I have in mind an example for that, @NikiC - imagine that you have some base class and you're binding some handler, which extends functionality of that class. You're doing that in custom 1-2 places, so you don't want to have entire extending handler
@ircmaxell I'm actually not even sure it can. @JoeWatkins seemed to have issues with class redeclarations when the same code path is taken twice (if I got that right)
Imagine having a doubly linked list class. Where you have nodes stored as classes. Nobody outside of the DLL class needs the "node" class, so you can create a private factory method which returns a constructed anonymous class...
@NikiC it's how it's being discussed that's the problem. Stas has the habit of using disarming wording, which means that it basically ends the discussion right at that point (there's no way to counter it). You did the same here. It's not good or healthy to a discussion
Well, it's how it's presented. You could have said "The potential for abuse scares me". It distinguishes that it's your opinion, and that others may disagree. It opens for "why does it scare you" vs being an absolutist or generalist comment
Ok, in that case, what specifically scares you? Or what specifically about using anonymous classes as private classes do you think is dangerous (or bad)?
@ircmaxell The fact that you are giving up a meaningful name (and all that comes with it, like typehints), just for the sake of visibility handling. Visibility handling seems a rather minor concern. Just add a /** @private */ declaration or a _ before the class name or something.
@NikiC Well, it's an implementation detail. It's less about visibility than about keeping the abstraction where it needs to be. And in the cases I'm referring to, type hinting (even protected or private methods) may be going too far... DLL may be a bad example, but...
after all, isn't that what a generator is? You can, by definition, do everything a generator does with an iterator... It's just a PITA. This is the same, although it's less of a pita and more just "yet another named class to maintain"...
@ircmaxell For the record, I'm not arguing that "you can already do it this way" is a bad reason to decline something. Otherwise we'd have stayed with assembly. I'm more arguing whether anon classes really offer a better way.
@MadaraUchiha also recursing over an array is far more convenient and easy with iterators than with procedural code. and let's not forget append and multipleiterators
@NikiC well, to be honest, I think I'd rather have first-class anonymous classes... $foo = class {}; which could then open meta programming doors... But this would be very useful as well
@ircmaxell but they always say that such things as eval (which obviously can provide any kind of code's modification at runtime since dealing with it as with string) are evil
If I am routing everything through index.php and I have a function to explode the URL to help decided stuff... where would you store that function? Or name... basically helper functions. A routing class perhaps?
Well my thinking is that if routing is application specific it should sit inside application. But my composer is in library because composer is mostly 3rd party. But I would like to use composer for autoloading. So I can either move it in to application or have a second autoloader for my application.
you could have one autoloader for 3-rd party stuff, and one usual autoloader - that's a sample. You should then store all 3-rd party libraries in one place - and, perhaps, have data structure (such as config or array) so your loader will know where to search
Is anyone familiar with how PHP internally manages memory? If I'm passing a large array from one function to another, will a pass-by-reference reduce the load?
So the way I do it is not the good way? ( I am new to do this because I had a very large SQL file and I didn't know how to import it.. and the solution I posted worked). But there is a better way then...
I have journeyed thus and bruised into the lands of the error page on Stack Overflow. There, upon the hill I see a vision as such:
For those reading with images off:
# define v putchar
# define print(x) main(){v(4+v(v(52)-4));return 0;}/*
#>+++++++4+[>++++++<-]>++++.----.++++.*/
print(202*2...