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Wes
Wes
22:00
because php
Yea, damn. So much legacy grossness to get around.
Wes
Wes
> If people think PHP has a lot of life left in it we should make some big changes like merging properties/methods.
still, php has a lot of life left. i genuinely tried to move to other languages, but none is actually appealing
My biggest issue isn't the language of PHP. It's the implementation. Not that there's anything wrong with it, it's just the whole "kill the chef" thing makes it a little rough to work with in 2016, when there are so many options that have beautiful concurrency primitives built-in.
Wes
Wes
with the possible exception of dotnet languages, that mean commitment to evil / microsoft
I'd love to see async/await or something similar come to PHP soonish, but even then it'd be hard to not just want to use Go, Node Javascript, Erlang, etc.
Still love me some PHP, though. :)
22:31
@Rican7 In my opinion to do this properly we'd need a complete rewrite of the engine.
The key part there being the properly bit.
Yea, that was my fear
We can maybe hack it in there with few changes.
The hard part might be supporting it in various SAPIs, depending on exactly how it is implemented.
yea
I mean runtimes like Go have a full on scheduler built in.
But it makes concurrency so nice.
Eh
I'm not sure why we support so many SAPIs, honestly.
I know we dropped a few with PHP 7.
We still have a lot.
Some FastCGI based one is all we really need anymore.
I guess it's just the legacy and backwards compat preserving.
Switching off of Apache is painful if you aren't using a catch-all rewrite rule...

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