@Rapptz Doesn't matter. Sure you won't get fired for working exactly 8 hours a day (unless you're incompetent). But it reflects badly on the team if you always show up when everyone is already here and leave when everyone is still here. It will probably end with you getting a smaller annual bonus - which isn't even guaranteed anyway.
@Ell the manager has bonuses to distribute. If one employee does his job, and another one does his job + does overtimes. Who will the manager give the bonus to?
Anyways, I've said enough. I'm not trying to justify anything. I'm just saying that's the way it is and why it is. Whether you agree or not is a irrelevant. There's a lot of unwritten rules in the industry and it's best to play along if you don't want the short end of the stick.
PHP has grown organically from literal garbage, there was no design process or anything behind it, the hardest part of that would be to replicate all the idiotic decisions people came up in last 10 years
It's complex because there's a lot of interactions between crap inherited from C 20 years ago and newest stupid additions committee spent last year vomiting onto the spec
@Jefffrey PHP was a large committee of everyone that was interested, rasmus gave it up after a few years when he realized he couldnt do everything. his original php was pretty nice if you look at the source
@nick Mostly financial backgrounds and programmers with financial experience. I'm one of only two guys I'm aware of (excluding HR and system OPs) that came in without financial experience.
@CatPlusPlus Sort of. Some specs are better than others; 'language A is specified to do whatever implementation A does' is as useful as 'a kilogram is the amount of mass of the prototype kilogram'. Which is somewhat useful, sure.
@CatPlusPlus It’s normally the only thing that don’t make the cut. Whether the spec is a national, international, industry-wide standard or not is a different matter normally. I’ve never seen or heard anyone turning their nose up at a language because their standard isn’t of international caliber for instance, and I find it hard to imagine why anyone would bring that up.