@JoeWatkins well, if you precompute, sure. But wouldn't that get slightly expensive?
13:44 <cxmu> hello where do i download the old hiphop compiler before i burn your house down
13:44 <cxmu> pls advise thank u kindly
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13:45 ← cxmu was kicked by sgolemon (~sgolemon@facebook/hhvm/sgolemon): cxmu
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@LeviMorrison I expect resistance on the zpp front, but I changed that now, so main things are possible backwards-compatibility concerns and maybe performance
@rdlowrey this one is based on Artax btw: github.com/Ocramius/crate-pdo - we'll be moving it to another organization soon, but I thought you'd be interested to know how your stuff is being used :)
I think it's fair test code though, writing the test to go faster doesn't show us anything if the test is fair ... and since caching anything is going to be such a headache I think we settle for that ...
the question is, is it worth using dedicated utf8 apis from icu .. I really think not ... it makes everything messy ... but to find out for sure i need to do it and measure ... any input appreciated ...
is to store everything UTF8 only. On construction, if the charset is anything but UTF8, convert at that point. Then you only have to worry about a single charset within the object...
@JoeWatkins I think it's fairly safe to say that UTF-8 is required. and that the engine will expect UTF-8. And if you want something different, convert on output
I want to test if a given program is encoding an input using ISO-8859-1. Unfortunately I have no way to verifying the encode being used except the returned bytes.
Is there any character whose code is present in ISO-8859-1 but not in everything else?
@NikiC Infinity isn't really a number, it's more of an error value if anything, so I'd prefer zero here. LONG_MAX would also mean it'd differ across platforms. Plus, FWIW, JS produces 0 here.
@LeviMorrison E_WARNING and gives FALSE, much like a division by zero
I just took a random straw poll of my misses (C# dev) and my next door neighbour (physics nerd) and the general consensus is that logically it should be INF with the sign of the dividend @AndreaFaulds
Interestingly both of these two people who are entirely unaffected by this issue came up with the same answer immediately and independently, which must be worth something in terms of what the average user would expect
All the patch does is make the fpm config file routine dynamically increase the line buffer size while reading the file (hence I'm not sure how to test it properly, there's no way in the current framework to test that stage of the process)
@Ja͢ck OK yeh I see it now, so the way I did it was basically to augment the existing routine so it worked, and it just reused some slightly stupid logic which means that the memset is necessary because of that somewhat stupid thing it does where it adds the \n manually
The realloc does +1 though, so that overflow can never happen
Oh in fact, that's why it does it
It's to account for that fact that the file may not have a terminating newline
The other thing to bare in mind about the memset though is that a) it's only 1024 bytes and b) it only happens when the buffer size is increased, which is only when a line long enough to require it is encountered and c) it only happens during the fpm startup routine, so there is no practical perf hit @Ja͢ck
But yeh, it's somewhat non-optimal, I admit (although it definitely does work)