thinking-out-loud "?:=" operator, short-ternary/assignment. Use case "return $this->foo ?:= new Foo();" is equivalent to "return $this->foo ?: $this->foo = new Foo();"
@LeviMorrison A 3 character operator isn't that bad either; if we ever had a null coalesce operator, I'd hope it'd be "??" with a null coalesce/assign being "??="
If you do this $object?.property?.value, what are the chances that next line will work? I feel like you should be explicitly handling null conditions there.
Nah, I'd rather just see a port of the C# null coalesce operator with an assignment variant; as well as an assignment variant of the "falsey coalesce operator" (which I know isn't a thing, but that's pretty much how it works)
The "if a isn't falsey, gimme a, otherwise gimme a after making it not falsey" use-case is what I'd like to see an assignment variant for. All the talk of null coalescence is neat too, and I think that's be cool, but the "falsey" testing is far more ubiquitous in PHP (seemingly) and as a result, I think there'd be far more benefit to the terser syntax of an assignment version.
Also @ircmaxell I honestly don't think a unary coalesce is that useful.
@DanLugg this entirely depends on what you are writing and how, I don't like use cases for this reason, it's a perfectly good idea, but because we can all imagine another way to do it, maybe several, our response is "do it like this instead" ...
I don't think it's clear, which is a separate thing to usefulness
we only have so many reasonable characters we can use as operators ... and we seem to be using most of them already ... now when we want a new functionality we have to come up with strange stuff like ?:=
@PeeHaa Nope just visiting friends for the "big game" between our respective universities' american football teams. I will be consuming beer like a 20-year old frat boy. Reliving my early adulthood, basically.
I reversed the work on async stuff, I do think I can make it work, i saw your concern the other day and didn't have a solution to the snippet you gave ... but I'll come back to it ... it's "my thing", I should be able to do it ...
yh done, and 64bit stuff, and settled ... can start new patching now ...
should be a no brainer for 7, I don't see it getting any resistance at all there ...
we are almost too positive that 7 will be able to do anything, bit like we could propose anything right now and 7 seems so far in the future we are all just shouting yes ...
it would have but we don't want to implement it twice, 7 is a different animal, I don't intend to maintain any code for 5 and 7 ... and trying to maintain a patch at the compiler ... I don't even want to imagine a way to do that ...
I think if we get our heads together and implement those things that have been argued about the last 5 years, users have more incentive than they ever had before to adopt 7 quickly ..
Hahaha, I'm such a noob. I have no idea what I'm doing in this grammar language, especially not now with AST changes. When I ask someone for help and provide my code they're just gonna laugh :D
In computer science, BNF (Backus Normal Form or Backus–Naur Form) is one of the two main notation techniques for context-free grammars, often used to describe the syntax of languages used in computing, such as computer programming languages, document formats, instruction sets and communication protocols; the other main technique for writing context-free grammars is the van Wijngaarden form. They are applied wherever exact descriptions of languages are needed: for instance, in official language specifications, in manuals, and in textbooks on programming language theory.
Many extensions and variants...
I don't really know what the bracketed part means: variable { $$ = $1; } I understand that $1 is the first variable defined (coincidentally variable in this case) and the bracketed expression contains instructions to be executed... but that's about it.