@AnmolRaghuvanshi xcom, hard reset, deus ex: hr, warframe, heroes 6, frozen synapse, ftl (those would be the interesting ones that I have played recentl)
@NikiC It logs anything a file, send it to email or to database. Coupled with cronjob, it can scan /var/log/* files and sends/relogs any newly logged errors periodically.
Déjà vu sensation but... @Danack did I ask you why not make a language construct like callable("func") instead of closure("func")? not sure if I asked this already, but now it's being asked on the mailing list and I couldn't find nothing on chat history.
@marcio yeah, I'm just drafting an email saying that the RFC is changed to Closure::fromCallable() as that is clear, and can get past internals for 7.1. And yes, making it be a language construct should be done as a separate RFC.....however I don't think that will pass, as people need to have a change in mindset.
Currently people think 'callable' is the type that represents things that can be called in PHP. And also think that closures are just an implementation detail. However that's probably the wrong way round.
Closures should be the built-in type to represent things that can be called, as they can represent anything that can be called, have a single reflection API. i.e. you don't need to call ReflectionFunction or ReflectionClass based on what it was generated from, which you do have to do for callables.
@marcio I think they're fine. Closures work perfectly for all use-cases as far as I can see, and I invite arguments as to why they don't.
The only downside to them is that the manual says that they are an 'implementation detail' and people seem to have just got hung up on that.
Or to put it more simply, can anyone think of any difference that would result from having a custom syntax like $(SomeClass, staticMethodName) vs Closure::fromCallable('SomeClass', 'staticMethodName') ?
Unless the proposal for the new syntax also introduced a new way of representing things that can be called in addition to callable and closure. Which sounds unlikely to happen.
@marcio But callables are a pain in the butt to handle. If you want to inspect the parameters by reflection, you have to look at what type of callable it is and then use ReflectionFunction/ReflectionMethod as appropriate. With closures, you can just use the one reflection type for all type of thing that can be called.
@Andrea oh, please, that one would be useful. I'm tired of seeing people relying on return values from interface implementations that shouldn't be returning anything.
@NikiC All we're doing is closure-wrapping a callable… and with a short closure syntax that's now so easy, do we really need callable(...) or similar syntaxes?
internals will never move anywhere - too many people prefer the mailing list format. As for alternative interfaces, I doubt that's going to happen either - no one's even been bothered enough to fix the official NNTP interface
@marcio yes. So that doesn't exist, and the only type that can be used in a function to indicate that a param should be executable is closure - function(Closure $fn) {}
Currently people think 'callable' is the type that represents things that can be called in PHP. And also think that closures are just an implementation detail. However that's probably the wrong way round.
@marcio Look at what is needed to get the parameter information from a callable. It varies based on what the callable was made from. That problem does not exist for closures.
@marcio Look at what is needed to get the parameter information from a callable. It varies based on what the callable was made from. That problem does not exist for closures.
someone please give me an explanation. what's the conflict between this ^ and callable(Foo::bar())
Aw I'm getting all emotional about all the awesome people I met at PHPNW - if you don't go to conferences and you're in this room, you really should :-)
@NikiC we might only change called_scope when binding and leave scope intact for non-Closure Closures. That way the assumptions all still hold … the only question is whether that would be too inconsistent or not?
@Ocramius It's a shame you weren't here man, I had some really interesting conversations about not using auto increments but using GUIDs. But for nicer urls, holding a mapping between shorter, non sequential ids and longer complex guids