@HassanAlthaf what's neat about OrientDB's data model, is, writing a data-mapper would be essentially a matter of mapping data-types, no object/relational mapping needed, since the data-model already fits with classes, inheritance, and structured data-types like arrays and maps supported as property (column) types.
@HassanAlthaf well, sort of, that's the shit part - it's a great database, very promising, but the PHP driver is third-party work, it's outdated and under-maintained.
@HassanAlthaf I've been trying for years to put pressure on them to beef up driver support for any major web language, PHP or Node, but they're completely reliant on volunteer contributions for basically anything other than the official Java drivers.
Work, yeah. And reluctantly personal preference - I mean, honestly, I think PHP has too many weak points to even begin to sum them up, but I haven't found a viable alternative, so I stick with it.
@Jimbo the problem is, most developers spend 10 years writing horrible crap in PHP - it's an easy language to learn, but it's an extremely difficult language to master.
@mindplay.dk It has a low barrier to entry, yet you'll still find seasoned veterans picking it up for two reasons from what I've seen: (1) You can do all the cool stuff you can in other languages in PHP and (2) It's fun. I think if you can get towards mastering it, and still having fun... you've got the best of both worlds
I don't know whats wrong with most of the people on Udemy.
They still teach mysql_* on PHP courses.. lol
Void Types Adds a void return type to require that a function does not return a value. I would have been very happy to have void return types, but this RFC was another casualty of Andrea Faulds quitting as a contributor to PHP.
If PHP is inching closer to another language, it's closer to Dart, being gradually-typed... I think the biggest problem with PHP is the type-system, which is still horribly inconsistent and, worse, incomplete. With the introduction of return types and scalar type hints, we're inching closer, but we still need things like property type-hints and accessors before the type-system can be said to be "complete" by any stretch.
@HassanAlthaf Well, look at the contents of the courses from other universities. The problem is, you can go to some crap universities and not learn anything, so you need to choose one well known for good output
But the public API is what can be interacted with by the end user and your private implementation is up to you... we should be programming defensively anyway.
What I'm trying to say is that why should we let the compiler fail for us on something so trivial when it's our fault and we should be checking for the object type anyway (even if we did have these property type hints)
'Web Application Development Implement the knowledge gained in “Business Skills for e-Commerce” and develop your own web application using the world’s top ranked language PHP.'
Still think it's up to the dev to unit test and code defensively - I mean, so what if they get a wrong param internally? You don't want it to fatal, do you? You should have coded for that - so you would throw a catchable exception
I know what it's like with strongly typed, loosely typed, and everything in between
Type errors are not the kinds of errors/bugs that keep me up at night.
And type hinting is never a replacement for unit testing anyway
JavaScript objects have all properties as public by default (with difficulty to change that too), but as a disciplined and seasoned JavaScript dev I can tell you: meh, who cares.
/** * @param int $age */ public function __construct($age) { $this->setAge($age); }
/** * @param int $value */ public function setAge($value) { if (!is_int($value)) { throw new UnexpectedValueException("unexpected value for age: {$value}"); }
$this->age = $value; }
/** * @return int */ public function getAge() { return $this->age; } }
class Person
{
/**
* @var int
*/
private $age;
/**
* @param int $age
*/
public function __construct($age)
{
$this->setAge($age);
}
/**
* @param int $value
*/
public function setAge($value)
{
if (!is_int($value)) {
throw new UnexpectedValueException("unexpected value for age: {$value}");
}
$this->age = $value;
}
/**
* @return int
*/
public function getAge()
{
$jimbo = new Person(new FirstName('Jimbo'), new LastName('Uchiha'), new Age(30), new Money(50, MONEY_USD), new Address(new Street('Whatever'), new HouseNumber(42)));
@Jimbo yeah, but that leads to the other missing feature: accessors. If you had that, you could refactor between public $age and a pair of getters/setters, which, currently, you need two methods for.
@Jimbo so you could start with public $age, and if/when a business rule (like range) is introduced, you can refactor without breaking your public interface.
with asynchronous get_*() and set_*() methods you don't get that.
Dart code is fucking beautiful because of these two features. Writing (and reading) all this boilerplate junk code is tiresome.
C# also refactors bautifully because of those two features.
PHP refactors horribly because it doesn't have these two features. So you either code defensively, using get and set methods for everything, or you put up with unsafe code using public properties.
for a while I used @property annotations and __get() and __set() magic to support protected "accessors" - it works nicely, you can even mix it in with traits, but it's horrible for performance.
@mindplay.dk In JavaScript, what I do is test for the cases I care about (i.e. what I document), and the rest is left as "undefined behavior, which may cause nasal demons".
One thing I care deeply about is IDE support - things like automated refactoring is a huge time-saver, but it's not safe unless your code is comprehensible in terms of static analysis, which currently means slavically type-hinting every fucking last thing with php-doc. Which I do. And I'm happier, but, having coded in C# and Dart, I'm not happy
okay, it's safe then, but then it's no longer automated rafactoring, is it? you're doing half the work manually, when the IDE could have done it all in a split-second.
If you use globals all around, and constantly change the value of the variable so that it changes types, you're going to have a bad time, and you have bigger problems than automatic refactoring.
@mindplay.dk Eh? I don't explicitly test for Person::$age to be an int, I test that when I enter 50, I can do $person->getBirthYear() and get the expected result
If I care about a string, I'd pass a string and check for the same output
And the rest can go to hell, you want to pass a boolean? Fine by me. Something unexpected would happen, sux2bu
It's undefined behavior, behavior I don't care about.
@MadaraUchiha but you're again assuming a more complex case than the one I quoted. In my example, $age has no business rules, just asynchronous getters/setters, so that is all you have to test. Which is completely redundant and could be done in C# or Dart with just public int $age.
yeah, but that's the trade-off I'm not happy with: for trivial properties, where the only business rule is a type guard, I can choose between unsafe code, writing a lot of redundant tests, or writing a ton of boilerplate. Those are my choices.