@IluTov Small correction: That changed a little over the course of the PR. In the merged version it's: {closure:<parent_function>:<start_line>}, with <parent_function> being the filename for closures defined at the top level.
@Girgias For the shortName this is correct. When comparing the full name the name before the change included the namespace. With the change it consistently starts with {closure:.
@Derick See two messages above: It's not actually the filename in the majority of cases. I don't feel strongly about including the end line, but I'm also not sure if there is a benefit in doing so. It would still be ambiguous for cases line: $foo = function () { }; $bar = function () { }; in a single line.
If including the end line would make things easier for you, then I'm happy to make the adjustments.
FWIW: I've intentionally pinged you in the PR for your opinion, but you might've missed the email.
@Trowski This is about shortName incorrectly truncating? Do you have a simple stand-alone reproducer? I'll look into that nevertheless, but having a clear test case would make stuff easier.
@Trowski Looking at the php-src implementation, a more reliable check would be: ReflectionFunction::isAnonymous(). It returns true for actual closures, and false for first class callables.
@Trowski Amphp still fails in nightly (now with amp 3.0.1), but I can't reproduce the issue locally. In my case, the websocket-client never actually call the weakClosure. Were you able to reproduce this?
@TimWolla 8.2+, so I'd need to keep the current code for 8.1 anyway. I'll keep that in mind for the future, thank you. Also thanks for jumping on that issue right away!
@IluTov Was the nightly build before @TimWolla's PR was merged? Looks like it.
@IluTov The tests for amphp/amp will have still failed before the PR, but should be passing now.
The callback in websocket-client is on a timer, so may or may not be run depending on how fast the tests complete. CI tends to be slower than local, so is more likely to trigger such timers.
@JRL I wouldn't expect the first offer to just be accepted in most cases. You can explain why your offer is fair and make the same (or slightly higher) offer.
Often people fish to see if you'll pay more, even if they'd accept your initial offer.
in my particular area, my wife and i have a 90th percentile credit score, 90th percentile assets, 95th percentile income, and zero other debt, and they were asking for the very top of our range
interest rates are just that high
our purchasing budget would be $400k higher if we could get an interest rate of around 4% even, so the interest rates are going to make selling those houses very difficult i think