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00:01
@Jack I NaB it
unless I missed something, that's exactly how indirect modification is supposed to work
Really?
Seems like a bug to me.
@NikiC I think the "issue" here is the difference in behaviour between properties and array indices.
If we're talking about tracking, then it's a bug or just bad way to display history :) I'm on https://wiki.php.net/rfc/use_function and it says returntypehinting > rfc > use_function. @LeviMorrison
@LeviMorrison I've got a patch that doesn't break the test cases :) gist.github.com/datibbaw/703597322ad411287461
@webarto It uses the breadcrumbs as the last places you've visited, not the hierarchical trail. Make sense?
00:07
I like hierarchy better.
Ah, yes, it makes sense, but I think it's counter-intuitive.
As do I; I was just explaining the behavior.
Yes, thanks.
It has always irked me that there's no simple way from an rfc to the rfc overview.
Edit the URI. That's what I do ^^
00:08
I can maybe look into that at some point but for now I'm focusing on my Return Type-hint RFC and RFC formatting.
Yeah, I like that ^^
Though the : looks like inheritance heh
Oh, also looking into SPL bugs too.
99 spl bugs on the wall, 99 spl bugs ... patch that hole and fix that bug ... 117 spl bugs on the wall.
00:12
117 :D
very well :)
:P
@PeeHaa special for you :D
@Jack When I started there were 80.
Pancake breakfast!
Yesterday there were 100
00:13
Whoops
The 1 removed was a reassignment ^^
Looks like there are 96? bugs.php.net/…
SplFixedArray can't take references (I think) so the 'fix' doesn't work.
Morning
(Or at least doesn't return them)
@Achrome 'morning
@LeviMorrison Ehh, don't know?
00:24
Anyay, mark it as "Not a bug"?
I still think there's some unintuitive behaviour
It's doing copy-on-write.
It's an intuitive behavior, right? Right?
copy-on-write? wah?
ohh you're talking about 65019?
This is why I think arrays should have used object semantics and not value semantics.
His code would work with object semantics and not value + copy on write semantics.
Can someone help me figure out simple way to handle dependencies (classes), I heard things like Factory pattern, DI container, service locator, etc.? Any simple (good) example?
00:30
Are you trolling or being serious?
Sometimes hard to tell ^^
No, really, I've been living under a rock lately :)
I mean, I know, but I don't know what I know exactly.
I assume you already have your objects set up to have their dependencies handed to them through constructors or setter methods?
Correct, instead of calling them from methods or in __construct, they are passed on or set.
Now, I'm not sure how to proceed, because there is awful lot of classes.
I'd suggest Factories at this point.
Can you point to a good example of the pattern?
00:35
Once you've worked with factories enough you should be able to see the value (and potential pain points) of automatic dependency provisioning.
No, I can't.
I'll just make one up.
Actually, do you have a small(ish) snippet of actual code you could share?
Yes, just a moment please.
public function __construct()
{
  $locale = Zend_Registry::get('Zend_Locale');

  $config = \Awesomesauce::getConfig();
  $code   = $config->keyExists('locale', 'currency', NULL);

  $this->currency = new Zend_Currency($locale, $code);
}
@LeviMorrison Would this be fine? ^
Zend_Registry, Config and Zend_Currency would be dependencies.
So, I wouldn't put that stuff into the constructor of the factory.
Put it in a make or create method
This is actually Currency class, I don't have a Factory for it yet, I'm trying to create it :)
Ok, let me try to make one and I'll paste it, sorry for bothering and thanks for help.
No, no, it's fine.
I was just confused what you were doing for a moment.
So the snippet you posted is for a class that you need to refactor and create a factory for, right?
Yes, yes, that is right.
00:43
class Currency {
    public function __construct() {
        $locale = Zend_Registry::get('Zend_Locale');

        $config = \Awesomesauce::getConfig();
        $code   = $config->keyExists('locale', 'currency', NULL);

        $this->currency = new Zend_Currency($locale, $code);
    }
}
Something like so?
Also, is $code a boolean or what? It's a bit hard to tell.
Yes, that is exactly what I have now :)
It's usually USD as in currency code, I will refactor it, sorry.
So obviously the Currency class doesn't actually need the Awesomesauce or Zend_Registry, it just needs the Zend_Currency.
class Currency {
    public function __construct(Zend_Currency $currency) {
        $this->currency = $currency;
    }
}
public function __construct(Zend_Currency $currency, $currencyCode = 'USD') {
If I understand it correctly you don't even need $currencyCode as Zend_Currency has that information?
I think I need it, because it can be set e.g. USD, EUR, etc. Default should be USD, ideally passed on from CurrencyFactory if that's right thing to do.
Ah, sorry, PEBKAC. Yes, you're right.
00:50
Okay. Next:
// something like:
class CurrencyFactory {
    function make() {
        static $locale = Zend_Registry::get('Zend_Locale');
        static $config = \Awesomesauce::getConfig();
        $code = $config->keyExists('locale', 'currency', NULL);
        return new Zend_Currency($locale, $code);
    }
}
You could alternatively do it like:
Following you :)
// something like:
class CurrencyFactory {
    private $locale;
    private $config;
    function __construct() {
        $this->locale = Zend_Registry::get('Zend_Locale');
        $this->config = \Awesomesauce::getConfig();
    }
    function make() {
        $code = $this->config->keyExists('locale', 'currency', NULL);
        return new Zend_Currency($this->locale, $code);
    }
}
I just encountered static $locale ... and thank you for that :)
The latter is probably easier to think and reason about.
But it should be pretty much the same?
00:57
This isn't a perfect refactor but it at least pushes the tight binding from the Currency class to the factory.
Yes, that's exactly what's needed, nothing perfect, just sane.
Would I make a mistake if I pass $currencyCode via __construct/make?
I'd put it in make.
I really don't know what the config class stuff is doing so it's hard to make further suggestions.
function make($code = 'USD') {
    return new Zend_Currency($this->locale, $code);
}
Would this be legal?
Yeah, that would be good.
Awesome. Much appreciated.
00:59
Well
is locale likely to change?
Is locale from one Currency object to another supposed to be the same? Or can it vary?
Unlikely but not excluded.
I think it can vary, it's not per entire application, but per user preference.
So the same factory will generate the same locale for each Currency object it produces; is that the intended behavior?
If so then what we have would be a good way to do it.
Ah, also I don't think the static example I gave will work.
I think PHP only allows literals, not expressions for static vars.
class CurrencyFactory {
    private $locale;

    function __construct() {
        $this->locale = Zend_Registry::get('Zend_Locale');
    }

    function make($currencyCode = 'USD') {
        return new Zend_Currency($this->locale, $currencyCode);
    }

}
Yeah, it borks. That's exactly what it's intended. ^
Hopefully that was a helpful exercise.
    class Currency
    {
      public function __construc (Zend_Currency $currency) {}
    }

    class CurrencyFactory
    {
      private $locale;
      private $currency;

      function __construct()
      {
        $this->locale = Zend_Registry::get('Zend_Locale');
      }

      function make($currencyCode = 'USD')
      {
        $this->currency = new Zend_Currency($this->locale, $currencyCode);
        return new Currency($this->currency);
      }
    }
Am I doing it right? :)
01:06
Not sure why you are storing the Zend_Currency each time?
I don't need to, I can just pass it on?
return new Currency( (new Zend_Currency($this->locale, $currencyCode)) );
Yeah, that's what I would do.
You don't need the inner parenthesis though.
Thank you for your help, I had issues because it's not quite textbook example and I wasn't that familiar with it. If you need some hosting, let me know :P
class Currency {
  public function __construct(Zend_Currency $currency) {$this->currency = $currency;}
}
class CurrencyFactory {
  private $locale;

  function __construct() {
    $this->locale = Zend_Registry::get('Zend_Locale');
  }

  function make($currencyCode = 'USD')  {
    return new Currency(new Zend_Currency($this->locale, $currencyCode));
  }
}
Yes, that's what's going to be commited :) Thanks again.
01:11
A good automatic dependency provisioner will let you delegate to factories in which case you can reuse the factories you've made; meaning the work to make factories won't be wasted if you choose to go down the automatic dependency provisioning route.
kba
kba
Is there a meta chatroom about SO in general or something similiar? I can't seem to find one at least.
Not sure; never looked.
Thanks, that might come later, currently the task is to decouple the code as much as possible without breaking it much, namespace it, and remove as much statics as possible along with some "MVC" related changes. I think Factory will be sufficient for now.
Incremental refactor is definitely the way to go.
kba
kba
Hm, okay.
01:14
@NikiC actually constants can't be arrays (that's nothing newly done by me) lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/zend_compile.c#7321 … but without that patch it was possible to trick an array inside a constant as the type is then IS_CONSTANT_AST which can't be just simply checked for the result being array or not (without executing the AST which might be not possible until run-time).
Good evening
Good evening.
@ircmaxell Your thoughts on this idea? bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=62609 I've actually encountered this issue several tiems.
Unless there is some technical reason preventing it the logic seems sound.
I would absolutely not allow for an abstract class to, but for generic interfaces, sure: 3v4l.org/VK52Q
Why not for abstract bases?
because Traversable should not be directly implementable. it's extendable though...
01:24
I guess I still don't see why an abstract class poses an issue? Could you be more explicit?
more conceptual than technical
(By the way, the code you posted should be valid in my opinion)
it should be in my opinion as well
If you put the IteratorAggregate before Foo it will work.
01:27
Yeah, that's really lousy.
The order there shouldn't matter, imo.
I came across this issue in my collections lib.
user652649
02:20
why extending Traversable and not Iterator?
I'd use Iterator wherever it makes sense, but sometimes Traversable needed.
Such as not caring if the object itself is an Iterator or if it is an IteratorAggregate.
This is really common for library like code.
user652649
ah, i see
Btw, ircmaxell, my RFC keeps getting longer and longer. Hopefully soon I'll have it fleshed out enough to send to the ML.
user652649
go go go go return type hinting!! go!
user652649
yesterday 7:30 pm mail that i didn't even notice from a customer: _tomorrow we'll be at xxxyyzzz trade show. can you send the invite via newsletter to our subscribed users?_
text on my personal phone today 2:00 am: _i have noticed you didn't send the newsletter yet, can you please do that before tomorrow morning?_
02:33
...
Thanks, client, for being on top of things!
user652649
this because i'm friendly with everyone
My life became much better since I quit dealing with clients.
user652649
i'm happy for you @webarto dealing with clients is the worst thing that can happen to a programmer
I thought I would acquire more currency directly, but that was just false in my case. I cried out every $.
user652649
not only in your case, it's 2 persons job. dealing with client and developing means offering a bad service / feedback to the customer and bad developing
02:41
Thing is, you can charge e.g. $10.000 for 2 months project, but it quickly becomes 6 months because client is always changing something and you can't charge $30.000 but only (probably) marginally more. No one is going to refund you, and if you get another contract in meantime, you'll end up screwing that one because of the prior one.
user652649
you may get more money, but you are working for two persons, and you are doing both works wrong
user652649
@webarto story of my life :(
@webarto To mitigate scope creep, you should ask the client to sign the requirement document and acknowledge that if any scope creep is introduced, it will be re-estimated
Yeah, and they often treat you like you're their bitch, think if they paid you for something you're their employee, good example is that someone contacts you in evening and request you to do something "urgent".
@Achrome Yes, that sometimes works, but I still couldn't get it right, problem is, when you sit in front of 5 people, alone, they can wolfpack you.
Once they threaten to sue me for not respecting the deal (because of their fault).
@webarto You have to stand by your terms. If they can't agree to it, ask them to kindly fuck off.
A business dealing is a business dealing.
They are not your employers. :)
02:47
Out of 20 projects, maybe 5 were really happy and still are.
I boosted their business etc.
Some people just don't respect what you do and are mean on purpose to lower your price/work.
Accidentally dropping short AK while getting briefcase out of trunk works every time.
Still, you can't get serious money out of it (maybe).
For big projects companies hire companies.
You can, if you go freelancing for big companies.
Contractors make a load of money
How much $ you think that could get you on monthly basis?
i.e. define load of money, freely.
Well, in the US, good programmers working on a contractual basis make roughly $60-100 per hour.
user652649
i often ask myself why we don't get the same respect doctors have, or car mechanics, plumbers.

Doctor: "you have to take these white anonymous pills for a month."
Patient: "ok."

Plumber: "you have a worm hole in your bathroom and there's dennis hopper in it, we need to tear down the whole house"
Client: "ok."

Me: "no, we shouldn't use comic sans"
Client: "no we MUST definitely use comic sans"
Me: "ok."
Not sure how it works in EU though
02:53
There's no such thing as respect, only fear.
@Wes Those clients are the worst.
user652649
:( all clients i had were like that
It's like telling your doctor that all the time he's spent practicing medicine is basically shit because your opinion in the diagnosis and treatment overrides his.
All because you are paying him
@Achrome Can you somehow translate that to monthly outcome, i.e. sum of hours at the end of the month, just asking because that's a shitload of money if it's 40 hours per week, I personally haven't seen anything like it.
@webarto Some contractors put in as much as 50, or even 60 hours a week. However, there's a caveat that they have to handle their insurance and medical bills and dental and all that shit. Which is why they are paid so exuberantly.
user652649
02:57
for some reason they think they can do better than us @Achrome especially when it's about design. they all think they are artists
@webarto So, they have to take care of shit like this. sacramento.cbslocal.com/2014/01/01/…
@Achrome I'm paid "as usual" but I don't have any insurance or anything since they can't employ non USA workers. Medical insurance where I live is $30 per month and I don't have to pay taxes for income.
So you are basically working as an immigrant? :)
@Achrome Yes, that's insane, my father in law operated lung cancer and we paid around $4000 for best doctor in region along with hospital apartment.
@Achrome Well, I'm not in USA, I'm in Bosnia :)
"outside consultant" or "contractor", however you like it.
Cancer bills in US run in hundreds of thousands of dollars.
03:02
Yeah, Walter White knows best :)
So, you take up outsourced work enough to classify you as an employee, but without the benefits of being one. That sucks.
In reality I am full-time employee just like any other, but without and benefits.
It sucks but I still get 10 average salaries (compared to local) in a month. So win-win.
Are you in USA @Achrome?
@webarto I'm in the land of cows.
Ah :) You speak proper English which have me doubt (no offense) :)
I speak proper English because I emphasize on being grammatically correct. :)
03:11
I've done a few freelance jobs.
In each case it was a good experience.
I've had a mixed experience with freelance jobs
I think a lot of the problems you guys face is that you are doing it for primary income which increases pressure and expectations and many other things.
That's true, I can't say it's not. I wanted to go to vacation and this person owed me $1000, I had to push really hard to get the money on time.
So I stalled the same amount of time as he did towards me when he needed me.
That can't be a healthy relationship, but it's business.
My positive experiences are with 3 engineers i.e. smart, successful, and educated people.
Yeah, I took the freelance jobs because both parties were really interested in each other.
When freelance is your job sometimes you just gotta get something to pay bills.
@RonniSkansing yeah, but not fictitious ones. I've been watching all the seasons of Dual Survival, and going to watch the NatGeo mini-series Evacuate Earth. You get the theme I stick to =oP
morning everyone
03:17
Or if you are good enough in various areas, you can charge more per job and work fewer jobs
Morning, cryptic.
Haven't chatted with you in a while.
Yes, perhaps, but I'm getting old and prefer steady income regardless it's not shitload of money.
Oh steady is really nice, definitely.
@crypticツ 'morning
Hey, webarto, don't hesitate to ping me with more practical refactor questions.
I've refactored enough PHP code to write a good book; I just don't have the time or interest to write one ^^
I will, appreciate the help really, surely there will be more questions from me :)
user652649
03:20
@crypticツ ahahah that says everything about you. ready for the apocalypse? xD morning
You should try to be honest, I sometimes want to barf when I see who publishes books.
lol
Are you referring to Paul M Jones' Modernizing Legacy Applications in PHP?
@Wes I'm prepping for it. =oD Got the whole family involved now.
user652649
the cats? or actual persons? xD
@LeviMorrison Hey, I don't want to get stripped of my @php.net awesomeness :P
03:23
I've reviewed portions of the book; it's okay.
It's not the kind of book I would recommend to people and say, "Treat this as your refactor bible."
More like, "This covers some useful stuff; ignore sections X, Y, and Z."
Certainly not, but I feel like it shouldn't be a book if it's not a "bible".
I don't mind paying or anything.
For its value I would say it is priced too high.
Of course, I only read drafts; maybe it got a lot better but I doubt it went through the amount of revision needed to be excellent.
Probaly as these. Find a hype/niche, publish books made of copypasta and boom.
@ircmaxell Proof that I don’t know everything!
This really pissed me off, the guy has a slight clue of something, and wants to teach it to others.
I'm not hating, but at least make sure you fully understand something before you preach.
...
In his defense, teaching something is a great way to learn something better.
I can understand your position, though.
I wanted to say that about you :P
03:40
And also in his defense those tweets are specifically talking about the SPL... maybe you aren't aware of the general consensus about the SPL but it's full of inconsistencies.
Yeah, I'm not picking on him, but came to my mind :) Maybe I don't like that attitude, but that's relative :)
@LeviMorrison why don't you try speaking at conferences for starters? :)
I'd love to do that and I intend to at some point.
I think it would fit you perfectly.
I think I need to attend some PHP conferences before I start speaking, though.
(not a requirement, just how I feel)
Yes, definitely, to feel the vibe.
I still have to visit one, never been to one.
I'm sorry, but "haha". That sounds to me like circuit rider :)
But, good for him :)
@LeviMorrison hey, I vaguely remember you ought to be a father, update? :)
03:53
I turned it down
one: because it conflicts with something I have to do for work
but 2 because no...
@webarto :) He's a beautiful 9 month old baby. He's the happiest baby I've ever known.
Cries so little; it's really nice ^^
two: because you're the superstar, not him
@LeviMorrison /me sheds a tear of joy
:) It's been really wonderful.
@LeviMorrison awesome!!!
I hope you're not putting him to sleep with scotch instead of milk like @DaveRandom does :P
03:57
lol, no, definitely not
I'd be interested to know how many Laravel books Taylor Otwell has sold on Leanpub (aka: how much cash he's soaked people for)
Too many.
Honestly if people are buying Laravel books then that says something more about the Laravel people than it does about Taylor Otwell.
^^ That was my go-to answer, but it's hard to multiply ~24.99 by "too many" ;-)
@LeviMorrison True, it says people will buy anything, and there's always someone willing to sell them anything.
Laravel is the one that uses artisan hogwash, right?
04:06
Jeffrey who was leading editor of NetTuts+ helped him create the buzz.
If only we knew the average tweet-to-conversion ratio
And then Jeffrey quit Envato and start making Laravel tutorials.
@LeviMorrison Yea.
Its like a package manager, but it isn't a package manager.
NetTuts+ is has a huge audience of desperate people.
Yes, @LeviMorrison, desperate is the word for them.
@LeviMorrison Most of his stuff is just ripped out of .NET; I'm pretty sure artisan equates with nuget. Mind you, many environments have similar tools, but I'm pretty sure he's made reference himself to basically creating .NET copypasta.
04:08
@webarto with what they offered me for an article... Sad really...
Now, we can think whatever we want, but there's nothing wrong with that they did, good for them. (Laravel guys)
@webarto I don't care what he did, I care how he did it, and his (and his communities) pompous attitude towards it
@ircmaxell You probably can't disclose the amount, can you?
I CAN @LeviMorrison
$150 - $300... $500 if really high profile.
I charged $1000 so give me some kudos.
@webarto mine was between the first 2. Closer to the first...
04:11
Yeah, it's a decision of editor, for some irrelevant article price is $150.
@ircmaxell What was your topic? Security something
?
something like that, I don't remember
Because I hacked them pretty hard, they didn't want to give me cash on that account, but we made a deal for tutorials on special price.
They know shit about security.
Marketplace (Envato) is dealing with millions of $ and they can't protect basic stuff.
quite sad really
It was Ruby, but they, in php equivalent used $_REQUEST without any tokens, and you could plant images in forums. That was just one of the things, but you could accomplish much.
I think developers were paid nicely, $100k, I guess it's more important to post pictures on twitter etc. than to do something useful.
http://tutsplus.com/amember/login.php?amember_redirect_url="><script>alert('Cus‌​tom WP FTW');</script>
04:20
@webarto Ever seen them offer lower than 150?
@LeviMorrison No, shouldn't happen, $250 should be the price for a bit advanced stuff.
Usually there's a long list of stuff of subjects, and you pick some (assing to yourself in Basecamp) and do it in timely manner.
You send invoice at the end of the month, and they pay you via Paypal (you can withdraw right away).
If you want to write, I can get you access to editorial stuff.
I might be interested.
Anyone know if the @phpdoc type annotations support anonymous functions of a certain format
I don't think the annotations are that advanced yet.
:(
04:23
You just have to comment yourself on the signature.
This is your regular article subject.
*cough-we-need-delegates-cough*
Dan, delegates?
function signiature types
^^ This.
04:25
@webarto How much room is there for formal library construction and design patterns?
@DanLugg I'd say we need function return types first ^^
we need lots of things in php, the thing i like the most is that it seems that they're coming bit by bit
delegate AcceptFooBar(Foo $foo, Bar $bar);

function doStuff(AcceptFooBar $acceptFooBar) { }

doStuff(function (Foo $foo, Bar $bar) { }); // cool
doStuff(function (Foo $foo, Qux $qux) { }); // bork!
@LeviMorrison I don't think anything is off-limits, you can create a topic to write about, take a look here, variety of topics: code.tutsplus.com/software-and-tools/php
@Aren Yes, most of that things were created by people in this room :)
PHP team lingers here?.
04:31
@ircmaxell Dammit! I was getting work done tonight!
@Aren Team, yes, Group, no :)
So far only @JoeWatkins and @bwoebi got on Credits page. @ircmaxell and @NikiC, write some extensions :P
NikiC wrote generators and variadics and he's not on credits page?
04:34
nope, the PHP Group takes all the credit
for doing nothing in a decade, but whatever ;-)
But if you write extension that's bundled, you're in.
What if I am a major maintainer for the SPL?
lol
nope
I really don't care about credits.php, just curious.
04:35
It's not fair to be honest.
Usually when you look at Credits, you think those people are working on it or something.
The turning point for me in PHP was 5.3 with namespaces, it's what brought me back
Lots of good stuff implemented since 5.3, too.
@webarto bring it up
I have no karma whatsoever, but I get your point :)
Well yes, im keeping my project on the latest stable build
04:37
I can bitch about it on internals, this is not place for it.
@webarto So, all the basic sysadmin type stuff is right up my alley for my day job.
I was doing some "how to configure VPS" and I quit there, so yeah, pretty much basic stuff.
It was good source of secondary income for me. Granted it lasted for 2 months, but...
I just suck at writing and explaining in general, so not for me.
0
Q: Scenario for exhausted close votes without using review quota

AchromeConsider the following scenario Daily CV limit : 50 Daily CV limit through review : 40 I cast 15 CVs manually and then proceed to finish my daily CV quota from the review page. I would expect that the CV section on the review page should be closed for me, asking me to continue reviewing after ...

I feel it would be a time-sink for me. I spend a lot of time polishing my writing and am never satisfied.
@LeviMorrison this one was proclaimed best of the month, so you wouldn't have a hard time there :) I'm looking at comments and I'm feeling sick. THAT'S the audience that pays 24.99 for Laravel book :)
04:47
Do you get any kind of perk for best of month?
Maybe a reason to ask more another time, not really, it's not that regulated.
I sold them a collection of 100 php related questions (basically what I gathered for ZCE exam) but in a nicer form, for $1000, I think they haven't used it for a quiz ever (it was for quiz).
Also, if you constantly deliver, like 1 article per week, I think they would pay you more, because they're sure they'll have content and don't need to worry about it.
Also, it can get you some good street cred, 2 or 3 big companies contacted me after my "instagraph" tutorial. Like yaymicro.com, someone from Linkedin, etc.
1 a week?
I could never do that.
I have stressed over the wording of 1 paragraph for a week.
> ImageMagick is command-line Photoshop for web.
^^ Fuck off.
Hah, I know that feeling too well, but you really could, I think I wrote one in a day.
@DanLugg but it's mostly true…
04:53
@DanLugg What, it's not? :P
Yeah but I have a full-time job with a wife and child ^^
Then, forgetaboutit :D
And I still need to prepare RFCs and improve the php.net websites.
I could probably do 1 a month.
$300 would buy plenty of diapers :P
That's around $4000 a year with no sweat.
More like upgrades to my home server. It needs an SSD or two and a GPU upgrade ^^
04:55
I borked @DaveRandom's linkifier
There we go. ^^ lol
> lbennet • a year ago: More filters please, it's a piece of cake for you.
Sounds like your usual client.
@webarto @ircmaxell I am not on the credits page for websites team. I may actually complain about that one.
I nearly single-handedly relaunched PHP.net!
Well, good luck with that :P

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