@LeviMorrison Apart from not liking fn as a strict alias to function (I'd rather make fn specific to short declaration), I don't see anything immediately objectionable in that.
My opinion is that it would reduce cognitive load to have the developer write things out the long way, so the whole shorthand syntax is a bad idea anyways... but that's just an untested hypothesis.
@Sara Yeah, I was just going over in my mind the similarities to the cognitive load of the ternary compare... Short and simple and part of an assignment is a great candidate for the ?:... but as someone who has to read other people's code, sooooo many people get it wrong.
My vote, as someone who has to maintain other people's code, is that shorthand closures should be distinctive from normal, non-shorthand closures, just as ?: is distinct from normal conditionals.
Which for me means it should be outside of [a-zA-Z]*... Is the % token being used in some esoteric corner of PHP?
The issue with these RFCs is that they bring something new to PHP, which certain people already oppose by default. And then a few people bitching about what mnemonic the operator should be…
I'm very deceptive with bison limitations (not exactly bison), it got to a point we're struggling too much with workarounds and we end up not getting what we want.
> My primary idea was, as you suggested, to provide a variable_exists() function, restricted to variables, an hasitem() construct, reserved to array elements, similar to array_key_exists(), and consider that property_exists() is sufficient for class properties.
STOP USING NULL TO INDICATE ANYTHING OTHER THAN YOU F&%#%(ED UP. IT IS NOT A VALID APPLICATION VALUE. The sooner people get that through their heads, the sooner we can build *robust systems
# I already have done this: because too lazy to use an extra boolean.
if (condition($x)) {
$y = $someValue;
}
// code…
if (isset($y)) {
// something something...
} else {
// something
}
@Ghedipunk No - it's really useful. For some people mkdir failing is an exceptional circumstance. For others it's not. Having the squelch operator allows both people to be happy. As Bob said.
Anyone know what makes running php tests fail to fail on errors in Travis ?
@marcio Exceptions... loggable warnings... It would be a lot of work to put it into PHP itself, and I'm not nearly well versed enough in C to do it myself, much less in the internals of PHP... Maybe if I were to implement something like that it might make it into PHP 10.
I'd love to help... I'm sure there has been penty of discussion about it already, too...