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Wes
Wes
15:00
@JoeWatkins why? you just need the exception in the __constructor, and possibly __wakeup kind of things
that's not really how it works though ...
@ircmaxell If I have a private Body $body and a flag guarding whether body is ready or not… if ($ready) { return $this->body; } else { throw ...; } … the object API is fully stable, regardless of whether body is actually set or not.
Wes
Wes
yes i can grasp why it's hard @JoeWatkins
@bwoebi If you need a flag, just make it nullable.
@ircmaxell body must not be null though. I never want this function returning null.
@kelunik that's why simple examples suck … but that flag might guard multiple things and you don't check for $this->body …
15:03
gotta go afk ... will think ...
And it has the advantage to actually fail if $this->body is accessed and being not set.
3v4l.org/2QPtF < Would be nice if $expr ?? throw new Exception worked.
Wes
Wes
function raise(Throwable $e){ throw $e; } is a must @kelunik
@ircmaxell in general typed properties mean: this is the type I'll get when I access it. The internal state is unaffected. It shouldn't leak to userland. If for some reason I can't get the type I asked for, then it should fail.
Wes
Wes
no @bwoebi because while one happens immediately when you instantiate a class, the other may appear in a subtle case that is guaranteed to happen in production
which is the fundamental problem with nullable references
15:12
@Wes not sure what you're trying to tell me
@JoeWatkins so you're trying to figure out how to get uninitialised properties to work?
@JoeWatkins my suggestion: make typed properties without default values start as IS_UNDEF
Wes
Wes
@bwoebi you construct the instance, fields types are not fulfilled? you get an error and you fix it. if you allow that to be possible there could be bugs (missing isset()s, etc) left unseen even after massive testing
@tereško trust you to bring this up in room 11 :/
Wes
Wes
coffee time
15:20
tea time
@Wes and otherwise we have the inverse problem … something which never should be null when accessed, has to be set nullable … which then leads to bugs.
coke time
@Andrea so .. you are saying it didn't make you facepalm?
Wes
Wes
@Jimbo hm, good idea. black or earl gray?
@Wes Black, flavoured? I have a ginger loose tea and it's terrific
Wes
Wes
15:22
ahah, so british
@tereško I should probably read the full paper before responding, but it's not really as absurd as you might think
@Wes green
Wes
Wes
green gives poor boost
you must be buying really bad green tea
glaciers melt because of humans. humans make glaciers melt because of human factors. gender, as with every other imaginable facet of sociology, has some role there
Wes
Wes
15:23
does it contain caffeine?
@tereško i'm not even buying it as i don't like it :P
actually, glaciers melt all the time. That's how some of the rivers work :) It the replenishment of the ice that is the issue
sure
climate change is a classic case study in the rich screwing over the poor, in some respects
won't be long before some island nations cease to exist
that's not entirely true, because some of the major polluters are the "developing countries"
mind that a lot of that is driven by western consumption
Wes
Wes
@Jimbo you are british. is there such a thing as tea as concentrated as espresso. that's how i drink it (up to 5 tea bags in a single cup)
15:27
and while China is certainly developing, it's much bigger and richer than the tiny island countries which won't exist soon
@Wes There's coffee flavoured tea
Haven't tried it though
But you can concentrate the tea by leaving it to stew for longer
@Andrea I don't care about tiny island coutries. They are unsustainable anyway.
huh?
@Wes Sounds more like turkish tea to me
Wes
Wes
lol
15:30
there's larger fry from climate change as well, though
it's one of the reasons for the Syrian Civil War
climate changes and ruins your agriculture, country becomes unstable
reason for Syrian war is USA's plan to balkanize middle east: globalresearch.ca/…
it has multiple causes, it's not black and white
Syria was one of the most developed countries in that region, before USA begun fucking up the region
the US is partly to blame but the problems date back to the Ottomans and the British and French empires really
Sykes–Picot etc.
USA is where terrorism comes from
15:34
why not just blame Romans?
@tereško because they didn't cause the problems
actually, the Caliphate was probably more of a problem for the Romans than vice-versa
PHP anyone?
3
Neh thanks. I just ate @Gordon
@Gordon how many Philippine pesos are you willing to sell?
;)
@PeeHaa speaking of eating. I will drive here now: google.de/maps/@51.1968234,7.0775435,3a,75y,97.82h,73.86t/…
15:38
Holy fucking mekka batman!
@PeeHaa I didn't know Bruce Wayne went on Islamic pilgrimage
That can't be good ..
@PeeHaa :D
@PeeHaa also an asian transgender bat-kin (because making new superheroes is too hard, let's just mess with the existing ones)
15:40
Are we really discussing politics and stuff here now? That can't end well.
@DamienOvereem blame @tereško
mv $religion /dev/null ... 95% of the worlds wars solved.
not really
@DamienOvereem My religion are spaces
religion is but a means to an end
15:43
@DamienOvereem mv $brainwashing /dev/null 95% of world wars solved…
We're off-topic more than usual today.
Please reign it in a little.
@LeviMorrison morning
As long as people stop thinking and simply follow a 2000+ year old book to the letter with "guidance" from an expert the world is doomed. Hell, you would agree if the book was PHP for dummies and the expert was w3schools.
@LeviMorrison @JoeWatkins needed the break from @Wes
@bwoebi Morning. I've been here for 40m just not talking ^_^
15:44
hmm
@DamienOvereem not that newer shit, like scientology, is any better
> 21.9KB/s
^ that has been my day
Wes
Wes
@PeeHaa eat a d.
@LeviMorrison wow… you didn't say anything about typed properties even though you were here…
For some reason I don't believe anyone really believes in scientology. My guess is they are all just in it for the laughs and giggles.
15:44
@Wes :P
@bwoebi I've gotten better at restraining myself :)
@PeeHaa that's quite fast for coding… I wish I'd produce meaningful code at that speed too.
@DamienOvereem have you seen this: youtube.com/watch?v=IaUhR-tRkHY ?
hmm
@bwoebi Yeah. A tad less fast for a mailserver though ;)
15:46
nope, but watchin
@PeeHaa hehe
class Foo {}
const Bar = Foo;
waits for Levi to pounce on the bait
/me runs
ugh. much truths
!!separate symbol tables blurb
15:47
:D
hehe
@DamienOvereem watch it all an report in :)
why cant connect to my account using PASSWORD mysql function
@undefined try sacrificing one more chicken
here is the query $query="select userid,username,usertype,userper,usercent,userfrom,userto,usermon,userfname from userdt
        where username = '$uname' and userpass=$old_p"."PASSWORD('$upass') and usercent='$uucent' and userdel=1 and usertype!='I'";
15:48
Don't use that crap mysql hashing
@undefined dont use PASSWORD() function
alright its an old project coded in 2003
Go back in time and punch yourself
that's not a good enough excuse
It was stupid then it is stupid now
15:49
don't
Perhaps even stupidier then, because it used md5 back then?
Or did I just make that one up?
Hello
@undefined While you are looking into that code might as well start migrating it to fix it php.net/manual/en/function.password-hash.php
@tereško @PeeHaa problem solved thank you
Does anybody here know Yii 1.1?
I'm trying to sort a GridView by what a method in the model returns, but I'm not successful.
The examples here: yiiframework.com/wiki/590/… all tell me that I should describe how to sort the result of the method in SQL, but that's simply not possible.
SQL is not able to describe this kind of sorting because the generated field is recursive.
Kinda scary stuff isnt it
The model has a method $model->public_id(), which does recursion in a parent-child relationship in the table.
@AnmolRaghuvanshiVersion1.0 o/
To generate things like UC1.2.4.5
@DamienOvereem Yeah
15:54
I stand corrected it was something called "MySQL323"
that sounds exceedingly trustworthy
lol
Perhaps I should ask this on Stack Overflow
@Shoe how does "no success" look like?
Damn scary function overloading
> The old_passwords system variable controls the password hashing method used by the PASSWORD() function.
15:57
5 mins ago, by Shoe
The examples here: http://www.yiiframework.com/wiki/590/sort-and-filter-a-custom-or-composite-cgrid‌​view-column-that-may-even-contain-data-from-different-tables/ all tell me that I should describe how to sort the result of the method in SQL, but that's simply not possible.
5 mins ago, by Shoe
SQL is not able to describe this kind of sorting because the generated field is recursive.
It looks like this ^
@tereško Most concepts in that video are well known, but its pretty nicely explained in this vid
My Client server has php 5.4 :(
@Shoe I have no idea what you are trying to say with that
Reinforces the concept that humans are a whole lot dumber then we think ourselves :) At the core we are still ants stupidly following a set path
15:59
lol! Guess what the current mysql password function does...
@tereško The model has a method public_id() which is generated using PHP and other variables that cannot be known by SQL. And I need to sort the results of search (from the CActiveRecord) by that method.
function mysql_41_password($in) {
    $p = sha1($in, true);
    $p = sha1($p);
    return '*'. strtoupper($p);
}
I don't want to live on this...
The way they describe sorting implies that I need to code the sorting logic in SQL. That's simply not possible.
I wonder why they do 2 rounds
Because the data in the database is not the only thing determining the result of that method.
16:02
@PeeHaa Because hashing something twice is more secure of course. /sarcasm
6
Hello !
@PeeHaa obviously, to decrease the entropy :)
@Trowski well, actually … it is … brute force is taking longer :-D
@tereško does it actually decrease it?
@bwoebi yes. And introduces another round of possible collisions.
function secure_pw_hahs($s) { return md5($s + password_hash($s, 1)); }
16:09
now you just being mean, @Andrea
@tereško I want to update a punch of table in the same mysql query is there a loop or something to do that in phpmyadmin ?
@tereško actually, that just helps if you're going to aim for any preimage.
$ php -r 'function secure_pw_hahs($s) { return md5($s + password_hash($s, 1)); } var_dump(secure_pw_hahs("ircmaxwell"));'
string(32) "cfcd208495d565ef66e7dff9f98764da"
@tereško good pasword hahs y/y
@bwoebi A salt is needed to be effective though.
maybe I should use this code in a project to troll Scott
16:11
@Trowski I'm not disputing this.
of course it has a fatal flaw which I hope you have noticed
@bwoebi brute force on YOUR code does, but you want to limit tries on your code anyway. It does not however introduce much for when you have some sort of leak....
(please tell me you've noticed the problem)
@undefined you can write an SQL procedure
Anonymous
lol
'The last 3 days I suffer on a task. Google refuses to help. The problem follows.' http://stackoverflow.com/questions/35896748/php-find-the-lowest-day-among-randomly-generated-dates-in-the-array
16:12
@Andrea yes, the + ^^
@bwoebi correct :D
@tereško thank you a lot
$ php -r 'function secure_pw_hahs($s) { return md5($s + password_hash($s, 1)); } var_dump(secure_pw_hahs("bwoebi"));'
string(32) "cfcd208495d565ef66e7dff9f98764da"
$ php -r 'function secure_pw_hahs($s) { return md5($s + password_hash($s, 1)); } var_dump(secure_pw_hahs("ajf"));'
string(32) "cfcd208495d565ef66e7dff9f98764da"
$ php -r 'function secure_pw_hahs($s) { return md5($s + password_hash($s, 1)); } var_dump(secure_pw_hahs("paragonie"));'
string(32) "cfcd208495d565ef66e7dff9f98764da"
@Nanne well, if you can reduce the double hashing to a simpler operation than actually doubly applying the hash, yea…
apply a few trillion rounds of SHA256
16:14
@Andrea looks like md5(0)
the main problem with user table leaks and weak hashing though is pregenerated tables alongside with username and email…
I can't bring myself to make this exceptional code
<?php
class Manager {
	private Dependency $d,
			 Dependency $s,
			 Dependency $n;
	private Resource $r;

	public function __construct(Dependency $d, Dependency $s, Dependency $n) {
		$this->d = $d;
		$this->s = $s;
		$this->n = $n;
	}

	public function connect() {
		$this->r =
			new Resource($this->d, $this->s, $this->n);
		return true;
	}
}
it'll be very very slow unless you use bitcoin mining hardware
@nikita2206 yep
I want to make a distinction between a dependency that is required to construct an object in a valid state, and a resource, which an object may use during the course of runtime ...
@JoeWatkins check on read
16:15
I can see no reason you should type one and not the other ...
in fact you don't even need a new branch
@JoeWatkins as said, I'm completely on your side
make typed properties start life as IS_UNDEF
@Andrea we're talking about making constructors throw exceptions if typed properties are unset ...
when you get to the undefined property branch, check if typed and throw an exception
@JoeWatkins oh, hmm, I'm not sure if that's a good idea
16:16
@Andrea you can use it to really optimize user login speed
yes, we already do that, for uninitialized typed props, we're just talking about ctors ...
@Andrea me neither ...
wellll
if the property isn't set in the constructor then you probably ought to mark it nullable?
because it could conceivably be null during the object's lifetime
that is the domain of another rfc
@Andrea which only matters if you ever access it being null
you can never access null on a typed property ... in case not clear ...
16:18
@bwoebi I suppose so
@Andrea but if your code is nicely guarded, that should never happen
but having an object, now constructed, with fields that are uninitialised seems bothersome
well why should it be more bothersome just because we know the type ?
what do Java and C# do here? I think they have some facility for this
@Andrea it really depends on whether we're talking idealized code or not…
16:19
@Andrea IIRC they suck at this
'cause they allow nulls in typed props/parameters
ohh right
I forgot about that
@Andrea example: github.com/amphp/aerys/blob/body_buffering/lib/… … I don't initialize $queryVars in ctor, but lazily when needed via $this->queryVars ?? $this->queryVars = $this->parseQueryVars(); … but the $queryVars property never should be actually null while used. If I were to use $this->queryVars without guard somewhere, it should fail.
@bwoebi I suppose that's fair
it's a bit like if you had a nullable property and assume it's not null in those places
it would error anyway
@bwoebi what you'd do in that case with non-nullable fields is use Option datatype
@nikita2206 I was thinking that
16:24
@Andrea it wouldn't error because array access on null just returns null ;-)
@nikita2206 may you please recall me its exact semantics?
Wes
Wes
@bwoebi Nullable<int> $foo
if($foo->hasValue){}else{}
in Haskell you could say some field is maybe some value, say queryVars :: Maybe [String], then unpack it with let (Some qv) = queryVars myRecord, and if queryVars wasn't a Some (i.e. had a value) and instead was a Nothing (i.e. had no value), it'd throw a fatal error
Wes
Wes
just that
@Wes oh, no don't get me started with that crap.
@bwoebi it's a tagged union with two states, Some(value) or None. At first you initialize it as None, then you create a Some(value) when the time comes
16:26
Swift has this too, but with more C-ish syntax :)
Swift does so much stuff right, I love it. I need to write some code in it some day.
Wes
Wes
@bwoebi how is that different from isset() ?
(Swift-to-PHP compiler???)
Wes
Wes
do it!!!1
@Wes the problem is that you actually need to getValue() to actually get its value.
more likely that I'll write a PHP-to-JS compiler. Well, write another one. I've written two before, neither are very good
ElePHPants Love Coffee has a fun name but is a giant, ugly hack
16:27
Basically Option/Maybe is more explicit than just by-default-nullable reference types
Recki-CT is dead and only useful for a tiny subset of PHP code
@Andrea I'm not quite a fan of explicit unpacking here…
Wes
Wes
sorry joe :(
@bwoebi then you're not making it explicit your code could throw an error there
16:28
@Wes that was for recki
@Andrea why should I?
it's an error if an error happens there anyway.
Wes
Wes
still i'm sorry :D i know i ruined your day :P
you really haven't ...
Wes
Wes
idk, i feel this is important to do right
I'm not going to make normal code exceptional ...
16:32
So yeah I'm fine with making public int $foo; be set to IS_UNDEF. Where the "Undefined property" notice would be triggered, check if the property is typed and throw a TypeError.
@bwoebi I think the point is more of if it will be implicit there will be a lot of code with null-pointer dereference ($this->nullYet->execute()) while if it's explicit people tend to not forget this sort of checks... Also by making them nullable you cannot declare property as non-nullable - it's the one-way ticket. But if you make it non-nullable then you can emulate nullableness with Option/Maybe data types
I can see a way to do it for userland objects, and internal ones can probably be hacked together in zend_call_function, or some other place ... user ctor is already detected by leave helper in vm, so there's even a branch to do it in ... but it would be wrong to do it that way ...
Should work reasonably
that's already how it works @Andrea ;)
Incidentally we might want to do this even for nullable properties, but that might be a bit surprising
@JoeWatkins great :D
16:33
I think there should just be a distinction between properties that should be set upon initialization of an object and those that shouldn't. That way you can enforce non-nullableness on certain properties while still retaining easy way to make 'lazy-initialized typed properties'
What there were nullable types, so you could declare a property as private ?int $foo?
@nikita2206 that means we have to add a way to specify this, though
@Andrea yeah. For example in Java (I'm pretty sure C# must support it too) it's enforced with final keyword
the pitfall of lazy initialisation is a property may end up never being initialised
I can imagine this causing nasty bugs with long-lived objects
this is one of the problems that type declarations ought to prevent
Wes
Wes
@Andrea do you really want that kind of errors to happen at random, rather than after construction?
16:39
they won't be a random ...
Good luck ?
Wes
Wes
exactly
oh well, typed properties do solve that ...
it's not really luck, you will get an exception ...
comes with much useful information ...
I'm saying that uninitialised typed properties create a variant of this problem
16:40
@Trowski that would be better than java's final. It's better when nullableness is opt-in, rather than opt-out
You have a broken dependency (an uninitialised property, in this case), and it causes an error down the line, but it may be difficult to figure out how the object came to not be fully initialised
But I suppose this issue exists for nullable properties too, so...
to be clear, if myDependency had a type, you would get an exception on the first line of ctor ...
yes
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins can't you wrap the constructor into another function that temporarily disables the checks? it's annoying that this can't be done :(
@Andrea On the other hand, if you actually gave a type for the dependency...
16:42
TranslationDataCollectorMessageFetcher implements TranslationCollector What have I just done I'm a monster
maybe I shouldn't have posted that slide, I'm not talking about that specific issue
Basically a lot of programmers don't reach for classes for things where they should and reach for classes when they shouldn't.
I'm worried that lazily initialised properties create a similar type of bug
@nikita2206 the big difference though is that unlike Java you can't get null by default…
I am looking for teaching resources for semaphores and mutexes and I find stuff like this:
16:45
@Andrea create a HHVM-like AOT typechecker if you need that… ;-D
This slide from my presentation amuses me still:
On stage, I said what I thought that function took and returned, from memory
What I said was wrong.
Goes to show that type declarations are useful :p
@Andrea I was worried about what I said on stage too, but turns out people are rooting for you and only correct you afterwards to better help you next time :-)
I gotta do real life stuff, lata all ...
@Jimbo "Jimbo, I hate to break it you, but everything you just said is wrong. Just wrong."
16:48
@NikiC Is alright mate, I got a free conference ticket and a load of free food, I'm good!
ps I'm not a hobo
// what I thought the type was:
renderLetterPreviews(array<\StdClass> $letter): array<resource>

// what the type actually was:
renderLetterPreviews(\StdClass $letter): array<resource>
Wes
Wes
@Andrea it's about moving the problem to another place. ok, the error is going to show up eventually, but it could be a subtle, hard-to-spot case, as opposed to having it immediately showing up after construction.
@Wes exactly
as I put it in the talk, it's a ticking time-bomb
Wes
Wes
yeah
@Andrea But everybody loves bombs
16:52
@NikiC yeah, if I find them.
@NikiC buy the print: kareprints.com/bomb
user924016
moooornings
… nah
Wes
Wes
it's an advancement if compared to what we have now (nothing), though
16:55
evening

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