORM is not a "detail". It is a "crutch". If you base your entire application upon it, then you cannot remove it afterwards
what really matters inside your application is the business code
the domain part of your application
and that is really independent from the database
user895378
Yes, but the problem is Doctrine is not just some component you can switch out. If you use Doctrine for your persistence layer you're stuck with it unless you completely rewrite everything.
@rdlowrey thats a sad fact indeed
16:56
@Ocramius yep, co-owner / co-worker
but i still think even with doctrine
you can achieve some level of low coupling
or at least less coupling than the usual
i fail to see how my code would benefit from adding ORM
hmm
some benefits from using orm are:
@tereško because implementing all of POEAA by hand is tedious and prone to errors
speeding development
16:58
- slow maintenance
become abstract and portable to any db
generating boilerplate code
user895378
While I generally disagree with your conclusions, at least you're advocating the right goals (low-coupling, general SOLID architecture, etc.). And good for you for defending your position :)
- becomes tied to the specific ORM
it still helps you in a lot of senses
@rdlowrey yupyup :)
16:59
- causes boilerplate
boilerplate is often bad, but can be good as well
user895378
Usually people curl up in the fetal position once the framework battles begin ...
ORMs have two usecases: prototyping and mayfly projects
@tereško what type of posts do we use a rv-pls on?
My problem with ORMs always was that I spent a lot of time optimizing SQL statements and reducing the number of queries in an application in general. When using an ORM you have no control over that stuff anymore. Takes quite a while to realize that you don't really need to have control over that.
17:01
i think you do need to have control over that
@TillHelgeHelwig you are in the second first stage : denial
and i agree that an orm library is bad in that sense
Not over the basic CRUD stuff. Over everything more complex..definitely.
bad the in most common cases we dont need to
exatcly
I prefer working on an abstract layer where I just have objects and seldomly need to worry about persistence.
17:04
@crypticツ answers you think contain harmful advice
Same goes for other low-level stuff. At some point you just want to focus on the actual work that has to be done...like...business logic.
@TillHelgeHelwig me too
@TillHelgeHelwig exactly my point! we need to worry more about what really matters
user895378
I get embroiled in these debates from time to time but I think everything pretty much always boils down to a case-by-case decision. What's right for this project? What are my needs? Etc.
and stop worrying about the details
17:04
the web, the database
my sushi delivery is here
@rdlowrey exactly
@tereško enjoy man =D
user895378
For example, people lose their minds if you suggest using a goto statement. However, I have encountered at least one case where not using it would have been the height of stupidity ... it was that much faster than any other method for accomplishing the same task in an application where performance was critical.
same goes for traits
but they have their use cases like everything else
people say traits are bad and are the contract for workarounds
user895378
Programming boils down to problem solving. You should always solve the problem in the most appropriate way possible for the given scenario while taking into account future maintainability and stability and your own skill level.
17:07
right perfect
@rdlowrey Being a software engineer means that you know how to select the right tools to solve a problem. Exactly. Frameworks are part of that toolbox, but not the holy grail that solves everything. :) I think we can agree on that.
user895378
Yay! PHP chat has reached a happy place where everyone agrees!
rofl thats a rare moment
let me take a printscreen
@drgomesp @rdlowrey Just don't forget that most people are not able to find the most appropriate way to solve a given scenario
user895378
@drgomesp lol no joke.
17:09
no joke =D
@NikiC the most appropriate way to solve a problem is really difficult to find
some people just find some better way to
That's why we have those rules of thumb. That eval is evil, that goto is bad and that traits are crap. Because mostly it is true
but not the most ideal way
agreed
but that does not mean they dont have use cases
and are the most ideal solutions for them
@NikiC That's a problem very common with most scripting languages, because they invite a lot of people to try and write applications themselves. Once that kind of succeeds they consider themselves programmers. ;)
user895378
^ Only because they don't know any better.
well if they are solving problems
17:10
@NikiC plus there is no most accurate way way of solving any given problem because everything around the problem is in constant change
even if they dont do it the proper way
i consider them as programmers
@drgomesp Nigh everything has some tiny little use. Still it is best to advocate not using them at all, if the only valid uses are small and in between
agreed
@drgomesp Well...do you consider a carpenter to be a carpenter even if he keeps hitting nails with the flat side of the hammer?
well, thats a good point of argument
17:11
(Just to reuse a metaphor from a well-known blog entry. ;))
if he does the job, still...
True software engineering needs to find a balance between quantity and quality.
Quantitiy ("problem solved") alone doesn't do much good.
agreed
"doing the job" and "doing the job right" can be very different
@TillHelgeHelwig He may be a strange carpenter, but if he gets the work done in as much time as other carpeters (and with the same quality) he may not even be a bad carpenter.
17:13
But the result is the same.
@TillHelgeHelwig just that we're not talking about hitting nails with the flat side of the hammer but about maybe not hitting the nail exactly with the center of the hammer surface or maybe about having a hammer that has a hammering surface that is 0.02mm larger than the optimal hammer
except right is an abstract and contextual concept
@markus good point
@drgomesp yup.
@Jasper Comparing a hammer with software development tools is maybe a little far-fetched. ;)
each one in their context
17:15
I know a lot of people who are self-thought programmers and are doing a much better job than some others who studied computer science... there are really many ways to rome also in this case... a degree doesn't guarantee anything
@markus It's not like computer science has anything to do with software engineering... or at least very little
@NikiC also a good point
I'm currently in the "lucky" position to have to maintain a 10 years old CFML application. It definitely does the job it's meant to do...somehow. But implementing something new or tracking down a weird behaviour is a matter of days or even weeks...because they just did everything wrong regarding to software architecture and even down to little things like code formatting etc. So that what I meant with quality vs. quantity.
@TillHelgeHelwig The metaphor was one of the worst parts of the blog post and showed very well what the problem with the whole post was...
17:16
@TillHelgeHelwig for a moment there i confused CFML with SFML ROFL
@Jasper what metaphor?
@drgomesp I frequently get confused over CFML...seems to be an innate trait of the "language".
@drgomesp If you click on the arrow to the left of my post, you'll see that I was responding to this:
6 mins ago, by Till Helge Helwig
(Just to reuse a metaphor from a well-known blog entry. ;))
ah right
how do you answer directly
?
without having to click is it possible?
@NikiC true, what I meant was any degree in the area
@drgomesp I click myself. Don't know if it is possible without doing so.
17:19
@Jasper right
@rdlowrey turns out the post sharing generate some great discussion huh :)
generated*
I'm not saying the average skill with degree is not higher than the average skill without degree!
degrees are important
Depends on the degree and where you got it. Over here there are universities and "schools" to get an academic degree...the former usually don't care at all about software engineering but only about the science part, while you get quite a lot of practical experience in the latter.
But overall software engineering is all about experience. Theory is a part of it but only actually USING the stuff will get you anywhere.
@TillHelgeHelwig as is true with any craft and that's why a unlearned carpenter can excel too while a learned one doesn't
@markus The difference is that theoretical education is not that common in carpentry, but it is in computer science. You can't become a carpenter without actually getting hands-on experience. But you can get a degree in computer science without ever writing a single line of code.
@TillHelgeHelwig yep
Anonymous
17:37
What is recursive function?
@PHPNooB Did you mean recursion
Section 1.1: Recursion (see Section 1.1)
that is really just x: goto x, but easier to read
@PHPNooB a function that calls itself
The biggest itch I see but often can't scratch is when developers start something from scratch and don't keep to the same code layout. I don't really care what Style guide a given project uses (if any...), but when I see people use mixedCase, CamelCase, mixedCase_with_underscores and lower_with_underscores all inside the same method, I wonder if they do it on purpose.
it's a conspiracy to annoy those with OCD, i swear
Proper tool support takes care of that. But many people don't care about a proper infrastructure when kicking off a project.
No code style checks, no unit-tests and usually no CI anyway.
17:44
many don't even blueprint how something will work and then spaghetti code it
and then don't refactor
D:
this site is going to kill me.
(hadonejob)
Anonymous
@Gordon no, I meant reclusive function.
@Gordon so how much do you think you will be elected?

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