Speaking of editors, I'm really excited about zed.dev. It seems like the closest thing to vim without actually having to use vim. ^^ I'm using vscode + the vim ext. atm. It works, but it's far from perfect.
Unfortunately, CLion has always been a hot-mess for me. Whenever I open php-src with it, my laptop starts sweating.
@bwoebi Right. Zed on Linux isn't ready yet, but it works. And at first-glance it was quite a bit faster than VSCode, and vim mode worked much better. It's going to miss features at first ofc. But to me it's more important that the general editing experience is nice.
Talking about less than great experiences: Should I try making a PR to make zend_string_release(NULL) safe or is that hopeless? I find it incredibly annoying needing to put explicit NULL checks around free()-style functions.
I just don't like implicit NULL behavior. I don't find verbosity particularly problematic. It could be improved by allowing ifs without braces, but people dislike them for some reason.
@TimWolla It'd be interesting to see how many zend_string_release have if not null guards, at the very least.
Theoretically I'd like to rework the engine to not use zend_string * so much, and to use a type which holds the zend_string * instead. There are a few different reasons for this, including that C++ doesn't support flexible array members and I'd like to get rid of the struct hack, and also that Rust's bindgen doesn't support replacing something like zend_string * with a custom type, but if I had a type like zend_string_ptr, I could replace that.
But at this point I'm not sure if this is worth doing. Minimizing code churn is definitely a virtue at this stage, unless there are specific benefits.
Agree with you @IluTov - most APIs should not accept NULL. Keep your code tidy, be explicit about where NULLs are guarded etc. Aside from the obvious benefit that it saves checks. It may even be not quite predictable for the branch predictor.