@Ghostff you might want to rephrase that... either it's too late and I need to sleep, or it looks like you mashed some words together that vaguely sound relevant. Yes, I know a meaning could be derived, but there isn't enough context.
@Wes dude, you can just talk to kalle calmly in here, you don't need to scream and shout on twitter ...
also, there's no technical difference between the proposed use, and use as implemented, none, there's no worry about the variable going "out of scope" or anything of the sort, use'd variables are bound lexically (ie, when the script is lexed) to static variables in the closure ... so that argument against it is a non-starter ...
lastly, your reasoning is, as a matter of fact, totally subjective ... you can find the proposed syntax easier to understand and model, and someone else of equal intelligence and experience can find the implemented syntax easier to understand and model ... so you can't argue that it's superior, you can only try to find enough people that think like you to agree it's a good idea ...
I don't care enough about the syntax to prefer one or the other, it makes absolutely no difference ...
that said, having two syntaxes that do exactly the same thing is not a good idea, and we obviously can't deprecate the old syntax, so -1
@JoeWatkins Their argument is that now you have to read (at least some of) the function body, at the time of encountering it, to determine whether it needs to enclose over variables from the outside
@wes your RFC gave me an interesting discussion idea
what if you supported variable aliasing in functions/etc via use:
function foo($bar, $baz) {
use $bar->other as $other;
doSomethingWith($other);
$other = 123;
}
The important difference, is it isn't creating a reference, but a literal alias, so it's identical to copying the tokens and re-executing them each time.
function grow(array &$array, int $fromKey, int $number): void{
use $array[$key] as $value;
for ($key = $fromKey; $key < $fromKey + $number; $key++) {
$value = null;
}
}
@MadaraUchiha or a great way of creating super readable code since you can impart semantic meaning to variables, rather than just long complex token sets. use $whatever[$something]->other as $meaningfulName
@NikiC it wouldn't be a macro, it'd be a literal alias. The difference (in my mind) in that a C Macro can be any set of tokens, where this would need to be a valid expression AST node
I can't think straight, back to bed for the third time today ...
@NikiC it's rounding, I managed by chance to reproduce it, EINVAL is being set, I thought it was hitting the last RETURN_FALSE but its the one in the loop for sure
@PeeHaa my argument is that declaring variables in js is not that annoying to write. it's the same difference as a blacklist and a whitelist (or the PC way of saying the same thing :B)