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00:00
yeah, sure, just wanted to make emphasis on that complexity
out of curiosity
run phploc on it, and see what the average cyclomatic complexity / method is
@Neo what about little refactoring?
btw: cheers :)
Neo
Neo
well I havent done refactoring on the majority
@Neo I'd start with db abstraction/orm, you won't need to rewrite all of your queries next time
Neo
Neo
@Kamil what do you mean?
00:06
for example orm means no sql, no sql means no need to rewrite all of queries because of possible security flaws - you'll just fix that orm...
Neo
Neo
but its not as efficient as mysql, I got 60,000 users with million of rows in a table
@Neo so now you have fast, but vulnerable app :)
Neo
Neo
@Kamil well every app is vulnerable
I'm still in development anyway it's not in production
00:12
for social attacks? possibly, yes...
Neo
Neo
the site is gonna replace an existing platform
with 60,000 useras and etc...
so does Stored procedures counta s orm?
uh shit, I feel like I know nothing again
Im actually pretty certain about it lol
forget about performance, and forget about orm
put some structure in the app if you can, and push all db interaction down to one layer
Woot, found a pair of vulnerabilities in a popular CMS
Neo
Neo
00:29
which CMS?
@ircmaxell
Drupal
both are minor, but they do exist
 
5 hours later…
05:27
hi all
 
1 hour later…
06:52
!$expired || ($expired && $status==3)

Anyone knows how to simplify that expression (if at all possible)?
replace magic number with constant or constant method
you cannot ( and it should be === )
move conditional into method
or introduce a state pattern
Hi all!
somehow the new Eclipse Color Theme plugin broke my Zend Studio. Had to revert to an early version and re-update without it. Weird. Why should that plugin even touch Zend Debugger?!
07:00
can anybody tell me regular expression so that in a text box only a OR p can be entered, only one character should be entered at a time?
Uhm, morning @Gordon, @teresko. @Gordon - I was merely pointing out it was a number, so I used that instead of a constant, but there's a valid constant for that.
@ChristianSciberras: !$expired || $status==3
@teresko - Why exactly would I need that?
it is simplified and does exactly the same things
@ChristianSciberras then use that constant. using the number is unreadable
07:03
@Gordon - It's already inside its own method.
@ChristianSciberras then you dont need to simplify further
the only other thing would be to introduce a state pattern instead
@Gordon - I was talking more about what @zerkms just did.
@zerkms Thanks.
code also bears the question whether expired should be a status
@Gordon - No, expired is calculated.
But it is still some sort of "state/status"
07:07
even if its calculated, it can be the result for a new $status
$expired = $this->is_expired(); -> return $this->creation > strtotime(Util::EXPIRATION);
it really depends on what status implies here
Status, on the other hand is a specific value.
active, declined, pending
That's their current criteria
imo expired pretty much fits into that series semantically
I still can't see how I would change the value of status without a cron job
07:09
the same as you do now.
Right now the admin changes the value himself.
no, right now you calculate it
Ah, I make status into a method and "calculate" itself.
Well, yeah, not impossible :P
nvm
well, i dont know the requirement or the control flow. all im saying is that expired fits well semantically into active, declined, pending and that you could maybe add its as a fourth state instead of keeping it a separate thing.
now that I think about it, I still need the status while expired.
But as you said, it's a design issue.
07:13
then you cant add it as a fourth state
not without heavy refactoring, i'm assuming.
LIKE '%{$searchTermDB}%' in this query why we use {} around variable.Any body plz explain
@Gordon - I'll be doing a small course this summer to teach PHP basics to some uni students :3. I was wondering if you could advise which design patterns I should focus on?
@Unique_Key yeah, he could introduce a state pattern or some other form of polymorphism
@ChristianSciberras the usual :)
(A good 4 hours of the "lecture" will be on design patterns)
@Gordon sigh
07:15
on the plus side, that would make the system easier to expand, like for adding new statuses (and hi @Gordon @ChristianSciberras)
might even be worth the extra hassle.
Ah, hello @UniqueKey, didn't see you come in! :P
back from a small vacation, too :3
i needed to plug off my mind, heh
if its a four hour lecture, i'd skip the patterns and just setup a beamer and show them the four clean code talks
projector @ChristianSciberras
07:18
@UniqueKey - XD good one
@Gordon where'd you get that one? :P
Anyhow, @Gordon, makes sense to mention, even show those vids later on, but I still think they have to learn about this.
Sadly, the UoM doesn't teach design patterns to students :(
(university of Malta)
Come to think of it, they don't teach anything practical except some old-school C and C# (M$ ;)
C# is a good topic to teach, it's in high demand
C, however... eh. it's like teaching antipatterns before teaching patterns, at least from an OOP standpoint.
1 	2 		Java 	18.580% 	+0.62% 	  A
2 	1 		C 	16.278% 	-1.91% 	  A
3 	3 		C++ 	9.830% 	-0.55% 	  A
4 	6 		C# 	6.844% 	+2.06% 	  A
5 	4 		PHP 	6.602% 	-2.47% 	  A
bleh, site croaks without JS :P talk about sticking to standards.
:)
how do you use the chat w\o JS enabled?
@Gordon noscript. can't live without it
oh, for chrissakes
why is ADA demand on the rise?
07:25
And no Delphi :(
well, never mind that. with a 0.606% share even small changes would cause a big shift
it only is 0.17% more in demand compared to last year but given the low overall demand that is four green arrows. look at RPG for the same effect.
@ChristianSciberras delphi is pretty much a dinosaur, though
HAH
@UniqueKey And? Compared to the other runtimes, its lean&mean
logo is in position 21 XD
07:27
Think JRE and .NET
@Unique_Key sigh
@ChristianSciberras possibly, but it's all but been replaced by "leaner&meaner" languages
i don't think it's even maintained anymore, correct me if i'm wrong. that would pretty much kill any language.
Delphi, good ol' VB on steroids :D
Uhm, you're wrong there :P
thanks for rectifying that, then
Embercadero now maintains Delphi.
There's also the open-source Lazarus.
i like how you hear everywhere that Scala is the next Java and then it only ranks at 48. I mean, it sure looks nice but its a classic Dont believe the hype.
07:29
It's Delphi7-style, but cross-platform.
Scala? Who's Scala? XD
Same for the oh-so-superior-and-pristine ruby
So, why would you name a function getStatus() instead of status() (let's assume they do both the same thing)?
because status isnt a verb
however, assuming the method is public, the real question should be, why should your object have a method to expose internals like that
read-only access to the current status
$user->status() instead of $user->status
07:36
status() doesnt tell me what the method does
What if I wanted to merge getStatus and setStatus to have status($new=null)=>$old? Still doesn't change the fact that it's not visually understandable.
Even makes it harder to understand at first glance.
At this point, it might be a question of how much you want to depend on documentation.
making that method set and get at the same time is a violation of command query segregation
and even if you expose it for read access only, the question remains: why is it exposed in the first place. some object apparently queries your object for that status and then decides what to do. in other words: that object needs to know about internals of that other object. chances are you got misplaced responsibilites here.
“Always code as if the guy who ends up maintaining your code will be a violent psychopath who knows where you live” – M. Golding

I'll take this guy's words for it
:D
@Gordon - But in some cases, that simply can't be avoided, no?
of course it can. use an interface
I mean, if the frontend template (for example) needs to know the current status of a user, you can't help it, no?
07:43
and not one that has getters in it
why cant your user tell your template about the status instead of the template querying the user?
Because the template's course of action my change, and it doesn't make sense to list each possible dependency, no?
If I get you correctly, it's similar in how Joomla expects you to define what variables get passed to the view. The view is expected to use the said variables only.
(I mentioned Joomla since it's the only system I've used that heavily depended on this practice, and which came to my mind instantly)
class User {
    protected $status = 'banned';
    public function renderWithTemplate(Template $template) {
        $template->setFields(array(
            'status' => $this->status
        ));
    }
}
Must admit I can't say I like the practice.
@Gordon That's my point, does it really make sense to make each possible object do this same thing, and restricting access to all variables except a specific set?
What features do I get out of this?
decoupling
high cohesion
maintainable code
ah, gordon teaching DI again :)
07:49
Hmm, well, you must admit it requires considerable more changes to the core whenever the template changes slightly.
@ChristianSciberras how so? how do I have to change User? Or anything else? If the Template changes, I have to change the template code. Nothing else.
What if I "forgot" to pass $user->name to the template and I've abruptly decided to need it?
You'll have to change $user to pass the variable, as well as template to do the actual change.
Granted, in such a case, the guy in question might not be that competent anyway.
Well, ok, I give up on that point. :P
My last point would be the code required to build this, I don't think it's worth the hassle for small systems, correct?
Hmm, then again, this point depends on the underlying templating system.
class Template
{
    protected $fieldData;
    protected $template;
    public function render()
    {
        $content = file_get_contents($this->template);
        foreach ($this->fieldData as $templateKey => $replacement) {
            $content = str_replace("|||$templateKey|||", $replacement, $content);
        }
        return $content;
    }
}
Yeah, that can't work with joomla/wordpress (for example), but I get your points.
wordpress is the most horrible codebase ever
07:56
Nah, it seconds joomla.
But everything's so.....raw in wordpress.
@Gordon - What would you suggest as a good codebase I could learn from? Bonus points if it uses different patterns at the same time.
@nikic its rather "tell dont ask". Ask @KamilTomšík about it when he gets back, but dont let him drift to functional programming or Smalltalk ;)
@ChristianSciberras i never looked at it but symfony is supposed to be good
Just to be on the safe side, anything you actually looked at? It doesn't have to be popular you know :)
nope
Maybe @teresko has some ideas? :)
Well, I'll just wait for my book to get through then.
which one?
08:11
can anybody tell me regular expression so that in a text box only a OR p can be entered, only one character should be entered at a time?
@ChristianSciberras Any code from Fabien Potencier. I never looked into Symfony, but it's supposed to be good. But I know the Twig codebase and it's definitely good ;)
@Gordon clean code
@ChristianSciberras clean code? by robert martin? you're gonna hate it. It's full of advise like "dont put superfluous comments into your code" and "use explicit method names", etc . a lot of what im telling is from that book
@Adnan if ('a' === $text || 'b' === $text) { ... } ?
@nikic - I don't know why, maybe it's just my over-judgement, but I don't seem to have a good opinion of symfony. That said, I'll definitely check it out whenever I get some time.
@Gordon - Well yeah, but you know, when you want to break someone's argument, you'd better know each of his argument's corners hehe ;)
On a more serious note, I do believe I'll be able to see code in a different light. You don't have to be fascist to know what Mein Kampf is about :)
08:17
ding! godwin's law
Uhuh! Nooooo!
never fails once.
it's also good to see code differently, might provide some enlightening insight on what you think you could do better.
@UniqueKey The thing is, when you code for a specific company, even if for different projects, you end up writing things in the same style. The only thing that changes this is either changing jobs or motivation in doing extra things.
Such as working on some open source project.
Or getting repeatedly beaten around by some expert guys ;) (lol, not really)
Still looking for an answer to this:
3
Q: Catching errors thrown by token_get_all (Tokenizer)

nikicPHPs token_get_all function (which allows converting a PHP source code into tokens) can throw two errors: One if an unterminated multiline comment is encountered, the other if an unexpected char is found. I would like to catch those errors and throw them as Exceptions. Problem is: As those erro...

@nikic - You lost me at @$errorGetLastReset...
What's it for?
Oh, I see.
How about using $php_errormsg?
08:27
not enabled by default ;)
yep, I already thought about that but then found out that one needs to enable track_errors for that
So, if I understand your code, you're "resetting" last error to an error you know well, namely undefined variable error.
yes
Well, I've had a scenario similar to this one.
Basically, my framework loads a set of extensions (during booting stage). In order to detect issues, at the beginning, there's a register_shutdown_function which compares a variable prior to loading and after loading, if the pair doesn't match, it means boot died somewhere, at which point we spit out error_get_last() to the logging mechanism.
In general, it's reliable.
08:32
and you can't use an error handler for that either?
ah
okay, get it now
I'm using the error handler to log issues as well
But this one works for parser errors in "extensions" which are PHP files.
yep
Something in my mind is telling me there was a function to syntax-check PHP code.
not really ;)
there is php_check_syntax()
Actually, I did implement this even. Now I remember.
I did this via ajax.
So that my actual script didn't fault.
08:35
but php_check_syntax is deprecated and it executes the file it is passed :(
ah, nice idea too
but not really an option for me
You can poll your own server, no?
maybe with a special parameter to avoid outside access.
I can't execute the scripts and I need the whole thing to be crazy fast ;)
don't execute the script
@ChristianSciberras i've got a WP question for you.
08:37
ah, you mean that I call token_get_all in a sperate request?
`` php -r /check.php -- badscript.php ``
check.php contains the actual code you have on the SO question, but with less error checks.
hm
not really usable
a) I need the token_get_all output, so I would need to serialize that and unserialize it again
It's crazy fast (local).
But you can't get the tokens if its faulty.
b) As I already said, I need it to be crazy fast, not just fast :D
lol
@UniqueKey - Shoot :)
08:39
@ChristianSciberras slow dash.
"5.0.3 Calling exit() after php_check_syntax() resulted in a Segfault. "
LOL
@UniqueKey - What?
the dashboard is slow, is that fixable?
Oh. It's a load of AJAX.
@ChristianSciberras Well, I parse PHP files and that already is slow by itself (on a large codebase). And if I add yet further latency caused by calling another script the time's going to be doubled probably
Is it slow as in page load, or the widgets are slow?
@nikic - Then don't do the check each time.
08:42
page load
@nikic Validate just once, keep note of file hash or something and next time just check hash.
@UniqueKey - Bad sign :)
Try disabling all plugins and try again.
Are the other pages ok?
If you're doing this on a local network, I have a hunch it might be timing out trying to get something from outside.
yep, everything else seems to work properly
yeah, that's one of my main problems. i've been trying to disable any and all external communications
@ChristianSciberras I think I'll stick with the hacky version. I think that adding a command line call will a) make the code bigger, not smaller and b) kill portability (command line is disabled, typically)
I'd advise you to run wireshark.
i probably should
08:45
@nikic - You could try local access; eg; file_get_contents('http://localhost/check.php?f=badscript.php');
@ChristianSciberras Makes it less usable because one needs to provide a script for access via the webserver aso.
Seems a little bit strange if you want to use a parser lib and you need to copy a file to a web accessible location for that ^^
@nikic Well, I just threw the options on the table, you decide ;)
:)
Yep
I decide to stay with the hack ^^
Another option would be to make use of a specialized PHP extension (runkit?).
:D
but that would really kill portability
no sane person has runkit installed
08:49
Yeah.
:P
cheers, @ChristianSciberras @Gordon already cleared it out... instead of asking for information you should just give orders. you want render user, so just say $user->renderYourself()
@KamilTomšík ->OrElse(function(){ die; });
morning @KamilTomšík
@ChristianSciberras now that thing you've mentioned - having to update both user and template in case of new property - this is not caused by tell don't ask, but rather by separation of template and "model"
you have to change them both even with "getters+template"
but you don't if you avoid template at all... then you will just name your fields and UI will take care of rendering, links, everything
Still, depending on the system, I'd rather avoid this confusion.
That is, usually, it isn't user -> template, but template -> [user,product,whatever]
And having a piece of the template in each object, can be confusing.
Oh, @KamilTomšík, I had two (important) questions; 1 which patterns do you regard as widely used and somewhat important? 2 Which (PHP) code do you know that makes good use of patterns?
08:59
@ChristianSciberras that's imho wrong perpective - it's always user->**action**, like render - and template isn't really that important... and on top of that - you'll end up only with one template - for given UI theme.
@KamilTomšík - But the user can be used in different "template files".
@ChristianSciberras 1. most used patterns are Class and Prototype, and every good oo code uses them :-P
@KamilTomšík - You're doing it on purpose :P
@ChristianSciberras what do you mean by different template files?
At the very least, render would need $action
render('profile')
09:01
which one?
No, the user needs to be rendered in different places differently.
That's my point.
And you need to at least pass parameters to render to make it work differently.
Or perhaps $user->render() polls $theme->action() or something
@ChristianSciberras not really :) does it really make sense for user to look differently? and how much? what about UX? - I'd be really astonished if one thing was rendered by two completely different ways in my application. Only thing which makes sense is theming (app-wide consistent theme) and restricting visibility (ACL), but it's still just one "view". and action is something different - it's not about viewing - it's about requesting data.
very simplified example:
User::edit(){
  $fields = array("name", "email"); //or whatever else, you need something understandable by UI
  $callback = array($this, "update");
  request($fields, $callback);
}
and again - does it make sense for forms to look differently for each action? you only need one theme for "request" (form)
@KamilTomšík - That's completely dependent on what the project is about.
no, it's not
A specific project I've had in the past (it was a mess though) required that for a form user were read from a DB, and for a different one, read from a different entity.
Well, arguably, you'd have two types of users in that case.
Hmm, well I can't think about a sufficiently practical disadvantage.
09:18
@ChristianSciberras ok, but that's not an UI problem, you still have only one app-wide look and feel - and that's my point, if it doesn't make sense (it's anti-UX) to have different looks for same things, then you don't have to separate rendering from object itself. no need for templates or custom-renderers (like @Gordon's example)
@KamilTomšík Regarding my earlier two questions
@ChristianSciberras are you writing some essay to school?
@KamilTomšík O.o what makes you think so?
I'm just asking - my answer depends on that :)
@KamilTomšík
> @ Gordon - I'll be doing a small course this summer to teach PHP basics to some uni students :3. I was wondering if you could advise which design patterns I should focus on?
> (A good 4 hours of the "lecture" will be on design patterns)
09:29
> > is for quoting
@Gordon Thanks. Do you pass a perm id as well?
@KamilTomšík How would you deal with a system such a forum/SO/this chat, where you may have each user rendered as First Name Profile Picture, Profile Picture First Name Last Name or used on a profile page? Would you have a different method for each form of rendering?
@ChristianSciberras oh... I've wanted too, but not sure about free time... well:
0. start by "design patterns are not silver bullets and they **are** big guns, which can hurt you, use them wisely"
1. most helpful pattern is probably dependency injection
2. pretty anything which accepts its dependencies from outside

maybe I'm not the right guy for this kind of question - because I don't like patterns too much. (I did in past)

my "rule" for patterns is "use them **only** when you **need** them
I've added that one has to a understand a pattern proficiently in order to use it at its fullest in the best way possible. Am I correct?
@KamilTomšík - We (the company I work with) were looking for PHP developers, but didn't find any. I had the idea of finding and training interested people instead of getting people to work directly with us (in the past this proved to waste a lot of time).
@Aether good question, you don't have to - even in here you're still using the same view - name, picture, profile, everything - with some restrictions, probably rows (2 rows -> image, name, unlimited rows -> everything)
09:37
@ChristianSciberras how much do you pay? :)
@Gordon XD
You'll have to ask human resources (the director :P) for that, info at keen-advertising.com.
One of the major hurdles is that we needed people to work here in our offices.
And well, Gozo is quite small.
@ChristianSciberras basically: novice does not use patterns (not aware of them), intermediate uses patterns a lot (aware of them, but not their downsides), expert use them very occasionally (aware of both benefits and downsides)
i can live with a rough estimate from/to :)
@KamilTomšík So would that lead us to things like 'if row is two lines, render this way, else render that way'? Or something like 'if this is a profile page, render a third way'?
@ChristianSciberras BTW: brilliant idea (training people)
09:39
And then you tell your method whether it's one line, two lines, more lines or a profile page?
@Gordon 1k/mo eur :) given our COL
@KamilTomšík - Thanks! :)
The course is a one-time fee of 50eur, and it covers web dev basics (html, js, css, lamp stack mostly)
with a focus on PHP
Also, regarding patterns, I would at least mention that a pattern is more than just a class diagram, and involves problem definition and a possible solution.
umm, 1k per month? is life that cheap in malta or is the company?
@Aether not necessarily - if you realize that order actually expresses importance - you should render most important things first - and if you're doing that, then you can just skip unnecessary "fields", you would need ifs for swapping name and image, but not for "striping" unwanted fields
@Gordon - On average people earn 700-800eur in Gozo.
But the company could(should ;) pay more
09:43
@Gordon beware, there's a chance I'll move to germany :-P
@Gordon - 1k/mo was a 'from' by the way
@KamilTomšík Right, that would reduce a lot of the complexity, but you would still need a way to tell your method which fields not to display.
But I'm getting the idea better now, thanks.
@KamilTomšík germany is big enough for both of us ;)
@Aether - I'm very practical, I'd show sample code before diagrams ;)
@Gordon I doubt :-P
09:47
@ChristianSciberras Right, but the point is that the pattern definition includes things to help you determine when or whether you should use it, and when you might be incorrectly applying it.
@KamilTomšík where to?
@Aether there is no article about this, yet - it is my own "research" towards less coding, more intention and easier maintainability, so it's hard to explain - generally you can reduce a lot of code complexity by simplifying your needs - do you really need something that complex? is it good for customer? it's always easier to figure this with some sketches and prototypes. and eating your own dog food, of course :)
@KamilTomšík Heck, even as of now, I'm trying to squeeze a modification date of a property out of the modification date of a whole object.
@Gordon somewhere near to you ;)
I'm not convinced nor ready for that move, yet - so...
Why do clients have to be this complicated?!
09:51
@ChristianSciberras why don't you explain them why it is bad idea?
@KamilTomšík By the way, @Gordon, if you don't like Ivory Tower, you won't like it here. Tried changing this the very first day of work, to no use. People here think "companies make websites"/
@ChristianSciberras customers don't want features, they want solutions for their problems - find their problems and you'll probably instantly find better solutions
Hi all !
@KamilTomšík - It's hard when the clients are so over pomposity they only want to talk to the director not a "simple" employee (regardless of the employee's certifications/experience).
Magento Content Problemm, anyone has knowlege`?
09:54
Magento? Eww :(
Is it possible to hide attributes when they are not available?
@Christian, I have the same feeling when I hear magento :D
@ChristianSciberras when I've entered J2EE company, the plan was: you will just sit down and read documentation for 3 months... I gave up after few days because I really wanted to do something - and my boss was not glad
@ChristianSciberras well - get his number and call him
@KamilTomšík - It's not the director's problem, in this case.
I shouldn't be too negative about this, since it works out right in many cases. There's proper system analysis and design.
But sometimes it just doesn't work, especially in cases concerning outsources.
09:56
it's your job, you're responsible for that, you want it to be maintainable, so you should communicate with customer - if director don't want to do it for you.
I did, my "director" was not glad for that, but it worked, so he got used to that. and I've done some similar "horrible" things like this few times again - like writing part of application with completely new framework, because that old one sucked. again - he didn't like that, but it worked, and he didn't noticed until code-reading, so...
@KamilTomšík - lol, bad bad developer ;)
posted on June 27, 2011 by Horde news

Thanks to Gunnar, my interview with RadioTux on LinuxTag has been transcribed and translated to English.

yeah, I'm sure nobody would employ me now, but it worked and it was much simpler. that is something which makes management to change their minds.
btw: @Gordon, @ChristianSciberras ever heard about JBoss Seam? it's really nice J2EE framework, and it could be easily transformed to php (leaving some unnecessary things) - could be interesting for you if you don't like "my way" (ui configuration inside domain objects) - especially interesting is that you have one validation for both business, db and UI level...
I'm not too fond of JBoss, Java even less. But Seam isn't familiar...worth a try I guess. But not before symfony ;)
can anybody tell me regular expression so that in a text box only a OR p can be entered, only one character should be entered at a time?
10:10
@ChristianSciberras J2EE sucked before JBoss - and they were officially invited to J2EE specification "crew", so it could look better now - I don't know, not into that anymore... but it was really revolutionary fw
@Adnan why dont you make it a selectbox then? or a radio group?
@Adnan - Why do you even need a regexp for that?
+1 for selectbox
and then "validate" it on the server side with if ($field === 'p' || $field === 'a')
and if you have to have a regex, have a look at perldoc.perl.org/perlretut.html and figure it out from there. its not difficult
10:33
@ChristianSciberras you can look at Zeta Compontents for some good code
@Gordon Very interesting
10:54
posted on June 27, 2011 by Horde news

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11:33
Good morning
The bad web app is done. Now to finish the slide deck. Shouldn't be too hard...
Good afternoon folks
What's going on?
is second on Recent Tags. This makes me laugh
hi @ircmaxell
It usually is up there...
hi all
11:42
What's up?
Or not .. going to enjoy the train ride. Later
Hello @inium
Anyone here use CakePHP? Having probems with HTML Helpers...
Yes @angad
if i can help you
00:00 - 12:0012:00 - 00:00

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