@Mark "where you accidentally return a value from a method that was actually supposed to set a value?" No, I'm pretty sure I'm able to tell setters and getters apart.
"void return type is more about documentation." - which is why I would strongly prefer null. It correctly describes what the function is doing (returning only a null value) rather than trying to describing something a bit misleading.
3
I refer you to the people who are already suggesting 'fixing' the behaviour of the PHP engine to match the 'void' return type.
maybe they could make a derived interface with type hints or something
$ php -r 'interface A { public function foo(array $a); } class B implements A { public function foo($a) {} }'
PHP Fatal error: Declaration of B::foo($a) must be compatible with A::foo(array $a) in Command line code on line 1
Fatal error: Declaration of B::foo($a) must be compatible with A::foo(array $a) in Command line code on line 1
$ php -r 'interface A { public function foo($a); } class B implements A { public function foo(array $a) {} }'
PHP Fatal error: Declaration of B::foo(array $a) must be compatible with A::foo($a) in Command line code on line 1
pinging @LeviMorrison to see how annoyed or not this makes him
oh my god what
return types and parameter types are inconsistent
parameter types are invariant, return types are covariant
o.O
$ php -r 'interface A { public function foo($a): array; } class B implements A { public function foo($a) {} }'
PHP Fatal error: Declaration of B::foo($a) must be compatible with A::foo($a): array in Command line code on line 1
Fatal error: Declaration of B::foo($a) must be compatible with A::foo($a): array in Command line code on line 1
$ php -r 'interface A { public function foo($a); } class B implements A { public function foo($a): array {} }'
Yea, perhaps anonymous exceptions should have been prevented. I couldn't think about any reason to have "throw new class("evil") extends SomeException {};", but maybe this needs more thinking.
i'm not sure about that @marcio, c# disallows having a class method with covariant return type of a method defined in an interface, but allows covariance when relationship is between two classes (extends)
@Joe even if you consider null to be the absence of a type, you can put return type null, to say that you want that… return nothing with a type ;-) … no reason to add void.
$x = (function(): null{ return null; })(); // fail, can't use a void call in a variable $x = (function(): null|string{ return null; })(); // valid, because it can either be null or string
@iroegbu little bit, but since it's conceivable that someone might be using a void function in an expression, we can't really change that right now ...
class A{ function test(): void{} } class B extends A{ function test(): null|string{} } this is a legit use case for me, except that should be null and not void
also - why as implementer should i care of how a "void" function is going to be used by its consumer code? how enforcing that will make my code and consumer code better?
@Orangepill I don't believe that's true. All functions produce null when you assign them to a variable. That doesn't imply that return; actually returns null. At least in a semantic sense.
@Orangepill totally disagree
@Abe if the return value is null, then yes. If it's void, then no
@ircmaxell The semantic sense is nowhere defined, except in implementation where an explicit ZEND_RETURN null is added.
And I prefer viewing functions as implicitly returning null if not explicit (callee-side). Instead of "if no value was returned, assign null to the returned temporary (aka at caller-side)".
@Abe "you can't use a void call in a variable" <-- why not?
@bwoebi null is the explicit lack of a value. If you assign a void function (one without a value) to a variable, you get an explicit lack of a value as a result
@bwoebi sure it is, it's defined because return;doesn't say what it returns. Therefore, it returns nothing. Defining it as "returning null" is an implementation detail. That's not semantic meaning. The semantic meaning is "no value". And the common (not just PHP interpretation) of assigning "no value" to a variable is either undefined or null.
@bwoebi because the function isn't returning null
it's returning nothing
the fact that nothing gets turned into null is something that can be perceived to be happening on the receiver side
@bwoebi @bwoebi when you look at other languages, when you look at databases, when you look at mathematics (set theory, lambda calculus, etc) they all make that distinction. This is the only case I've ever seen argued that void and null are the same thing
@ircmaxell now ask him what he thinks function f() { return; } var_dump(f()); does and tell him to explain how this should work with returning nothing.
the point is void has a different semantic meaning from null. Saying (): void imparts specific assumptions about that function (assumptions that we desperately want). (): null imparts none of those assumptions. That alone is worth it. But then add in that (): null makes less sense and is weird when you look at every other typed language out there, and that makes void a clear winner on all fronts
with (): null, a very strong argument can be made that return null; is acceptable. And a very strong argument can be made that $a = null; return $a; is acceptable. And return functionThatReturnsNull();. And all of those are very different from the implication of void which says "nothing" and hence all of those statements should be illegal
I'm considering it like we have a return value pre-initialized to null, which we can set, but not read… always when we explicitly return, we can overwrite it. Also fits IMO nicely with behavior observed with multiple returns possible due to try/finally.
@ircmaxell ... source code? or do you mean the fact that it's C code?
@ircmaxell yea, I believe you … just I didn't know ;-)
@ircmaxell I'm just a bit conflicted here, I've always seen void as nothing with meaningful value and type information. But it's still something, just that it doesn't have any meaning… The absolute nothing IMHO doesn't exist… Meh, I'm just discussing myself ad absurdum here.
nah, seriously, I'm going crazy myself too, because I'm not sure if I have some fundamental misunderstanding or if there's a fundamental flaw in Anthonys logic.
The only thing I'd really like to complain about is that @Andrea did a poor job about explaining why void and not null. "customary" is maybe a tie-breaker, not a "main reason". And for "function is supposed to not return a value, rather than return null specifically", I just can say "yeah, but it does return null and not not a value."
@bwoebi believe me, I question that as well. The one reason I'm confident here, is that it's how every other language works, and it's how type theory works (at least as much of it as I've studied)
@bwoebi take a break and come back to it with a clear mind. Often the best way to determine these things is to try them both out in context, and go with whichever feels and looks more intuitive. (If analysis is inconclusive)
By the way @JoeWatkins, I feel bad for the number of assigns I've made. I'd buy you a handful of beers if I could. Or cake, etc.
I feel like internals have a habit of forcing a discussion out, with the help of a few people who just argue with absolutely everything anyone says ... Stas ... even when something is a done deal ...
It comes down to what you're trying to communicate, though. Absolute nothing exists, it's the void, it's the complete absence of... anything, including nothing. Until the day we send some poor robot beyond the event horizon, the idea of "void" is the best we can do to communicate nothingness. I think of null as a value, void as a type, and null as the value representation of the type. Either way, can't wait for : void :)
> If php-SAPI.ini exists (where SAPI is the SAPI in use, so, for example, php-cli.ini or php-apache.ini), it is used instead of php.ini. The SAPI name can be determined with php_sapi_name().
So I'd like to evaluate an expression in round brackets against another like so: while ( (cond1 and cond2 and cond3 ) and cond4 ) {...} but it doesn't work. Instead I get while ( cond1 and cond2 and cond3 and cond4 ) {...}
But I want cond1,2,3 to be treated as a single entity.
Totally stumped. It just doesn't make sense to me.
@bwoebi Yep, I really don't want to bother you with the details as my head is about to explode already, but if you need to know the whys, it's because I'm iterating through a string and the algorithm upon finding a dot, a question mark or an exclamation sign FOLLOWED by a space would trigger exit. For that particular description there's a workaround, but I would need to stack up more conditions like that, so I can't just make three "cases".
@rtheunissen I doubt it. I have a working prototype in FileMaker which uses exactly the same logic save for the fact that FileMaker wants to "exit loop if" and PHP does "while some condition".
Yes, in this simplified case that's exactly what I'm doing.
@rtheunissen I could do that and I could rewrite it using a switch statement, but I'd rather try to be terse if that's possible and stuff it all inside a while loop.
Not sure what you mean by an index, it's a simple mb_substr function that receives a current position in the string to evaluate.
while ( ( letter () != "." and letter () != "!" and letter () != "?") and letter (1) !=" " and $textposition <= $length ) { $result = $result . letter (); $textposition++; }
function letter ( $skip = NULL ) { global $textbook, $textposition; return mb_substr ( $textbook, $textposition + $skip, 1, 'UTF-8'); }
@Joe Watkins they're there because otherwise the loop would match a single space and I need to match a space only when it's preceded by a punctuation character.
That's what it's doing right now - matching a single space and stopping.
That could be true, nobody would, but I just don't like that kind of logic. It's not too impossible of a task, and FileMaker for some reason understands the precedence must be honored when I put round braces around conditions. But PHP just ignores them.
after the first loop $result == 'This is a simple sentence.' second pass: 'And here's another one'.
@rtheunissen That could work. But I need more than that. There are special cases for sentences with quotes and I use another condition that checks if the quotes have been closed at any particular point inside the string while doing the loop or not. And even more...
@rtheunissen so you propose an array. Well, apart from probably making it a bit faster, is there a difference?
And so I thought that it should work just fine, but in my case it simply ignores the braces.
The other reason why I'm trying to make it work is because I want to understand the language. It may be easy to work around that in one way or another, but it's also important to understand why this precedence doesn't work to avoid making mistakes in the future.
Accessing the string by index, keeping a start and end value, with a substring at the end would be your fastest, simplest solution. You may run into multi-byte string being weird but I'm not sure. As for the problem of when to actually break or end, multiple if blocks with a break for each is a decent start.
@rtheunissen All right, I get it. Still, if we forget about what's right and what's wrong for the moment, why exactly doesn't it work like I intended it to? Is that something in PHP? Is that something else?
Fair enough. I can tell you that it's not the fact that the precedence doesn't work. It's that the condition itself does not reflect what you think it does.
Your test itself is flawed, rather than the mechanics of the test.