shouldn't you invoke the "context sensitivity RFC" in this case too? Or did you really mean that $something->void() should be considered soft reserved?
the "enum" section is clearer:
> (enum) should be reserved in all contexts that are not protected by the context sensitivity RFC [...]
@NikiC yea, but the RFC text is strange... it implies that there is a difference between the "void" and "enum" reservation, when in fact you just want to reserve both words for class names.
@PeeHaa I just changed all the things to snake case for the API, then I decided that I only want snake case for array indexes in PHP, so I converted all objects to array. Then I noticed, I can't differentiate between arrays and objects anymore. I think I'll change it all back and use camelCase instead...
@Trowski Looks reasonable to me. Though maybe move the zend_throw_or_error into zend_exceptions (changed to accept an error type arg) as it seems this pattern is used in a bunch of places
I am getting a "could not be converted to string" error when using array_diff() I looked it up, and it's because they cast to string to compare them. Is there a simple way of getting the same functionality without having to cast to string?
@NikiC Nah, it's pretty much just there. I could make it zend_throw_or_error(zend_bool throw, int type, zend_class_entry *exception_ce, const char *format, ...), but there's only one other place I'd use it.
@NikiC yes, thanks. I wasn't thinking about global functions likefunction void(){}. With the risk of being a PITA, the enum section is still not 100% accurate, global constant names can have any name already: 3v4l.org/0ZvHJ. It should be:
I was thinking the function wouldn't have to be declared using async at all, you could use async within the function and it would automatically detect it like with yield.
the general idea for most languages is underneath you're spawning a new thread/process for async/await unlike yield and from that is asynchronous but not parallel
@NikiC @ElizabethMSmith Clearly this requires some more thought and investigation. If it ends up having to wait for PHP 8 because of BC, I guess so be it.
@bwoebi No, this is absolutely the wrong way to handle this. You still broke BC and for the worse because you removed ALL useful error information permanently.
@bwoebi Why is warning not an option? The warning has always been there to provide the user with information that may be help them debug potentially buggy code. You're now leaving them with no way of knowing for sure. INF is not a guarantee that the operation was a result of division by zero.
@Sherif because we now have valid values. Either have a bogus value+warning (where exception is really better) or a valid value. But not valid value+warning.
Actually, I've been trying to solve the static code analysis problem in PHP for years. I think it's definitely a problem worth solving. Unfortunately, it's not trivial to write a decent static code analysis tool for PHP.
Many of the things that would be useful to analyse statically happen in the runtime :/
@marcio Mine was written back in the PHP 5.3 days, but I never released it. It was written in C and does some pretty scary things. Hence not releasing it publically.
It executes PHP in an isolated environment to find things like "undefined functions" for example.
Coding best practices question. Let's say I have a User object, and I want to load a bunch of BlogPost objects into an array as a property of the User. I want to do this *whenever* I create a new User object.
I have a UserProvider and a BlogPostProvider object. Should I have the User model invoke the (BlogPostProvider object)->getBlogPostsForUser($this); method or should it be invoked by the UserProvider?
@hakre I'm not too concerned, as long as I end up returning a User which has a $blogPosts property which is an array of BlogPost objects. By the time {UserProvider object}->getUser($userId) is finished, this is what I need back.
@hakre So, when the User is created, it creates an implementation of IteratorAggregate, then when I call {User object}->getBlogPosts() the implementation loads them?
@SilentEcho Not, even later. When you call {User object}->getBlogPosts() it returns an object implementing the interface IteratorAggregate (technically Traversable) so you can foreach over it whenever you want.