« first day (117 days earlier)      last day (189 days later) » 
00:00 - 18:0018:00 - 20:00

00:00
well, good night and have fun rejecting Danacks PR and explaining it to him (funny part…)…
user895378
I'm trying to work with him :)
That's the right attitude :-)
user895378
He's a good contributor. I want to do everything I can to incorporate useful things he's done.
good, but still a bit too frameworkish.
user895378
Yeah we'll see. Have a good night!
00:03
First: reading book at 2 a.m. (aka now) until 3 a.m. (I hope I'll be able to stop, haha)
Then: sleeping.
user895378
Enjoy :)
11:18
@rdlowrey need that for Aerys: github.com/bixuehujin/reactphp-mysql
 
1 hour later…
user895378
12:29
@bwoebi that's actually a great thing for aerys. DaveRandom has a working project that bridges react and alert so that any library created to work with react will work with alert.
user895378
If the lib is any good I'll contribute to it and you'll have the non-blocking mysql lib you've always wanted (it just will be entirely in userland and slow [relatively] because react is slow by comparison to alert).
13:06
@rdlowrey why should the lib be slow? or is it by the fundamental design of react that anything that bridges react is slow?
user895378
It's the event emitter abstraction react uses. It's a nice abstraction, but it's just much slower than doing specifically what's needed for a given protocol.
@rdlowrey solution: use Alert-style and brigde Alert to React?
user895378
But like I said, if the lib is any good I can work with it to create an alert-friendly version for max perf.
user895378
@bwoebi the bridge is only a bridge for the event loop, not the react event emitter abstraction used in that library.
@rdlowrey oh. okay. and we cannot bridge the latter?
user895378
13:12
There's no reason to.
user895378
I avoid event emitter altogether because the concept is slow in userland.
ah, so, it's slow by design. Okay.
13:50
@rdlowrey Actually, that's not true.
The way I proposed above is actually radically different than his PR.
user895378
I get that it's different, but I still don't think the individual parts of how the injector works should be exposed for modification
Not modification, no.
user895378
In any case, I'm working on a rewrite that will allow him to do what he wants without forcing it on the lib.
I am not sure my above proposal is really a good fit for Aerys Auryn anyway, but it is a better fit than his PR ^^
user895378
s/Aerys/Auryn/ Yeah it's his whole plugin architecture that I disagree with.
user895378
13:54
Everything else he wants could be done without modifying by simply extending the public API and creating his own extended implementation.
user895378
Using real OOP principles and programming to the existing interface was all that was needed.
@rdlowrey yeah, I agree; he should feel free to implement its own Auryn wrapper. (in his repo)
user895378
@bwoebi yup. Changing the existing code completely top-down is overkill.
yep
user895378
Just submitted a new PR against php-uv so I can determine if a filesystem path is a directory or regular file for use in serving static files in aerys.
14:11
@rdlowrey good
WHat are you working on just now? Aerys?
user895378
No, working on auryn v1
user895378
Will be asking for opinions on API changes soon.
Oh. I's still not yet v1 :o
@rdlowrey and it's merged :-)
user895378
woot!
@rdlowrey what's missing?
user895378
14:15
You mean what's missing to make it v1?
Polish :)
no, for API changes
user895378
^ that
Yeah, polish the API.
user895378
14:17
This is what I'm thinking for the final API. Thoughts? Comments?
user895378
All that's needed from an API perspective to accommodate Danack's changes is for him to add an optional third parameter to the non-make methods.
You really want not-so-handy method names?
I'm disappointed.
user895378
> not-so-handy
user895378
?
Current method names are short and different. So easier to recognize and remember
user895378
14:20
They're more descriptive and the consistency with make* and define* demonstrates the relationship between the methods.
user895378
Something like Injector::refresh() tells you nothing
refreshShare doesn't either. What are these shares ?
actually… refresh -> reshare maybe
user895378
then share -> shareInstance, but in this case I think "instance" is understood.
@rdlowrey I don't think the name improvements are much of an improvement.
Removing execute is nice though ^^
user895378
makeInstance() is necessary to differentiate between making an object and making an executable (makeExecutable()).
user895378
14:23
I don't think they're a huge improvement, but I don't think they clarify things a bit.
@rdlowrey you could just use build() instead of makeExecutable()
@rdlowrey I don't think they clarify things either.
user895378
Important: this is a compromise with Danack.
@rdlowrey Explain the difference between make and build?
user895378
@LeviMorrison I'm not using build.
user895378
14:25
There isn't one.
user895378
makeInstance
user895378
makeExecutable
I mean makeInstance or buildInstance or whatever it is called.
user895378
build is IMO vague and useless.
what's an Executable? A callable? … ah a class (looked at docblock)...
user895378
14:26
class Test {
  function anyMethod()
}
user895378
$injector->makeExecutable('Test::anyMethod')
So it returns (in essence) [new Test, 'anyMethod']?
user895378
Actually, now that I think about it execute can't go away.
then makeCallable tells me more
user895378
Because it injects method parameters according to shares and whatnot as well.
14:27
^ I'm going to need you to explain that some more.
user895378
class Test {
  function anyMethod(SomeSharedThing $thing)
}
user895378
$injector->share($someSharedThing);
...
$injector->execute('Test::anyMethod');
@rdlowrey the thing is not just about clarification, but also about memorability…
user895378
^ Automatically passes the shared instance to the method and invokes.
Okay. I'd drop the $forceAccessible parameter.
It's just a bad idea.
@rdlowrey !!! actually
I just realized something.
user895378
14:30
No, it's for testing.
user895378
You've said this before and I still don't agree :)
user895378
I think it's a useful thing for being able to execute anything. People shouldn't use it in their applications, but I don't see much value in restricting it. You'd be a grade A noob to invoke non-public things in your application code, but that's not my problem.
If you like makeInvokable or makeExecutable or whatever you can still drop execute.
return function() use ($params) {
    $object->$method(...$params);
};
user895378
Yeah but then you have to manually get your params.
user895378
The usefulness is something like in framework code (arya, for example)
14:32
No, $params is basically what you do with auryn.
My point is instead of invoking it directly just return a closure with the object, method, and params.
user895378
But the point is that sometimes you want the executable so you can execute it yourself and sometimes you want auryn to provision the parameters automatically.
You have to make $params if you execute it anyway.
user895378
In particular I need the execute functionality in arya.
user895378
But in aerys I need the executable
user895378
I added it because I needed the different functionality.
14:34
I don't think you see the point of what I'm saying.
user895378
I don't want to require 5.6 for that functionality.
So just use call_user_func_array.
Currently in execute you need to:
1. Instantiate the object
2. Create parameters.
3. Invoke the correct method on the object with the parameters.
user895378
I get that, but you can't then pass in your own arguments using your example
user895378
They're different use cases
:) You can with a slightly different return value.
This is the only valuable thing functional programming has taught me.
user895378
14:37
I still don't see how your suggestion solves both use-cases that I have.
return function($b) use ($a) {
    $object->$method(...$a, ...$b);
};
user895378
What if I don't want to take the perf hit of provisioning arguments for executables that I plan to manually invoke with the exact arguments I need?
You currently can pass custom arguments anyway, can't you?
I know you could for make.
So just pass [].
user895378
Still doesn't work because the injector will try to provision any args not specified in the custom array and fail because they aren't defined.
Okay, that's a possible issue but we could change it.
user895378
14:41
But that's at the very core of how the injector works.
To be honest, I've always thought Auryn left it alone if you gave it your own args.
user895378
No, it uses the specific named args you provide and provisions the rest.
user895378
The bigger problem is this: the library is mature, well-tested and it does exactly what it's supposed to do right now. There's not really any need to rewrite everything to serve Danack's use case (that I don't think should be served in the first place) :/
I can understand that behavior but to be honest I thought it just trusted whatever I gave it.
What is his use-case, exactly?
user895378
14:46
He wants to be able to define injection behavior differently for the same class name based on the context in which that class is instantiated.
user895378
So essentially ...
user895378
If Logger is being instantiated for Foo::__construct do one thing and if it's instantiated in the Bar::__construct do something else.
user895378
But not just the current ctor. Also higher up the chain so he can define different behavior for a multiple classes:
I am pretty certain he can solve that using the decorator pattern.
user895378
I agree.
14:48
Maybe I'll code it up.
:)
user895378
I think the reason he went all plugin crazy was because the internal provisioning functionality was all private and part of the Provider
yes, and that's why we don't like to implement his PR as it's easily doable in userland
user895378
So what I was thinking ....
How about this: you hold off on 1.0
I build a context aware injector that suffices Danack.
It may require some changing of the current software. Maybe.
If it does; great, we probably will have a better design.
user895378
make the internal code a bit more componentized (which I'm working on) and maybe incorporate a couple of traits so that I can keep my private fetish and the context-aware injectors can use the functionality they need.
14:50
If not (and I expect this branch) then you ship a refactored version of the current impl.
user895378
Yeah, I mean there are lots of small things that I would change now -- the base auryn code was written by two-or-three-years-ago me.
user895378
But your suggestion is basically what I started doing.
user895378
Danack's needs basically just require the addition of an optional array showing the chain of class context for all the non-make methods.
user895378
So that's why I was trying to settle on a final API.
I already cleaned up some code duplication and simplified some stuff; I imagine making traits for each piece could solve the rest.
14:53
hmm. I look forward for more horizontal inheritance.
user895378
Also, @bwoebi the reason I use/used "executable" is because we have both "makeExecutable" and "execute". The alternative is "makeCallable" and "call" ... and Injector::call() is just not a good idea IMO because of __call().
user895378
That's the logic behind that decision.
@rdlowrey not sure why there's a problem with __call…
user895378
I think it can confuse people and I prefer to avoid the potential for that altogether.
@rdlowrey I don't, but well…
15:03
@rdlowrey I think invoke is a great name. I think I've mentioned this before.
user895378
funny you mention it: I just changed to makeInvokable and invoke ... somehow I'm more okay with that than call
user895378
afk: food
@rdlowrey I know you don't have an official code style but what line lengths do you use?
user895378
I set the bar in my editor at 100. I try to always stay left of that but don't lose my mind if I go over by a couple of characters here or there.
Okay, and you upper case null, true, and false, right?
user895378
15:12
yeah, but I'll probably switch away from that so it doesn't really matter.
Also, something I did without asking you is always have two spaces before and after function declarations.
It really helps you distinguish code when scrolling.
user895378
function..something()..{?
and methods.
nono
I'm sorry.
Two blank lines before and after function declarations.
user895378
I saw that and I really hate it :)
user895378
15:13
but whatever, it's not a big deal.
Why do you hate it?
If you 'hate' something you should be able to voice it.
user895378
Because it looks different from what I'm used to.
user895378
These days I don't care about style: I care about good code.
user895378
Something like nested if conditionals is much more egregious than double spacing between methods.
15:14
I think the extra spaces around functions help you focus better on the code.
user895378
@LeviMorrison Also, I'm willing to compromise on the exposed $makeAccessible
user895378
But, the behavior needs to be retained internally so we can fix stupid behavior like Doctrine's protected/private constructors
I agree that testing protected/private can be useful but in those cases I think I'd rather create an explicit test fixture.
Now, as for Doctrine...
I dunno.
user895378
constructors should be internally forced to accessible if they aren't public
Anyone using a private constructor had better have their constructor made by language syntax.
That excludes everyone outside of PHP core.
^^
user895378
15:21
I agree. That's why I have no problem forcing accessibility for any userland constructor that isn't public.
user895378
ReflectionClass::isUserDefined()
user895378
Thoughts on makeInstance/makeInvokable -> provisionInstance/provisionInvokable ?
make is shorter.
That's about my only comment.
Hmm... so right now I'm trying to make a ContextAwareInjector
There isn't an external API that allows me to see if something is aliased, or what it aliases to.
user895378
isset($this->aliases[$allLowerCaseName])
user895378
15:32
Oh, you said external API
Even if I inherited from Provider I couldn't do that.
user895378
It's trivial to expose that, but again, I don't think that's something that should be exposed publicly.
Yeah but then I can't make a proper context aware injector.
user895378
hehe which was kind of the point :)
user895378
private $aliases;
protected function getAlias($name);
user895378
15:34
^ All that's needed.
user895378
Though I still don't think inheritance is the right way to go.
I'm not using inheritance.
I'm implementing Injector and taking an Injector in my constructor.
Classic decorator pattern.
user895378
The original intention was to keep the injector API as minimal as possible.
user895378
I didn't want to bloat it with lots of informational getters to accommodate functionality that I don't think should exist in the first place.
user895378
(And still don't, really)
15:36
Okay, I can tie myself to the Provider API but that still doesn't get me a way to resolve aliases.
user895378
Perhaps public function resolveAlias($name)
Yeah. I'd just rename resolveAliasIfNeeded to resolveAlias and make it public.
(and move it up with the other public methods)
user895378
Is there anything else that's needed besides alias resolution for context aware?
Not sure; I'll let you know while I go ^^
Hmm.
I wonder if I really need alias resolution.
Hard to know without comments from Danack who is afk atm.
user895378
I'm not sure how you could do it without alias resolution (I haven't thought deeply about it, though).
15:43
I'm just going to pretend it doesn't matter for the moment.
Will deal with it later.
user895378
Well, I suppose you could intercept all calls to the public methods in the decorator and keep a copy for yourself. But that seems sort of wasteful.
Yeah.
Maybe that trait would be useful.
^^
user895378
I dunno ... maybe we should just expose minimal getters
I think you should try the trait approach first.
If it doesn't work or we don't like it then that's valuable to know.
user895378
I'm trying very hard to compromise on lots of this stuff (with everyone, not just Danack) :)
user895378
15:47
I don't have a monopoly on good code and I'm working to be a good team member in general.
Right, so am I.
I don't need a context aware injector ^^
user895378
Me neither.
user895378
Those things said, thoughts on updated Injector interface: gist.github.com/rdlowrey/569996f23a436964d595
But I do think you should be able to make one as a decorator.
Why defineCtor?
Is it not used with what was the old 'prepare'?
user895378
prepare -> defineMutator
user895378
15:49
I was trying to be more descriptive because define is actually defining arguments to pass to the named class's constructor.
user895378
ctor may be understood there, though.
To me defineCtor is like defining a custom __construct.
Not defining its args.
user895378
okay, killing that. defineCtor define
I think define is vague but defineCtor is misleading.
Maybe defineCtorParams?
Or do you think define is okay?
user895378
I've never totally loved define because of the ambiguity you cite.
user895378
15:52
defineCtorSignature or defineCtorParams
Not signature.
user895378
I think I prefer defineCtorParams yeah
user895378
And how about defineParam() -> defineGlobalParam()
I don't like that feature.
user895378
It's kind of dangerous, yes.
15:53
Well, that aside I'm not sure how a global param is useful.
user895378
But it's there now and I know people use it.
Needs to be bound to a method, I think.
user895378
It actually is better named defineFallbackParam()
user895378
We already have defineCtorParam for that.
I'd propose removing it.
user895378
15:55
The whole point is so that if you use the same scalar config value object everywhere (for example) you don't have to define it in lots of places.
But that seems... less than ideal and maybe harmful.
I don't feel too strongly about it though.
user895378
I would be okay with removing it but I know of multiple people who use it.
Maybe try talking to them.
Needs renaming anyway.
They'll have to alter their code at least that much.
user895378
Hmm I'm unconvinced on this one ... I don't see the harm in leaving it in. It makes life much easier in certain cases.
user895378
In particular for mixed parameters without typehints
15:58
iWantVeryLongMethodNames()
Better than vague short ones.
user895378
short is preferred but only if it's clear enough.
@rdlowrey then find short names. Really. Then why not rename alias() => aliasClassForTypehint(). It's clearer.
alias is more clear than define
Don't pretend that names of semi-equal length are equally clear.
define => defineInstantiationArguments() that's very clear, but really really too long.
defineCtor() could as well mean: replace current ctor by a new one...
16:03
Exactly, which is why I argued against it.
To make names unambiguous you have to make them overly long.
That's absurd.
bindCtorParams is not overly long.
Just like a lot of people don't know what ctor means.
@rdlowrey By the way, bind is usually the functional name for what define is doing.
Hmm.
What if we did $injector->bind($classOrClassNameWithMethod, ...$args)?
better
16:06
If they haven't supplied a method then you bind to the constructor?
yup
user895378
Oh I like that.
good that we agree
bind has a well-established meaning in the functional world anyway.
user895378
The only question with that is ... nevermind
16:07
I was vague with what $args is on purpose.
I haven't worked that out, exactly.
Currently you do parameters based on names, not positions, right?
user895378
Right.
user895378
I feel like there was a very strong reason for doing that but I don't remember it now.
How about this then: function bind($classOrClassNameWithMethod, array $args)
Where $args is key => value paired.
@rdlowrey This also will be useful if named args pass.
(Which I don't really want to talk about but do want to state that I'm against it)
user895378
16:11
problem is, how do you differentiate between ClassName and functionName when binding without having to reflect everything if you assume ctor in the absence of a method specification?
user895378
Wait.
Oh, you can make functions?
That doesn't make sense to me.
user895378
That's the whole makeInvokable/invoke thing
execute, sure.
invoke I mean.
delegate or defineDelegate … the define is here superfluous and just reinforcing it
same for alias
only prepare() isn't selfdocumenting…
16:16
Hmm.
user895378
@bwoebi agree, I've changed those locally.
@Levi e.g. To alias is by definition the defining of a link between two things.
The "Hmm" was unrelated.
We're only doing about half of what a functional bind would be.
I don't think we care, do we?
user895378
I don't
user895378
Okay, off the wall suggestion coming.
user895378
16:19
I know @bwoebi will love this.
user895378
All the define/bind things are essentially doing the same thing.
user895378
So, what about something like this:
user895378
interface Injector {
    const METHOD = 0;
    const PARAM = 1;
    const DELEGATE = 2;
    const MUTATOR = 3;
    const ALIAS = 4;
    const SHARE = 5;

    public function makeInstance($name, array $args = NULL);
    public function makeInvokable($invokable);
    public function invoke($invokable, array $args = NULL);
    public function bind($type, $name, array $binding);
    public function unbind($type, $name);
    public function getBindings($type);
}
I need you to describe the args to bind and unbind.
$type and $name, specifically.
user895378
$injector->bind(Injector::METHOD, 'SomeClass', $ctorArgDefinition); // define()
$injector->bind(Injector::SHARE, $className); // share()
$injector->bind(Injector::ALIAS, $originalName, $aliasName); // alias()
user895378
16:23
We could also not fold everything into bind() but still use Injector::getBindings() (or Injector::getDefinitions()) in conjunction with constants to specify which type of thing we want to allow full access to internal settings.
user895378
That would expose everything you could possibly need to modify behavior through decoration.
user895378
Forget the "one-size-fits-all" bind() actually.
user895378
The important part is just having a single method to inquire about assigned defines/aliases/shares/etc so you can access them for decoration without cluttering the API with tons of methods to access everything.
@rdlowrey uh, not really…
user895378
@bwoebi Don't make me go back in the chat history to find you arguing for this exact approach in other libraries.
16:26
a method should do one task, not three.
user895378
lol
user895378
You've come over from the dark side, then?
@rdlowrey I invite you to. I cannot belive that I had argued for that
user895378
This is great news.
user895378
Now ... just need to figure out what to search for to locate this.
user895378
16:30

bwoebi loves fewer methods + constants

Apr 11 at 21:35, 27 minutes total – 66 messages, 2 users, 0 stars

Bookmarked 6 secs ago by rdlowrey

I'm still in favour of that
because that's not different tasks
especially not as we can bitmask here
user895378
Apr 11 at 21:50, by bwoebi
@rdlowrey E_TOO_MUCH_METHODS_IN_SINGLE_CLASS
user895378
Perhaps I misunderstood you, though.
user924016
How about the injector::bind first arg is a bindingStrategy?
user924016
pass the logic via a role interface
user895378
16:35
That's an option, but I think my idea to put them all into a single bind() method was a bad one.
user924016
Injector::bind(Bindable, ..
user895378
Okay, I think we're closing in on it now. Updated Injector ... leaner, meaner, exposes all assigned data for decoration via Injector::getDefinitions($typeConst)
@rdlowrey I don't want many methods, but it's also nonsense to just create methods with many tasks
@rdlowrey much better now
user895378
It's amazing how getting a simple API correct can take hours. I've been fiddling with this for most of the day.
@rdlowrey It took 2 hours discussing
user895378
16:44
Well the discussion was obviously needed. What's in the gist now is much better than what I got to on my own.
good that you like it too :-)
@rdlowrey Will give feedback over lunch break.
17:15
@rdlowrey Hey, you might actually know this:
0
Q: Formal name for this data normalization formula?

Levi MorrisonI am using a generalized formula for normalizing one data range to another but am having difficulty finding its formal name, if it even exists: $x_b = min_b + \frac{(x_a - min_a)(max_b-min_b)}{max_a - min_a}$ This converts an x in range a to its respective value in range b. Sorry if my notation...

user895378
17:55
I was going to use the more elementary term, "slope" but it looks like someone already mentioned something similar.
user895378
It's a little depressing to think of all the knowledge I've lost in the last ten years from lack of use.
user895378
On the bright side, I've gained lots of new knowledge in different areas.
00:00 - 18:0018:00 - 20:00

« first day (117 days earlier)      last day (189 days later) »