@JoeWatkins It's the only behavior that makes sense in the "broader picture". There is no reason why GmpInt(10)/GmpInt(3) should return GmpFloat(3.33...33796327821) and not GmpRational(10/3) or GmpDecimal(3.33...33). So I stick with the simple rule of "if all operators are GmpInt, you get GmpInt back"
@salathe Not only that, I think it will be rather confusing that some functions work with floats and other very similar functions won't. E.g. you'll be able to do gmp_sqrt($float), but gmp_root($float) will not work...
@JoeWatkins Then I think this discussion is pretty pointless
People use the GMP integer functions to do number theoretic computations. In that context you'd see how having a floating point result to a division is very detrimental
The GMP float functions are used for completely different things and interchanging them is little useful, typically
while the prototype is GmpInt function div(GmpInt $l, GmpInt $r) it makes sense ... I just didn't see the reason for that to be the prototype if we are going to add support for floats too ...
@webarto backend stuff, lots of data, lots of machines, bit of choice about language would be nice and I'll kill myself if I end up working in java all the time ... but the choice is nice ..
@bwoebi Presumably scientific computation with very large or very small numbers. I have no idea why people suddenly want that in PHP ... (decimal would be more useful)
@NikiC If we'd have that instead of the current floats, nobody would have to care about floating point imprecision anymore… but should cost too much CPU-time, right?
@LeviMorrison No probs. I would suggest going a step further and removing the list of people who voted and simply displaying the count and "you have (not) voted" to people who are logged in
@DaveRandom I also love how they are calling that thing behind it in IoC container, which in their case is a SL that gets magically imported using a static call. Look mom no new keyword in mah classes!
@Wes For an arbitrary depth, that's the simplest way I think.
@LeviMorrison I've needed stuff like that in the past in order to address things with strings (imagine a file system represented as an array and getting the "file" at /a/b/c)
I forget what the exact use case was but I know it seemed valid at the time, although if I revisited it it may not be
@Wes in that particular case the values are just namespaced, why do you need to group them together as a vector in memory? You can just keep them all as a flat array with the full string key