Ideally you would "reuse the recorded resolution" with rerere:
In a workflow employing relatively long lived topic branches, the developer sometimes needs to resolve the same conflicts over and over again until the topic branches are done either merged to the "release" branch, or sent out and...
I don't want to stop your conversation but I want to ask something about PSR Standards, because I know that you know it better than me. So here's the question: Can I lowercase namespace? I'm using a Windows, that's the reason why I'm asking (case sensitive filesystem)
@VeeeneX it really doesn't matter whether you use UPPERCASE or lowercase or TitleCase or camelCase or CrAZyWtFcaSInG as long as you make sure the files names match the casing
Treat every file system as case-sensitive and you can't go wrong
Also @VeeeneX take PSR specs with a pinch of salt anyway, when it comes to coding style. As long as your code is mechanically interoperable then you don't have a problem. It doesn't matter that you follow the style guide as long as you follow a style guide for a specific project, and ensure than all people contributing to the project follow the same rules.
@Ja͢ck Well the point is that if you have a global class map for everything in the project, you don't need a huge autoloader stack, one for each component (which is what PSR-4 generally implies, although it doesn't need to). You make every load operation O(1) and potentially eliminate a bit of fcall overhead.
Component-level class maps with separate loaders don't gain you much, if anything, though
@VeeeneX No I'm talking about composer and the --optimize-autoloader argument, which generates class maps for PSR-[04] projects as well. You should still follow a one-class-per-file layout where file names match the class namespace/name, but in production it's still a good idea to generate a class-map based autoloader as it's faster
In this question I would like to discuss a problem related to building a collection of homogeneous objects from a class using a transformer function that transforms a passed array or other sort of collection. The problem lies in the fact that I want to persist most clean code as possible and at t...
I really flit back and forth on this particular issue, I mean the argument that generics do not belong in a dynamically typed language really does hold a lot of water
But I still want them
If we get scalar type hints then I think there's more chance than people will come around to the idea of generics eventually
When you stand back and look at it objectively though, some elements of the concept of generics are directly at odds with the idea of dynamic typing. But that is also true of a lot of the classical OOP model, which we already have quite a bit of, so...
@JoeWatkins Indeed they are not, mechanically. But I do think that if they existed, and people got used to them, it would soften the nay-sayers on other strong typing concepts.
it has to be supported by the language if you want it to be usable in the real world, you can of course write collection classes, but they'd be horrible ...
@JoeWatkins I am fully aware that what you say makes logical sense, but politically... it ain't gonna happen in that order. Look at what happened with typed arrays...
@JoeWatkins They would be less horrible if type hints were covariant
:18632872 Yes, the fact that hack already has what is basically generics works strongly in our favour here I think. People will come around, it's just a question of time.
Although at the moment there's something of a mentality of people using the "just because hack does it, doesn't mean we have to" which people are taking too far the other way - arguing against things purely because hack does it, regardless of merit
@JoeWatkins If it only applied to objects (which would be the case without strong scalar types anyway) you could just forbid references. There's almost no reason to ever pass an object by reference anyway, the only reason you would is if you were doing a dirty hack that would be an epic violation of at least one SOLID principle
Anthony makes a good point though, regarding scalar methods, but the same applies to scalar hints ... the only sensible option is to cast yes, but, that does indeed change the nature of php, up until now, now included, we care about context, we don't care about types ... if we introduce scalar hints or methods we have to care about types, what happens if you call ::length() on a float is the same question as what happens if you hint for a string and get a float ... there are no good answers
to these questions ... and if we compromise, we will do it wrong ...
increasingly I think better to ignore it entirely ...
just don't bother with either ....
in ng, objects are hella fast
if you want a string class so you can hint for strings then have a string class ... simple ...
I personally just see scalar hints as syntax sugar. I regularly write code that casts arguments to a specific type at the top of the function, being fully aware of the casting rules and how this will behave. If you want something that is int-ish, just use docblocks like you always did and ignore the fact that the hints exist at all
probably, and I'd vote in favour of any implementation that made sense, so long as an implementation casts in the same way as zpp, then it's compatible and good enough, but, that's not to say I would deploy it, ever ... and would rather we worked on stuff that is sensible ...
@AndreaFaulds True, but what users want should be determined first. Internals people (should) vote on whether or not they like the implementation of a feature that has been previously agreed upon.
> SQLSTATE[22021]: Character not in repertoire: 7 ERROR: invalid byte sequence for encoding "UTF8": 0xef3033 HINT: This error can also happen if the byte sequence does not match the encoding expected by the server, which is controlled by "client_encoding".
user2862309
If I make a separate collection class then it's decoupled from the class itself so I have to call it with some strings which is dirty
@Mr.Meshuggah It's the only way, in PHP, if you want to avoid a static call like that. You can use ConcreteClass::class to avoid writing an actual string and make it a bit more IDE/namespace friendly
But you still end up having to do a instanceof check every time something is added
.....you're storing the result of some encryption in a field that is storing utf-8 ?
user2862309
so @DaveRandom what do you think is more proper? To use the abstract class that holds the method and call ConcreteClass::createCollection($rawData) or create a separate collection and say new Collection(ConcreteClass::class, $rawData)
@PeeHaa You're storing arbitrary bytes in a field that doesn't accept arbitrary bytes. Not all combinations of bytes are valid utf8, and that's what it's checking for.
@Danack I actually have a zts no-debug 5.6 build if you want me to do anything? I don't have imagick but I should be able to get it set up pretty easily
user2862309
@DaveRandom can you please elaborate on those pricipals
@Mr.Meshuggah Well firstly, no static methods for anything ever (just a general principle). But also your ConcreteClass would then be coupled to the Collection class (unless you also accepted that as a string, rendering it no better in that respect), and would have a method that's not really anything to do with the class itself (SRP violation)
@PeeHaa It's not meant for bytes, it's meant for utf-8 chars....it inspects the encoding to trigger errors to be helpful, to prevent non-utf8 chars from sneaking in their and fucking up the collation.
@PeeHaa yeah, it's definitely not valid. The second byte in a multiple byte char always has the pattern 10xxxxxx. The 0x30 in 0xef3033 is '0011 0000' so your DB is definitely protecting you from invalid data for that type.
A colleague of mine sent me a snippet of code made only of brackets ()[]{}, plus signs and exclamation marks.
[][(![]+[])[!+[]+!![]+!![]]+([]+{})[+!![]]+(!![]+[])[+!![]]+(!![]+[])[+[]]]
and it goes on like this..
This vaguely reminds me of Brainfuck, but I couldn't find any esoteric language...
@Danack WARNING: php_bin /opt/php/bin/php appears to have a suffix /bin/php, but config variable php_suffix does not match <-- I never use PECL, does this matter? Do you know what it means?
@Danack confirmed cannot reproduce with any combo of xdebug/opcache being enabled/disabled as well. Going to leave a comment and put bug report into "feedback" status if you're happy with that
"If you want to investigate the issue, please can you disable XCache and all other extensions other than Imagick, try to reproduce the issue, and then re-enable the extensions one by one."
@DaveRandom Is Xcache a PECL project? If not at least some of the bugs related to it could be closed on bugs.php.net e.g. bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=66775
@Danack I don't know, I don't mind handling that imagick bug because it's pretty obviously at least a little bit PEBKAC, but in the general case... I'd rather leave package specific bugs to package maintainers
@ziGi I have no idea what's going wrong for you. However I do recommend learning to and almost always running your tests from the command line yourself, so that you are always running the tests in the same way as your automated tools will be running it.
@ziGi Yes, but stick all the the details about bootstrapping into the phpunit.xml file so the command line to run the tests is the same for all of your projects php vendor/bin/phpunit -c test/phpunit.xml
That way you don't need to remember the individual options for each project.