The more I think about it, the more I like strict scalar types. That sounds draconian to some, but I think it plays better with return types and the possibility of generics.
1) Get VB spec 2) Replace all occurrences of 'variant' with 'mixed' 3) Replace all occurrences of 'VB' and 'Visual Basic' with 'PHP "7"' 4) Done. Turn off all email handling for php.net and ship it.
@DanLugg It means that false == ~true as well as false == !true. Although it's VB, so False = Not True ' wtf does this do? Assignment/comparison? Bitwise/logical? FU VB
What DB solution would you recommend for a fairly sizable amount of inserts. Selects happen and post select the row is updated to say it's been 'sent'. MySQL works but I am wondering if it's right. Insert figures are up to 8,000 per second.
I mean, if a queuing system is used, then the queries can be done in another system, which will block when too many queries go, but catch up when it slows down
There's a queuing system in place but we scale and descale a lot so we don't want to risk filling it up. We're treating the db like a buffer. Allows us to easily pause the system too.
InnoDB
Fields are just id autoinc int (11), queue varchar(128), data (text), added timestamp and sent timestamp
We have a mega queue where everything goes. This then gets read by a system which sends it to this table in bulk inserts of 2,500. The table is then read from and sent in to several queues depending on the data.
the queue it's sent to is in the initial job from the mega-queue
The mega-queue exists to gather all then split in to small job queues. The db in the middle is to provide a point we can pause. It all works fine, just wondering if considering the limited requirement from that db it was an okay choice.
not saying its the fastest possible solution, but am saying that if it works for now, time may be better spent elsewhere ... pretty hard to take a description of software you have never seen and provide really useful insights of the kind you require ... we could all be wrong and probably are is what I'm saying ...
I'd delete it but it's also kind of a backup. It's more like after a certain amount of time we don't care anymore. We also have significantly more going in than out due to the nature of the system. Eventually all go out it's just not as fast.
Fair enough. All is fine for now. We're at a good revision point too anyway.
oh hell yeah. I just like that they're not even sticking around for the "transition" or anything like you get with most company buys that have a lot of publicity.
no, it's not really, it's a non-outcome, we are not sure how people would have voted or why, we are not sure therefore what should change in another implementation ...
there is always noise ... what gives the noise clarity is a result, and the discussion that usually occurs during voting and after is usually much more useful than before ...
I wanted scalar hints that were compatible as possible with zpp, and where something doesn't make sense (because we are looking so closely) for zpp to change ... in 7, this seems like the only sane course of action so I'm not sure what sane objection you can have to that ...
@JoeWatkins The sane objection is strict type hints. Casting mechanics on return types make very little sense at all, whereas strict ones make perfect sense.
@LeviMorrison I own nothing but M&S plain black socks. None of them go in the bin until they have holes large enough to fit my entire foot through in them.
@LeviMorrison I'm showing that your position is overly narrow. And you don't do that by starting at the specific case... You start at the general cases...
Besides, the reason PHP has succeeded, and the value that it brings to the world today is that it's forgiving. It tries to do what you meant, even in cases where that may be ambiguous. It tries to pass as much as possible. it's designed to try as hard as possible to succeed. And from an academic background, that's scary as hell. It's hard to get your head around some of the things that it lets slide. From a correctness standpoint it's maddening. But it's also forgiving.
// Any ideas on naming these two little functions?
function first($input, $default = null)
{
return !empty($input) ? $input : $default;
}
function second($input, $default = null)
{
return isset($input) ? $input : $default;
}
user895378
The request/response are just very simple extensions of the abstract Message class.
user895378
To me, coupling the implementation to the interface is fine in this case.
@LeviMorrison you doubt it's what anyone wants. As someone who knows the difference. But that's not 90+% of who uses PHP...
@an1zhegorodov don't do that, it won't work how you think it will
user895378
5:38 PM
@Danack But, since I've already caved to pressure to add an HttpClient interface I suppose I can add HttpMessage, HttpRequest, and HttpResponse if you can demonstrate a real need. Just lemme know.
I suspect any user of PHP who uses return types and gave a type of float would want their return; or return false; to pass. And I mean almost any user.
because to use them, safely, you'd need casts at every call site. And explicit casts are 100x worse for correctness than safe-casts like we were talking about...
@LeviMorrison because there's no safe way to make 0 into an array that's not FUBAR (implicitly at least)... But there is a safe way to make "12" into an integer...
@ircmaxell I think it will work exactly as empty() and isset() works. I'm tired of ugly ternary expressions everywhere throughout the project, so I desided to make it more readable. The only problem is naming
well I think it would, so long as compatible with the expectations of the majority, the expectations of the majority is that they an document and write functions like internals developers do, and it will work like internal functions do, they don't know or care about any of the details ...
I am not going to write a scalar type proposal simply because 1) everyone disagrees on what is best and 2) I am unsure that the idea, regardless of implementation, is a good one for PHP.
@PeeHaa There are so much notices, that they are ignored. The short answer to your question "why?" is - a project with 6 years unmanaged technical debt
@rdlowrey I think I could make an argument - I ought to unit test the ResponseCache functions and doing that would be better with interfaces, but, meh - unit tests.
@Danack Yeah the very first implementation of the library used interfaces but it got really enterprisey. There were tons of extra files that no one needed anywhere. I didn't like it.