problem: say numbers are apples, and NaN is not a number in this case (could be anything) so how many apples do we have here (and how many should we have)? 1+NaN+9
@CSᵠ Explicit casts do not fail. They never fail. They always convert to some value. The question is what that value should be if it's an integer cast and the input is a floating-point INF.
@AndreaFaulds don't know yet really, I haven't proposed a RFC, need to do quite a bit of research to be comfortable to my proposition before publishing one, but you did and picked 0, that makes no sense to me and if you still want to publish it you should argue for it with valid arguments/facts
@derp The term, when applied to the automated implementation (or some other voodoo) is sensible, but yes, in the case of the manual practice of "passing parameters" to satisfy "dependency injection", the former term is better.
@AndreaFaulds this is how it works: 1. you have a proposition (RFC now) 2. some people refute your facts 3. you either gather better facts to support your proposition or throw the RFC down the drain (or parts of it)
@AndreaFaulds Ah, this is why I was thinking this:
> You can test whether a floating-point value is infinite by comparing it to this macro. However, this is not recommended; you should use the isfinite macro instead.
In the same spirit as the proposed scalar type-hint/cast, dataloss should be fatal. (int) "11" is okay, but (int) "noodles" should shit the bed wildly.
@Ja͢ck Well... not true. Assume you can cast an object to a string, then back to an object. The second object will not have the same address as the original, but is equivalent.
That's the only corner case I can think of. Oh, (float) (int) $f == $f where $f is a float will not be the same.
@NikiC The last thing I need for return types (pending bugs that may arise) is to verify that functions which are generators can only specify type hints of Generator and its superclasses. Any ideas for doing that in a reasonable way? Only solution I can think of is hand-coding string comparisons, because of the aforementioned opcache behavior.
@derp INF must not be zero, ever, and it still happens
because.. limitations
my feeling is Andreea's RFC only acknowledges some grave issues with datatypes, conversion, casting and arithmetic operations, and proposes some quick-and-dirty fix/patches to some of them
"be" - right there is your problem. When you cast to a different type you no longer have the same thing. INF will never be zero. Zero is simple the integer value you get when you cast INF to an int.
Just need to add reflection and figure out what to do about generators. I think I'll have to resort to string comparisons because of an opcache bug: bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=66773
Actually, even if that bug wasn't there I'm not sure if that would be helpful.
I am trying to show an array in view using foreach dd(array) shows that I have 53 records in it but the output shows only 5 records and that also same values -- Laravel
btw. @JoeWatkins I'm trying to rewrite your socket stuff to use a full-duplex connection in phpdbg… I just try it, though, I have no idea what I'm doing there :-D
I'm trying to find the proper way to make a method that kind of decorates another one inside an object. I mean, a method which semantic should be 'do that action with these arguments and then do other stuff'
I know I can use something like $this->$action($args)
but how can I specify that $args should be all the parameters that are passed to the parents beside the first two?
now the complicated part begins. I need to parse ^C in stdin. But also when not being in fgets() call. So needing async IO. Going to have fun with SIGIO handling etc. :-D
@JoeWatkins now I need to decide on an API for the xml/text switch. I think I'll use #define phpdbg_(notice|error|write)(xml_tag, attribute_sprintf_format, english_sprintf_format, ...)
I'm trying to write some code that is able to detect if PHP would convert the index or not - perhaps most easily done with testing via an array directly ... .
@QasimKhokhar if visiting an outside link is required to understand your question then your question is incomplete and should be edited to include the additional information necessary.
cpu is at 100% since a windows update this morning. added more cpu and it just eats it up. it's ~10 php processes that use 10% each... I have no idea what's happening, but I am the only IT guy in the office today... Has anyone an idea what could cause this? :(