why will composer, when presented with requirement like "php": "5.6 - 7.1", will still install versions of the other requirements that have a only php7 requirement?
@Danack well, I expected that a package marked as requiring php 5.6 inclusive to 7.1 would refuse a hard dependency on php7. One of the requirement of the first package (5.6) is not respected by the second (7.0)
I might not understand correctly what 5.6 - 7.1 really means though, or the premises of respecting conditions
Sorry if I posted that the times, my phone did a strange thing
@FélixGagnon-Grenier "marked as requiring php 5.6 inclusive to 7.1" - it doesn't mean that the software will run on all versions of PHP from 5.6 to 7.1, it means that it will on any version from that range. So, as long as there is a solution to finding all the packages for the current version of PHP, it will be fine.
@Danack Hmm. Yeah, that makes sense. The scenario is I was trying to use travis ci to test the build on 5.6, 7.0 and 7.1. since the composer install was done on a 7.0 machine, it locked phpunit at 6.0.7 (which requires php 7.0). Which, in turn, made the build fail on 5.6, because composer would not install, however the package itself might very well have passed the tests on a php 5.6 fresh install with a compatible version of phpunit
I kind naively assumed composer would not lock a file that would fail on one of the targeted php versions
I guess you could just do a composer update on those different versions, as well as do a composer install on the 7.1 version or whatever you develop against.
@Danack Yes, you are right, that would be the way to go. However, I realize that I might be in a place where I need to actually remove the lock file from the repository. Either install or update will first verify if the lock file exists. If said lockfile was created against >7, composer update or install on 5.6 will fail, as dependencies are already needing php7.
unless there is a command of flag that can be added to composer that expressively tells it to ignore and recreate the lock file from nothing
phpunit is hardcoded at a version in the composer.json...
sorry... trying right now, that is probably why it would want to install that. duh.
hmmm... which also means that I have to use phpunit 5.6 (PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase) for tests in any project that need to support php 5.6, otherwise the 5.6 version will crash when presented with the new phpunit classes (PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase)
@LeviMorrison what are my options for ordered hash maps? i keep reading that linked lists should be avoided because cpus can't cache their contiguous values properly. i think php uses two arrays now, but i have no idea how that technique is called
/me just killed linkedhashmap. one of the few things i did that worked :B
I am loading a css file to web page but it has no affect at all. And thing is when I loaded the same css file from some other server it works fine. I don't actually understand why its not working when loaded from the same server?
@PeeHaa I was going to say, if I had ext code in PHP and possibility to compile it into C exxtension from that PHP, then I'll be maintaining only one codebase
Hi! I recently came to a point where I try to shrink (or add) code in my ext regards ZTS support. Do you people use zts in you work/pet projects and what are particular needs for zts build in general (not counting pthreads)?
@pinepain The only people that would ever need a thread safe VM (besides those using pthreads) would be the Windows guys (where forking is not possible).
I posit there is never a need for a threaded VM on linux. Parallel code is so much harder to write, think about, and debug compared to concurrent solutions.
for me the question is how bad it would be to just say 'no' to zts folks or pretending that my ext is zts. and the ext is about embedding v8 into php and providing rich api to it
@pinepain I mean.. why should I have to think twice as hard just to end up with the same result? Maybe in a language like Go where threading is easier to deal with, but in PHP... meh
@pinepain I think the correct attitude would be, until someone who needs ZTS support is willing to provide a significant amount of time or cashmoney, to help it get done, just forget ZTS support.
### Fixed * In `"$foo[0]"` the `0` is now parsed as an `LNumber` rather than `String`. (#325) * Ensure integers and floats are always pretty printed preserving semantics, even if the particular value can only be manually constructed. * Throw a `...
* Added support for [route groups](https://github.com/nikic/FastRoute#route-groups). * Made some `RouteCollector` properties protected instead of private.
### Fixed * Fixed some extensibility issues in pretty printer (`pUseType()` is now public and `pPrec()` calls into `p()`, instead of directly dispatching to the type-specific printing method). * Fixed notice in `bin/php-parse` script. ### Adde...
remote: error: refusing to update checked out branch: refs/heads/master remote: error: By default, updating the current branch in a non-bare repository remote: error: is denied, because it will make the index and work tree inconsistent remote: error: with what you pushed, and will require 'git reset --hard' to match remote: error: the work tree to HEAD.
@AndroidDev I don't care what tutorial you followed. If you've listened to the people trying to help you then you've gone and studied what a bare repo is. So explain what you've learned.