@StatikStasis \o all good here. you? i tried avoiding programming work but ended up doing programming again only in a different language. you just can't avoid it these days :P
My dumb idea for PFA, is to basically not execute the call but add the parameters to a hashtable and then pass this hashtable to the named argument field of the FCI
And not use any positional args
But that's also a bit weird in that the types are only checked when the call is actually made :/
I still think a slightly different syntax so we can known "this is a PFA call" before the function call starts executing (this was the very complex part of Joe's version) would greatly simplify everything.
The basic syntax we had (with ? and ...), I think worked pretty damned well. It's just the location of the engine hook that was an issue. If instead we did something like %foo($a, ?, $c) or %$bar->foo($a, ...), that would have solved it.
At least that's what my engine-ignorant brain keeps saying. (And of course figuring out an unused symbol or keyword.)
Joe's implementation (as he explained it to me) worked by starting a new-function setup, hitting the ? or ..., deciding "oh, this is a PFA call", setting up a partially-complete argument struct, then backing out of the function call. Then the partially-complete argument struct could be used as a callable and it would fill in the rest.
It was that "back out" logic that Nikita and others found too fragile.
@bwoebi I dunno. It was above my pay grade then and still is. :-) If you think you can do a simpler version of Joe's patch that won't scare people away, the previous RFC can probably be reused near verbatim. :-)
@Crell the patch went through multiple iterations, and if memory serves me well the intial patch did have some issues though.
But the final version doesn't (needs a bit cleanup still, but was mostly there).
@RemiCollet I think the intent is that arginfo doesn't become a massive diff in github commit diff viewer when the stub was slightly modified in some way.
@Crell I think PHPs internal functions are just so bad that even with pipes/pfa it's still going to look bad. I think pipes for anything but collections and strings is a bit niche, so I wonder if a good iterator api might get us most of the way there. I'd also be interested to see whether an internal iterator api with closures is actually fast enough (as f-calls have non-negligible overhead).
So this is interesting (by-ref in an array passed into a function, essentially doing call-time pass-by-ref removed since PHP 5.4): 3v4l.org/ErCrS Anyone has any idea what's going on?
@IluTov Yeah, the APIs are bad, and everyone keeps saying we need to redo them, but we never do, because we can't agree how to. That said, I disagree that collections and strings are the only places for pipes. They're a common case, but not the only.
What Elixir does may actually be the prettiest approach for PHP: foo |> bar(baz) translates to bar(foo, baz). It effectively does a hard coded partial and then immediately calls it.
That would still allow for SA or compile-time type checks, avoid the need for a PFA syntax, and be infinitely extensible. You'd just need to write functions such that the first argument is equivalent to $this, basically, like many other languages do. Which... yes, means some of the existing functions will not work, but frankly, I'm OK with that. We can take that as an opportunity to redesign them to new versions like we keep talking about, like taking an iterable rather than an array.