@cmb @cmb Fixed the catch-on-own-line. Everything else in that file uses brace-on-same-line for classes and functions, so unless we're going to reformat all of the examples at once there it seems better to stick with the convention of that page, at least for the time being.
Thoughts: Should null-safe methods go here (php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.basic.php), where methods and properties are first mentioned, or is there some better place? Also, since props and methods are separate sections, repeat the logic or have a null-safe section unto itself?
@DaveRandom I bought myself a gimbal for a camera, and due to not also buying a modern camera for it, and instead using my trusty iphone 6s, can only take half-decent video when the sun is out. Have a boring video of me walking around 'the block' as proof I have left the house recently: youtube.com/watch?v=BKjX4z_cOFA
@SalOrozco I am ignorant, how much installation does a rock need? You need to run some duct work for the cables or similar?
if you ever want to get rid of it I can lend you this
I spent waaaaaaaaaaay too long looking for a previous pic that I had before eventually giving up and putting my shoes on to go out to the van and take another pic
I did framing in my early 20s. I still have most of my tools. Tool belt, hammer, measuring tape, chalk line, square ruler. I kinda actually miss building. U was in charge of doing the finishing details to houses before all the drywall goes up.
So all the windows and doors had to be the correct size.
and if you ever do stuff like that in your own house then you just spend the next decade seeing all the imperfections that no-one else can see even when you point them out
fucking slack-ass constructors as well who just throw everything up and nothing is square to start with
I generally don't bother with a spirit level, because most of the time all that matters is that it looks square, a lot of the time if you line it up properly it looks fucked because nothing else is straight
Last week a construction crew made the news here by having paved over a dead cat. Half the cat was sticking out from under the edge of the pavement. "Not my fucking job" award winners of the month.
@DaveRandom so I'm told :) Although I'm also told that python's async is, uh, questionable at times. The main point is that I do scientific programming so this is completely out of any scope I might touch.
PHP is not a particularly good language to work with either, if you are learning async, because the stuff we have is bolted on the side by bastardising generators (atm)
I personally would recommend JS, probably node but also client side if you have a good use case
@AndrasDeak the implementation and docs for Golang's way of running stuff concurrently is a pretty good way of understanding it, and also why other languages versions (so far) are terrible imo.
@AndrasDeak oh yeh I mean mono is very definitely mature, a shitload of stuff runs very well on it in production and it can frequently out-perform windows by a factor of 10 or more, depending on what you are doing
C# was historically "nice language, shame about the framework" but that is no longer true :-)
@AndrasDeak mono is one of several ".net core" impls for *nix, the most mature and most popular, those are facts, I have no valid opinions on this topic :-P
You can always resolve with something like [$key, $promise] if that's your purpose, but then that's not replacing one placeholder directly for another – some other information was conveyed.
@Wes Every promise or placeholder implementation I'm aware of has that behavior.
You don't resolve a placeholder with another placeholder – that's non-sense.
one of the good things about having actually understood stuff at one point is that you will forever be aware of how little you understand it, regardless of the transient level of understanding
you can call that the DaveRandom effect if you want
Not in this case. The API promises (pun sort-of intended) to only invoke the callbacks registered once it has an actual value. A promise is just another placeholder.
@Crell On that note, if you have a few moments I updated the Fiber RFC. I appreciated your feedback in the past, since you're at least familiar with the concepts, but not in as deep as many of us :-P
@Wes no, but I do know that if you want status updates pub/sub is a much better way to do it, and that I cannot imagine any unimagined use case that would not be served by same
@Wes If you really want a promise from another promise, just resolve it with [$promise] and use [$promise] = yield $otherPromise.
But… I have wrote a lot of async code and have never wanted to do that.
The closest I can think of in Amp code is here, where we remove a promise from a list of pending promises based on the objects ID, but we didn't need the actual promise object for that.
if i recall correctly in that particular case i needed to get the iterator because i needed to iterate two iterators in parallel, something i cannot do with just foreach()
so like i was doing e.g. $o->getIterator()->next() and rather than getting the iterator i was getting another iteratoraggregate
Traversable is also a big clusterfuck, i am glad i read recently you are trying to get rid of it
i think in php8 extensions will be required to implement iterator. ie they no longer can implement traversable "alone" without implementing also iterator
@Trowski "A FiberScheduler defines a class is able to start new fibers using" - I had to read that sentence 4 times to figure out the grammar in it. I eventually did but it's very clumsy.
@Trowski haha, and it's also recursive if i recall correctly, like php does stuff like $o->getIterator()->getIterator()->getIterator() indefinitely until it finds something actually iterable :P
Roger. After I finish reading the latest fiber draft, if I have time before I have to leave the hospital. :-)
@Trowski ReflectionFiber applying to both fibers and schedulers feels super weird to me. Also, while I love the static constructors that's, I think, inconsistent with all other reflection classes.
@Trowski Lots of reflection classes have nearly identical APIs. But AFAIK reflection is pretty solidly one-class-per-construct, with no static methods. Let's stick to that.
A separate RFC that adds nice create() methods to every reflection class would be a separate matter. No idea if that would pass.
"Adding this feature directly to PHP core makes allows it to be used by a wide variety of library authors without concerns of portability." - Grammar parse error.