btw @salathe I still have news.php.net/php.doc.cvs/12793 marked as unread in my inbox, I just haven't had time to do anything about it yet but I will get to it, I'm not just ignoring it
The systems are all ready to go (more or less) I think, but some of the translator don't like it because apparently for them SVN rev numbers > git SHAs
@salathe could you make a quick check comparing the download speed and ping that you get from airdog.com and blindsave.com (one is hosted in US and one in LV)?
Here me out here. One of PHP's biggest strengths (and weaknesses to be fair) is that it's incredibly forgiving with scalar types. As in, will pretty much never fail, even if it doesn't make sense what you're asking for
this makes PHP incredibly easy to use for junior developers, because it's so bloody forgiving that you almost can cobble anything together and it'll just work (tm)
It's a nightmare for defensive programming, because you need to do all sorts of validation yourself
but that's how PHP got to where it is today, by being forgiving. Which also makes it quite robust to outages/errors. Even if there is a massive logic error, the rest of the page/site will function just fine. And if you're handling error reporting properly, all that'll happen is that one part won't work right
And as much as I'm for static analysis and predictable typing, I'm not sure that really fits, especially since the exact demo of users it'll hurt is those most benefited from PHP itself
@ircmaxell I have two responses to this: a) It is "robust" (as in "ignoring") without any scalar types. However introducing even non-strict types it will be throwing fatal errors, at which points it's in no way forgiving anymore. b) In the profession (as opposed to lets-install-wordpress) world, I'm pretty sure PHP programming is transitioning more and more to the defensive side. Because PHP is so forgiving and you can't be reasonably sure about anything.
@NikiC a) sure, but it's still forgiving where it makes sense to be. And where it doesn't, it'll raise an error. It allows for a mix of defensive and non-defensive programming (or a "I want to defend against problems without making life a PITA for me everywhere")
@NikiC b) to some extents yes. But to many, I don't think so. Because if it was going truely defensive, people would be moving away from PHP to a language that's got a richer type system
@ircmaxell It defends you in the same way as causing an assertion failure at runtime in a C program defends you. The kind of defensive that informs you that there's a problem, but that is not supposed to be actually triggered.
As I've said before, My big issue with strict types is that sometimes types unpredictably (at static analysis time anyway). And raising errors in those cases is going to be weird. Granted, most of those cases could be ironed out by simply adding a numeric pseudo type which was a union of int and float...
@ircmaxell I think the fact that the PHP community has been very vocal about wanting strict scalat types shows that people want to be more defensive without pulling the radical option of using an entirely different language.
Also, I don't think there is a language that is "PHP, but with better type system"
Both ruby and python, the usual alternatives, don't do type annotations
@ircmaxell Lots of companies started by using PHP with "crappy" code and are then improving the code later. Switching to another language is seldom an option.
I originally learned to write web code in Cold Fusion. The best way to explain the difference between the two is that CF is a prefab shelving unit you buy at an office store, while PHP is Home Depot, where you buy wood, nails, circular saws and hammers and build... stuff. Some people like prefab shelves and that's OK, but not everyone is capable of using a circular saw
Junior developers don't have to use scalar type hints, just the same as they don't use PHP's existing type hinting. They still manage to use 3rd party code. Suggesting strict scalar type hinting is "bad" on the basis of what someone new to the language might have trouble with in some random 3rd party library is absolute nonsense.
@ircmaxell We've talked about this in the past (in the context on methods on scalar types) and had differing opinions there. I think handling a number as a string is a sufficiently weird and rare operation that it should be denoted by an explicit cast.
@derp no, but we can encourage them to do so by engineering solutions that encourage adding explicit casts to calls to prevent errors. or we can encourage them to not add explicit casts (which never fail) but instead error when there really is an error, not just when there's something that's close...
@NikiC i can't say i'd argue with that statement. If i know $_POST['some field'] might not exist, i hate having to say isset($_POST['some field']) ? $_POST['some_field'] : null
@NikiC I don't know. My thoughts on this have been changing as of late. I used to be of the camp "check every index every time". And that notices encouraged defensive programming. But now I'm not sure. I'm not sure if that just doesn't lead to bloat...
@cHao Better collection types that override offsetGet would be a solution here (if they could be shoe-horned into the platform provided collections like the supglobs)
@ircmaxell I think that's a problem that is very specific to $_GET and $_POST. It's a problem pretty much exclusively there and in all other places you want to know if you access something that doesn't exist. Which is why ?? may become a thing ^^
@ircmaxell Nothing about it encourages adding explicit casts to prevent errors, it encourages being mindful of your data and not doing stupid shit with it. That some people will blindly misuse explicit casts is a thing I don't particularly care about. They were already writing crap code to begin with.
@LeviMorrison sure, if you want to abandon the built-in array handling functions. but in order to make that decision, first you have to know that they won't work.
@cHao I've actually worked a fair but with functional functions that work on both arrays and Iterators. spl\filter would be a function that works on either type.
sure. the point was that it's a problem that turns up again and again and again. In PHP it would not leak your private keys, but it would still cause a bug
because in C, if you do a out-of-bounds read, you're reading a memory block, that's not part of the array. In PHP if you do a out-of-bounds read, you get back null.
and considering you can't distinguish between not set and null with isset (you'd need to use array_key_exists), why distinguish them at all by forcing a notice on one and not the other?
i am faceing a problem im magento 1.7 my site's front end is not working but admin panel working proprlly. i have tried many things seen from google but cant solve it plz help
ul Gahlot any php developeravilable here? i am faceing a problem im magento 1.7 my site's front end is not working but admin panel working proprlly. i have tried many things seen from google but cant solve it plz help