@CharlesSprayberry not quite the same as forbidding merge commits altogether :)
I suspect that (if this feature is really coming) it's due to the LLVM project migrating to GitHub
They want to have a strict no-merge policy, and the only way to get that is using a server-side push hook, something that github (obviously) doesn't allow you to install
I was reading about the new switch expression for C# and found an additional new feature related which is switch tuple matching, but then realized PHP has "tuple" matching for ages now :)
I'm lost after 7 mails from Mike Schinkel on Object Initializer. Something is telling me he tries to complicate a lot such trivial feature I've proposed.
Wondering why @SebastianBergmann sees object initilalizer as harder to read than additional noise provided by constantly repeating $var-> part each line - especially for classes with multiple fields. That was in my opinion easier to read actually.
@beberlei pushed two examples and asked for comment cause I don't get it why example full of noise is harder to read, that may help me understand better the argument and don't repeat mistake next time when I push an RFC.
@brzuchal i was meant to say, there is really no way that people have subjective opinions about the syntax that lead them to -1 the proposal. with something this "big" its practically guaranteed. You should really not compromise unless there is a really better proposal, because a watered down solution to try to appease everyone might not help. Think of how we needed 5 proposals of scalar type hints until the stars finally aligned
the first part is always convincing that we need this kind of feature, independent of how the syntax looks like.
If someone for some reason there was an error in PHP, that reliably lead to the entire server it was running on hard-resetting whenever the query string contained the letter "e" ... and someone wrote a patch and put it on the mailing list as an RFC, someone would still complain
and Z would probably chime in and say it was breaking the backwards compatibility offered by server crashes.
@beberlei From all the feedback I got so far the only thing which I think would be able to compromise is exchanging "=" into "=>" but TBH I prefer the first than the latter
@brzuchal As far as I understand the RFC, the object initializer can only write to public attributes (if used from outside the scope of the class in question). IMO, this encourages the use of public attributes.
@SebastianBergmann Yes, that's right, cause it's purpose is simplification over repeating noise for each public property especially for DTO's and similar classes which don't need protected fields inside of application domain
@NikiC Just because we encourage using undefined variables does not mean we should encourage ... oh, well. Seriously though: yes, with typed attributes public visibility of attributes is less risky. But only a little bit.
@brzuchal There might be a use case for this for DTOs, yes, but I foresee that it will be horribly abused and lead to unmaintainable code :) Sorry for being pessimistic.
@SebastianBergmann there are no rules changed by object initializer than standard object initialization, it is also possible to write bad code full of noise now without object initializer
Well, probably not, but a lot of your validation problems go away if you had something like:
class DTO { public static function InitializeObject(array|object $inputs) { ... blah blah blah ... } }
And if it exists, call it when you do your initialization stuff (if it exists) or just default to setting the properties externally. Giving people an easy way to validate the input... but at that point, you could just use arrays in the first place I guess.
i am totally on the public typed properties for the win bandwaggon, we are even elevating our PHP upgrade policy to go for 7.4 in potentially february 2020 rather than summer 2020 as usual
@brzuchal question about your RFC and typed properties. The struct syntax is also about allowing more typed properties to be "Type" instead of "?Type". This is a central benefit imho. but for the use case where some mapper creates the objects dynamically, you need a dynamic invocation syntax from array data, like $reflection->newInstance()
not sure where the question is in there, probably "Did you consider that already?"
@beberlei Ok, would you mind elaborating on ML that adding reflection mechanism would be expected for this feature? Then I would be able to respond to such need with for eg. ReflectionClass->newInstanceFields($fields) added to RFC
i am sure the fact unitialized exists right now is a workaround for something edge casy in the engine (would need to look up the typed properties rfc), but maybe with this syntax it could be possible to enforce
@brzuchal yes, will write later. about Reflection i think you don't need to mentoin this and if the rfc is accepted you can just add this later as a refinement. Plenty of features "forgot" about reflection and it was just added later, for example Traits
if you say you want to add it for completeness then i will add it to my ML post
essentially class Customer { public $organization; public function __construct() { unset($this->organization); } public function __get($name) { if ($name === 'organization') { $this->lazyLoadOrganizationFromDatabase(); }}
i wish we could find a way to remove this dark magic and go with something explicit
> | If you did not receive a copy of the Zend license and are unable to | | obtain it through the world-wide-web, please send a note to | | license@zend.com so we can mail you a copy immediately.
....we should probably change that, as zend.com isn't controlled by the PHP project, or anyone associated with it.
It's allowed, but you're not allowed to block other people from using a similar name.
i.e the problem with the company using the php debug or whatever it was name was them trying to block PHP DBG, not them using for years without anyone noticing.
The name "PHP" must not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without prior written permission. For written permission, please contact group@php.net.
Products derived from this software may not be called "PHP", nor may "PHP" appear in their name, without prior written permission from group@php.net.
I assume if it's a transpiler and they're not actually deriving from it?
C might be relatively #1, but it's going to drop 30 places when you consider the amount of energy wasted in coffee and microwaved meals trying to debug the damn thing (/s)
I have one string like below $string = "[[2478,2477,2021,2474,2040,2039],{|gq2|2021|gq2|:{|gq2|title|gq2}}]" But i want only this value[2478,2477,2021,2474,2040,2039] so anyone have idea how can i get this using regex?
I started at about 11 or 12 with... I think, python, then lost interest until I found a copy of Visual Studio 6 on a warez site, then VB6, ASP.NET, C++, PHP
I remember my first week at University, couple of hundred people in the main lecture hall and they were trying to gauge experience by having people put their hands up, then put them down if they hadn't written the amount of code they shouted out
I have one string like below $string = "[[2478,2477,2021,2474,2040,2039],{|gq2|2021|gq2|:{|gq2|title|gq2}}]" But i want only this value[2478,2477,2021,2474,2040,2039] so anyone have idea how can i get this using regex?
@MarkR A more clear scope should have been provided but told to remain quiet about physical tests... but the fact they were kept in jail, had to make a 50k bond, and have charges against them which they have to appear for in court at a later date seems absolutely ridiculous.
Obviously the testing company are amateurs/new though.
Looks like when someone draws over something with a marker. engadget.com/2019/09/13/… Darker than Vantablack.
They were killing it.....but it's still being used as the backend authentication for google hangouts apparently. So blocking someone from pinging you in google hangouts, requires going to their "google+ page", which.....doesn't exist.
blob upload invalid: Request failed with : Cannot find package version with version id `56188`, please ensure that your token has `repo`, `read:packages` & `write:packages` scopes
@Danack i saw a few days ago that my private email address stlil has me working for my old company of 4 years ago. That was probably from google+, i found no way to change this anymore
@beberlei wait what - you can't change that setting?
to be clear, the message I got today was from someone who I have a copyright strike against on youtube. Google gave them my email so they could contact me.....and that's just turning into abuse.
ah....that reminds me. Someone I know had uploaded a picture of them on a night out where they had drawn a mustache on themselves, and they had tagged themselves in the photo. Google had decided that was an appropriate image to use for the persons business email.
please has any one experienced CORS issues with laravel + react, read up on the issue applied the fix everything works fine but i cant help but wonder if i have compromised my code by applying the package github.com/barryvdh/laravel-cors
I'm sat debating casting a vote on the engine warnings RFC. On one hand, I don't want it to appear as though new people are trying to stack the vote, on the other hand, I've debated the most contentious issues a lot and my primary motivation for starting to contribute code was to help move PHP in the same direction as what these changes bring.
Is there a general architecture to follow when you can have infinite amount of relations between the data? For example, I have item A, which points to item B, which points to item C, which points to item D. My current approach is to have one table that stores all these items as individual rows and each one of them has a "parent id", which is really just a reference to the id of another row in this table
For example, if I have the following
1 -1 A
2 1 B
3 2 C
4 3 D
Then I interpret this as Item D is pointed to by id 3 (which is C) and C is pointed to by id 2 (B) and so on.
Is there a better and recommended way to handle this?
You've basically just created a linked list in your table set, it's about optimal.
However, if your data is in a DB, you're either going to have to read it all, or do lots of union joins, or do lots of individual joins. Depending on size.
Not off the top of my head, it's pretty much just a linked list
If you had multiple sequences in it, you could eat the extra data and create one-to-one references in a linker table bewteen every part of each individual chain, but it's expensive
I am not sure how I would fetch this data without having to make as many SELECT calls as there are items, because I wouldn't know how many links it has just by looking at the first element
That is where it becomes more expensive. You can potentially keep a separate table which links every item to the first item in the chain, or if you can enter the chain at an arbitrary point, every link between every two parts
I use the latter for a recursive tree hierarchy, but it can take up a lot of link rows, and requires extreme care when making changes
Alternatively, some database engines allow single-statement recursive queries, such as Mysql's recursive cte