last day (32 days later) » 

18:22
hello :)
Good day
you'll have to link me to the gist again, home vs. work browsers :p
sure, np
Right, are you using some kind of autoloader?
yeah
Ok good :)
First thing I would do is bump those requires right up to the top
18:27
I'm writing this class to work with a local business's custom CMS code
<?php

namespace SendMail;

require_once('Mail.php');
require_once('Mail/mime.php');
alright
Assuming you're requiring because they can't be autoloaded?
Or... maybe you can drop one or both of them
I'm using another function as an example that I'm working from
I don't know how long ago they wrote it because it's lulzy
I'll make a new gist for it
Ah right, and you're trying to turn this function into an object?
18:30
yeah
well, a class with an OO API. gotcha
their function has no error handling
I tried adding errorhandling to it, and.... it didn't work.
I know I did it wrong, but I figured it would be easier to just turn it into a class, add error handling to the class rather than try to make this function work
It's all good practice. Tell you what, I'll convert it how I would do it, and ping you in a few mins
o.o thanks
The original function is a bit more horrible than I thought, lol. Lots of concerns all mixed up that should be separate
18:47
yeah >.<
what ultimately pushed me to rewrite it, is this scenario
our network went down once, there was a race condition for the web server and SMTP server
web server came up first, SMTP server was still down
because web server couldn't email through the SMTP server, it displayed a PHP error on the front page of the website and included my fucking email
I should just define my email address in the config.php file and change that...
we obfuscate our email address on the website, and point what used to be mailto links, to a contact form. But, there are several hands in the cookie jar, so not everyone remembers to email me so I can create the link they need, or they just don't care.
typically the latter though
Uh, production server, display_errors should be off
absolutely catch errors, report them somewhere, don't display them
give a generic "oops something went wrong" page, and keep the error to yourself
they shouldn't display, I think error reporting is turned off but I could be wrong.
it's set up to where it emails me the errors
buuuut if the SMTP server is down.... there's no error handling for that scenario
You want error reporting on - you want displaying off
I thought it was turned off.
I just checked the config file... it was on
woops.
19:05
I need ot take lunch
I'll be back in an hour
19:29
How much control do you have over the composition of the parameters, like $headers? Did you want this to be almost a drop-in replacement?
19:53
I'm planning to leave the send_mail function because I don't want to go through the work of refactoring the whole vendor code base
but I'm going to be using it in another project and to fix the scenario when the SMTP server's down
There's a chance we may be looking into redesigning the site this year, that is looking into redesigning it, it probably won't be complete until next year. But, I think we may switch platforms.
So, refactoring the code base would be a waste of time
20:06
I kinda paused re-implementing it.
The part where things that aren't headers, but are passed in via the $headers array made me realise I can't really refactor without breaking
yeah :/
I was planning to use the class I'm writing in the project I'm trying to finish, and modify the error handling stuff. And if I happen to write anything new that requires sending email, I'll use it then. But the class probably won't see much use after I finish it, sadly.
So, some general points about what you've done so far
* Conditional requires can lead to unexpected behaviour, so move them up if they can't be autoloaded
* You would normally want to inject dependencies - so passing Mail, and Mail_mime in through the constructor
* You don't need `=&` :)
* You have some inconsistencies. For example you call `hasAttachments()` then access the $options['attachments'] element directly. Hiding the implementation is the correct thing to do with an API, so maybe a `getAttachments()` method would be better
similar with hasHTML
You have a bunch of missed opportunities with type declarations. With 5.3 you can only do class names / array, but you can still make use of them
And even if it's not much use, you learned and got feedback, all good :)
#2 - that was my plan at the beginning, but when I started to write the class, and writing methods, I realized I was coupling them to PEAR Mail. I kinda gave up, said fuck it, and just coupled it. It wasn't my intention, but I've been working on the original project for ... probably over three months now, and my supervisor is irritated. I would have looked into doing it the right way, but opted to just get it done for now. I left the groundwork in place, in case I decide to decouple it later
what is =&? I'm just using what was in the original function, but I don't understand what the equal sign has to do with object reference
regards to using $options['attachments'] in addAttachments(), I thought that's what I needed to do based on the original code, it didn't occur to me that it would unnecessary because of hasAttachments().
can you give an example by what you mean with missed opportunity in type declaration?
20:25
Ok, $var =& $anotherVar is a horrible way to write $var = &$anotherVar - It's assignment by reference.
But since here is is being used with an object, it is unnecessary
Objects are (kind of) passed by reference anyway
alright
Re addAttachments, the disparity is the hidden functionality of hasAttachments (this is a good thing), then the direct access of the same set of options (this is the bad thing)
I would probably go for a getAttachments() method that returns an empty array if there are none, and you can still loop over the result (zero times)
Type decls...
public function buildEmail($content, $options)
{
    $mime = new Mail_mime();
    $this->setBody($content, $options, $mime);
You create a new Mail_mime and pass it to setBody
Defined as
public function setBody($content, $options, $mail_object)
But could be defined as
public function setBody($content, array $options, Mail_mime $mail_object)
ahhhh
Some people don't like types, I love them, early warning when you did something wrong
do I need a return in setBody(), addAttachments(), and buildEmail()?
yeah, I agree
the logic I was following is that: check to see if there are attachments. original code checked it from the $headers array, assigned array value to $attachments then unset the key (gross, in my opinion). then checked to see if it's an array, I thought that would be necessary... I guess I should write a new method, like you suggested, getAttachments(), and it would do what hasAttachments() does, plus the assignment work? I think?
blah, didn't get to proofread it entirely before I ran out of time
or wait, write a getAttachments function that uses hasAttachments, and getAttachments is used by addAttachments
20:41
if it's a "set" you don't need a return, you're performing an action on the object, not asking for something from it
That's how I was taught, setters don't return anything. I'm still getting used to $this-> and thought I needed a return. Might've been a brain fart.
You could use hasAttachments in getAttachments, but you'll still end up with either both direct and indirect access of $options, or, an unnecessary double check on whether the attachments key exists
$attachments = $options['attachments'];
$attachments = (is_array($attachments)) ? $attachments : array();
is this necessary at all?
`$this` just allows you to access the object you are currently in.

If you did $a = new X; $b = new X; you don't have to know if you're in $a or $b, $this will resolve to the correct one for you
@Tiffany sure, that's a decent check. You could add error handling there because if attachments isn't an array something has gone wrong
I know what $this is, and how $this works, it just takes time for me to know if I'm using it correctly
it's one of those, just keep using it repeatedly and I'll eventually get it
my brain's weird when it comes to learning abstract concepts
sorry if that came off as rude, not my intention, I very much appreciate the help you're giving me
20:47
Nah, you're fine :)
function getAttachments(array $options)
{
    if (array_key_exists('attachments', $options) && is_array($options['attachments'])) {
        return $options['attachments'];
    }

    return array();
}
I was thinking like that
you know the result is safe to iterate over
yeah
that makes a lot of sense
And all of the functionality is hidden, the caller of that method doesn't have to know anything about the structure of $options
No hasAttachments followed by direct access
I thought that having a "has", "get", and "add" was a bit redundant and didn't know if the work could be combined in some way
If later on you need to check for attachments but not do anything with them, go ahead and add hasAttachments, you don't need it right now
public function addAttachments(array $options, Mail_mime $mail_object)
{
  if ($this->getAttachments($options))
  {
    foreach ($options['attachments'] as $attachment)
    {
      $mail_object->addAttachment($attachment['file'], $attachment['type'], $attachment['name']);
    }
  }
}
do I have the foreach right, then?
or should I do it differently?
argh, I want to keep working on this but I have a meeting
20:57
noooo :)
the bane of every programmer
ESPECIALLY when we're on a roll
        $attachments = $this->getAttachments($options);

        foreach ($attachments as $attachment){
            $mail_object->addAttachment($attachment['file'], $attachment['type'], $attachment['name']);
        }
don't need the if, because you return an array, safe to iterate
I need to go out anyway, catch you later
thanks for your help :)
and you're right, after reading your code I said, "duh"
21:28
heh, no need for thanks, happy to help people who want to learn :)

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