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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

21:00
@DaveRandom Either .map(), .filter(), etc. Or a for..of loop
Almost never a proper for (let i = 0; i < whatever; i++) { kind of loop
I think I even use while loops more than I use for loops
ah right yeh, the three-part "manual" loop I don't use so much I guess
But even so, the most common cases with collections are covered by the array methods
I'm not a huge fan of the array being realized anew every step, but I guess it's a valid way of doing things
.some() and .every() are especially nice
How often do you find yourself doing something like this
I dislike while loops
foreach ($arr as $key => $value) {
  if (someCondition($key, $value)) {
    return true;
  }
}
return false;
It's stuff like "get this view of the collection but also counts of some other view(s)" where I have seen people write god-awful functional stuff where 15 lines of callbacks could have been written in a 4 line loop
21:03
but I suppose they're useful when tracking a condition that is non-numeric
while is good for tree traversal, most other cases I use for
@DaveRandom Sure, but that's not the common usecase, at least in my experience.
@Tiffany How do you think an iterator is advanced behind the scenes? :)
@MadaraUchiha duh
Also, what @DaveRandom said
oh, I read iterator as incrementor :S
21:07
@DaveRandom Most of the cases is either transforming the collection into another collection (map and filter) or reducing it into one value (some and every for booleans, reduce for the rest)
@MadaraUchiha more common than I intuitively expect, maybe just a product of having done more reporting stuff than maybe some people have? I think it's mostly something that comes with augmenting existing code than writing new code, i.e. "add this new aggregate stat about some other dimension to this existing report"
I admittedly almost never use .forEach, as for..of is more useful in those cases.
@DaveRandom I would expect you to use a getter for that, rather than work with arrays directly.
Some object graph that accurately describes the state, and methods and getters to perform computations on it
Especially in an OO language such as PHP
yeh, I frequently start by using forEach() but end up refactoring it out
.forEach() is nice when you already have a function handy
So you can just do .forEach(doStuff) and be done with it
As opposed to for (const el of els) { doStuff(el); }
But yeah, those array functions are normally meant for short, light transformations
@MadaraUchiha the specific cases I'm thinking about are mostly reading massive unbuffered result sets from multiple rdbms/object stores, the sort of thing where the only practical approach is computing aggregate stats on the fly as you read from the wire, you can't buffer in memory and even if you do buffer you don't want multiple iterations
21:12
@DaveRandom Well, that's what iterators are for
And streams
You wouldn't want to realize 100GB of data into memory, after all.
this is entirely academic in PHP though, functional APIs are basically useless in PHP whil we are stuck with this clumsy-ass anon function syntax
@DaveRandom Not to mention strings and arrays as callables :D
array_map($arr, function($item) { }); <- already unreadable, not even done anything yet
Yeah
I'm actually taking a closer look at C# now that .NET Core is more stable, it's got some pretty clever ideas in it.
foos.Where(foo => foo.IsAwesome).Select(foo => foo.Bar).ToDictionary(foo => foo.ID)
^ that shit is awesome
21:14
@DaveRandom That's not what's awesome about it.
What's awesome about it is that foos might actually be a database context and that thing you just wrote in C# expressions is compiled to SQL for you, executed, and type-checked.
I mean "is more readable than a for loop"
Specifically, access to reified types in runtime is a pretty sweet concept. It enables some pretty powerful reflective programming.
@DaveRandom I wrote a linq-ish thing for PHP a while ago but never progressed it because this
@MadaraUchiha access to what sorry?
@DaveRandom In Java, generic types are erased in runtime.
oh, Java :-P
21:17
All of the generics are checked and verified in compile time, but the Java Bytecode ends up with all of them as type Object
In C#, the CLR is aware of generic types, in runtime
And you can access, and reflect on, the types in your code.
yeh, although largely just as meta-data afaik?
meaning, there's no run-time checks in most cases
@DaveRandom No, as actual instances of System.Type
You can create instances from those, and those reflective methods would also be type checked with the correct constructor params and so on
sure, I mean that they don't exist unless you reflect on it, or do something like as
@DaveRandom They do
like, in most cases the CLR itself isn't using that data at run time
21:19
@DaveRandom I'm actually not sure about that.
It's entirely possible that it does optimizations based on its knowledge of types (i.e. more efficient memory allocation, for example)
me neither, however I do remember reading a lengthy article about this stuff by (I think?) Stephen Cleary
I'm only starting out, so I don't know much about the innards. Yet. ;)
iirc it was reworked for 4.6
no idea about mono though
It's especially nice for things like dependency injection
Oh I have a thing you might be interested in actually, moment
21:21
Instead of having to list each and every one of your controllers in some manifest file referenced by your entry point, you can just say "Yeah, just find me all of the types that inherit from BaseController, and I'll reflect on those"
basically a a set of scripts you can hook the build with, and have it pre-compile the DI bootstrap and spit it out as a separate DLL
@MadaraUchiha you have to be super careful with this unless you are building a monolithic binary, more than once I have been bitten by code which walks down the tree and just assumes that all libs will have been loaded
related, internal is your friend, use it liberally
Yup, it's tricky.
at the class level, anyway
oh and also, without checking, tell me what you expect protected internal to mean @MadaraUchiha
@DaveRandom I'm going to start by pointing out that this is likely a part they stole adopted from Java back when they wanted to be like the cool big (yet slightly slow) cousin.
If I were naive, I'd say that just protected looked at the namespace, and if you had another DLL with the same namespace, they'd have access, but the internal modifier prevents that.
But I'm going to guess it's not that simple 😃
essentially you expect to be protected and internal (which I what I expected) but it's actually protected or internal
i.e. adding a visibility modifier increases the visibility
21:29
Heh
Reminds me of the experiment with the 3 polarized filters
It's one of only two things in C# that I very do not like (that I can think of right now, anyway), the other being that params is a reserved word, even though there's no syntactic ambiguity you can't use it as a symbol name
which is an epic nitpick of a complaint
The amount of light passing through between 2 filters is determined by the cos() of their angles, so between 0 and 90 is 0% of light, but add a third filter in between at 45deg, and you get some light shining through
@DaveRandom Their yield is also rather weak
But given that they have await, I guess the most common use-case for a bidirectional yield is covered.
Hmm, PHP still doesn't have disposers, right?
right, the generator impl is complete, it's just not easy to abuse it for co-op, but it doesn't matter
(a.k.a. C#'s using and Java's try-with-resources)
@MadaraUchiha it's a different concern, destructors are enough
21:33
@DaveRandom I'm... not sure I agree with you on that, there's some overlap
All resources in PHP are managed, so you don't need that separation between resource liveness and refcount
But it's not always the case that an object lifecycle 100% corresponds with the holding and release of external resources.
I may be wrong about that, if you have a case I haven't considered
Say I have a persistent connection pool of database connections
I want to grab a connection, perform a query, and return the connection to the pool after I'm done (regardless of whether the operation succeeded or not)
The connection would still remain open, but would now be open for reuse.
right, in PHP you are limited to the paradigm of object lifetime being hard-coupled to resource lifetime, however I personally have no issue with that, resource re-use is really hard, whenever I have tried I have ended up throwing it out and adding weak refs
or just refactoring
21:38
// With Java after 8, I'd have something like this:
try (PooledConnection conn = dbPool.getAvailableConnection()) {
  // use conn here
  // PooledConnection implements AutoClose, which would signal to the pool that the connection is available
} catch (DbException e) {
  // e will deal with problems with acquiring a connection, releasing it, anything in the try body, or any cobimnation thereof
}
You want to see how that code might possibly look like before Java 8? :D
> PooledConnection implements AutoClose, which would signal to the pool that the connection is available
I smell an IoC violation
The "resource" held by the PooledConnection is, ironically, its connection to the pool
...and mixing evented code with co-op code is bad news
It's entirely possible to phrase it in a way like "it will set off a flag in itself, and .getAvailableConnections() looks for connections with the available flag"
It's not necessarily that AutoClose makes a method call on dbPool.
no I know what you mean, pooledconn is basically just an observable decorator
21:42
PooledConnection conn = null;
try {
  conn = dbPool.getAvailableConnection();
  // use conn here
} catch (DbException e) {
  // e will deal with either acquiring a connection or the body of the try, but not both.
} finally {
  if (conn != null) { // we might have failed acquiring the connection
    try {
      conn.release();
    } catch (DbException e) {
      // e will deal with errors releasing the connection
    }
  }
}
but that works fine in PHP without the explicit handling of resource management, the pooledconn will just be dtor'd when it goes out of scope, you can always just unset() it
That's how the same code looks like before try-with-resources :D
@DaveRandom You could structure it that way I suppose
does java not have null propagation?
@DaveRandom Nope
shame, that's one of my favourite bits of sugar in C#
it's the single biggest pure-sugar thing I want in PHP I think
21:44
@DaveRandom I can't wait for it to reach Stage 3 already, so that TypeScript implements it and then I'd be able to use it in prod :D
I don't pay much attention to ecma, are they doing null propagation and null coalesce?
You could structure it in a way such that ConnectionPool actually holds all the connections, and that .getAvailableConnection is a factory for one such PooledConnection, with a destructure to return the connection to the pool.
@DaveRandom Yes.
Both ?? and .?
It's currently Stage 2 I think
dunno what that means in practice, I assume "will probably happen in a decade or two"
@DaveRandom Once it hits Stage 3, it's pretty much almost guaranteed to make it into the language within the next year or so
imo it's a no-brainer, but ecma does... fucking weird shit
21:46
Stage 0, 1 and 2 still have a chance of being deadlocked on something and stuck indefinitely until some external force is applied
backticks for interpolated strings, srsly wtf
@DaveRandom The semantics are off, especially given ES having two "none" types. (null and undefined)
@DaveRandom What would you have done?
@MadaraUchiha not certain, but I think the 'use strict'; approach is a not-completely-terrible way to deal with it, i.e. you can just fold the ${expr} syntax into existing strings, but only interpolated them if a flag is set
I'm not suggesting a load of stringly typed decls btw
the point is more that there is precedent for declarative behavioural changes
@DaveRandom The problem is that people have been using Douglas Crockford's "supplant" for years
rapid googling, please stand by
21:52
With all of his "Oooooo Avoid™️ The (Bad™️ Parts™️)™️" talk
@DaveRandom Adding a method to String's prototype so that this is a thing:
"foo {bar} baz".supplant({bar: 'world'}); // "foo world baz"
So it isn't unimaginable to think something like this is commonplace:
"Price: ${price}".supplant({price})
And there goes your ${} idea :)
yeh but it doesn't matter if interpolation is disabled by default
@DaveRandom Most modern code runs in strict mode, webpack adds it by default
$"foo {bar}" was also considered (that's what C# does)
But it was deemed too close to the common jQuery patterns for comfort, they feared it would confuse many, and I think the same.
But you know? I don't much mind backticks for this
I prefer that to PHP's "just execute whatever I write here in a shell"
I must admit I think it may be possible to do too much in C# interpolated strings, if you read "Foo {(bar ? "baz" : "qux")}" without a syntax highlighter it's not awesome
But what I truly despise, the only feature I actively hate since ES2015, is the tagged template literals.
yeh those are really weird
21:58
The feature itself is pretty good, it gives you access to the "template", and all of the variables, rather than the resulting string
But the syntax is abysmal
Who in the 9 hells thought that making it a function call, but without the braces would be a good idea?
@MadaraUchiha another JS question: do you use debounce or throttle functions with event-triggered code?
looks like something the lisp crowd would come up with, only the lisp folks generally have some reason which I don't understand but they seem confident in, the ecma tagged thing has no solid reasons behind it afaict
@Tiffany Yes, especially the fast pace ones, like mousemove, resize and scroll.
@MadaraUchiha having flashbacks to VBA/VB6 making a syntactic distinction between Sub and Function at the call site
@MadaraUchiha which should I use for a scroll-related script?
22:00
@Tiffany Depends on the effect you're after.
I mean VB so not a place where you expect sanity, but even so
@MadaraUchiha navbar to scroll to top, and stick
Throttle would execute the function immediately, but no more often than once in every N milliseconds
Debounce would wait for N milliseconds of silence (i.e. no calls), then execute the last.
For example, for a search autocomplete, you'd use a debounce, because you want to wait for the user to finish typing, before sending the autocomplete query.
@Tiffany What browser support?
@Tiffany That sounds like a throttle to me, but answer the question above this one
@DaveRandom Give TypeScript a try one time, it's like JS but sane.
A nice feature I just thought of would be the ability to specify an ID for setTimeout() and setInterval() to prevent duplicate watchers being created and/or replace them, would make all that shit so much easier in userland
@DaveRandom Yeeehhhhh, that's effectively relying on global variables, whereas wrapping things in a Timer class in userland with like 9 LoC is trivial
class Timer {
  set(fn, ms) {} // sets or replaces

  unset() {}
}
22:04
Yeh I just realised a thin proxy API is the way to do that
@MadaraUchiha not sure... I'm going to guess primarily mobile? I don't think there will be many who use oldass browsers
my dad's storage unit business website
@Tiffany Consider position: sticky; with a polyfill
I should add google analytics to his site so I can gauge browser usage
And consider whether you need the polyfill
sticky, not fixed
position: sticky behaves like position: relative until it reaches the threshold defined by top:, and position: fixed after the threshold.
For example...
tipranks.com/stocks/aapl/price-target the sidebar menu here is position: sticky play around with the scroll
@MadaraUchiha neat
that is pretty cool
22:10
You'll need a polyfill if you want to support older browsers
But even if you don't, it just ends up as being position: static and not scroll, it wouldn't be broken or anything
@MadaraUchiha eh, timers are inherently global state, I'd have no qualms about e.g. Schedule.setTimeout(ms, func) and maybe Schedule.getTask(name, qSize = 1, dupe = SCH_IGNORE | SCH_REPLACE_HEAD | SCH_REPLACE_TAIL | SCH_THROW).setTimeout(...)
looks like support for sticky is decent. IE 11 doesn't support it, but not sure how many users will have that
@DaveRandom Sure, but then again, most of JS is global state.
The only reason it's not global state is because we avoid it :)
s/JS/GUI/
You wrap your timers in a class, you don't put data on the DOM, but rather allow for a DOMNode to be passed in your constructor/function, etc.
22:13
Process Name has lots of null appended – #77044
Otherwise, we might as well be back in 2008 for all the good that'd do.
it would do wonders for productivity, in some cases...
@Tiffany We cared, our fintech site is mostly used by non-techies and IE11 has a relatively higher use-rate with us (like 5-6%?) so we cared.
But if you don't, feel free to drop the polyfill.
@DaveRandom Look
When PHP code looks bad, you want to kill someone.
When JS code looks bad? You mostly want to kill yourself.
@MadaraUchiha I probably will have to care, because I"m guessing most people will be using IE 11
I've seen PHP horrors, and I've seen JS horrors. At least in PHP it's not trivial to alter stdlib objects.
22:16
wait... did PHP make... progress? I remember reading PHP code that make me want to kill myself but actually I haven't seen any in a while
just stay away from looking inside fpdf and it's fine
damn, watching Classic Tetris World Championship, there's a 16 year old kid in the top 4
everyone else is like 35<
the kid is 16, what's everyone else's excuse? :-P
@DaveRandom there's this one Japanese dude who's really fucking good
he's playing him now
@DaveRandom ...says the guy who has an active game of 2048 which has a 2097152 tile on the board
it's cool, it's tetris that was on NES, but someone reimaged the 8-bit detail into HD, and added some statistic information
22:20
ffs you just reminded me of something I need to do, brb 10 mins
I'm wondering if it's possible to perfectly play Tetris and still end up losing.
max is 999999 I guess
I would expect that the difficulty level is only bounded by integer overflow, so it's a question of whether level 255 (or whatever) is playable, if so then it would presumably wrap back round to the beginning
@Tiffany display-wise maybe, it's unlikely that's enforced logically though
@DaveRandom I guess level 30 is the "unplayable" level
22:27
I'm not intimately familiar with the inner workings of tetris, but I do know that many/most of those games just don't enforce bounds of score/difficulty etc, they were built with the assumption that no-onw would get there, and in some cases adding checks would be in danger of making the program too big to fit in the hardware ROM
@Tiffany lol @ the sounds the narrators make
there was a AI team at manchester uni a few years ago where they just gave it a load of old arcade games and for almost all of them it figured out that the best way to win is to make something overflow and break the game
holy shit
I don't think I've ever heard someone so excited about Tetris.
But that was a pretty epic game.
@DaveRandom to be honest, I'm not either, but just listening to the commentators and doing a bit of googling, I found out that level 30 was the max
22:29
@MadaraUchiha have you seen the marblympics?
Those single frame spins, wow.
okay, I was wrong, it is possible to get above 30
do you think that guy in the back of the shit knows he's on a live stream?
@Tiffany apart from anything else, I'd be surprised if it wasn't a power of two
right, actually brb
Green Tea makes a lot of great faces
he's very animated while playing
I wish I could see their hands...
@Tiffany next time please add , this shit is such a productivity killer :-P
22:44
@DaveRandom it's the weekend!
time is irrelevant down here in the rabbit hole
I don't really smoke any more, but I have seriously considered making an exception so I can get high af and spend a day watching the marbleympics
@DaveRandom lol
I used to love getting stoned and watching curling as well
damn
Am I right in thinking that the behaviour of this is guaranteed in C99? #lazyweb
switch (foo) {
    case 1: stuff(); break;
    default: if (cond) break;
    case 2: case 3: other_stuff(); break;
}
23:10
grand finals
23:41
^ I smell a BGP leak, I can't reach any of the asia-pacific php.net mirrors either
holy crap, the 16 year old won
that guy looks a little bit like simon pegg and now I can't not see it
lol, can't have an after party at a bar
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