Hi, hope you are all good =] Ive been writting some rust a few years ago and wanted to share how cool macros it has.. I made a couple friday examples with embedded php, check it out docs.rs/friday/0.1.0/friday/fn.friday.html
Hey, I'm getting an error that a class can't be found, while importing services from resource I ran dump-autoload and cleared the cache and checked the namespace. any ideas?
I hate the zend_ini code and the fact that it does special case the value == orig_value case regarding refcounting… wtf. If the value was originally not modified and assigning fails, it should still have modified == false ...
yield from + iterator to array is returning only 1 result when I have 3, thing is I have some other yields from in other places, I will try to provide a code example, but perhaps someone is already familiar with such generator manipulations
works with foreach (I get 3 results), doesn't works with iterator_to_array ( I only get one result )
The returned value does not implements \Traversable if that comes to your mind
@NikiC The above bug reminds me that ArrayIterator is terrible. Do you think we can deprecate nearly everything on the ArrayIterator and drop them in 9.0? I hate to wait that long but all my other proposals get sidelined.
I just want a lightweight API to operate on an array, ideally with a by-ref API or something equivalent. (because I see little reason to instantiate an ArrayIterator object just to get the last or second last element)
@PeeHaa Whether this is true or not, the fact is the built-in one has terrible performance and a needlessly complicated API (just use ArrayObject if you want that stuff).
It would need complete ownership of the array, refcount == 1. It's also important to me that for common cases it doesn't copy un-necessarily. Maybe we could create a static method helper move that accepts an array by-reference and nulls out the caller. Have to think about whether to fail if refcount is still > 1, or if we should just duplicate it, but then we can call ArrayIterator::move($array) and for at least some common cases it won't duplicate unnecessarily?
IMO it does, whether it is technically required or not. No way do I want an iterator to change the values out from under any other array... and if we invoke copy-on-write we can get unexpected performance issues. That's why I think it should be rc = 1.
Anyway, deprecating the existing APIs is the first step if we want to fix it. My attempts to provide an alternative haven't been met with much support.
I use Nginx+PHP-FPM, in the case that nginx logs "upstream prematurely closed connection while reading response header from upstream", will nginx pass the request to the next upstream that is in the load balance configuration, or even use the "backup" server that is in the upstream list?
@LeviMorrison The only effect it has is that a ZEND_DEP_FE function entry is generated for functions having it (and the ZEND_ACC_DEPRECATED flag is added for these methods)
The deprecated attribute seemed to work correctly when used with the implementation-alias attribute, meaning the original function doesn't emit deprecated, just the alias.
@NikiC Ah, I didn't realize it ran more than one. Thanks.
My plan is to next open a PR that won't merge and has all the perf improvements to make sure everything that needs deprecated is deprecated. Will take me a few weeks, I think.
I had an idea just now. We could create ArrayObjectIterator which becomes the new default iterator (why they allow you to override this, I don't care to know).
We'll alias ArrayIterator and ArrayObjectIterator but the former will have deprecation notices on basically everything and the latter won't.
Anyone who wants to preserve the (terrible) API has to switch from ArrayIterator -> ArrayObjectIterator in 9.0, because in 9.0 the ArrayIterator will drop all those methods and become efficient.
But this is would be an easier transition than switching from ArrayIterator to ArrayObject, I think? Since it's only a name change?
Actually, I'd prefer not to add ArrayObjectIterator and such because of assumptions in the code for the internal array object that's shared by everything...
@Tiffany you could abuse it for having strings in different languages. And then regret your choice when it comes time to supporting numbers in sentences.
For what it is worth. stackoverflow.com/questions/21900632/… They're talking about Java but ultimately the same principle applies. A class can access the private fields of other instances of the same class.
A couple months ago I spent a couple days doing a lot of refactoring that didn't really result in major changes to the UX but it removed like 700 lines of UI cruft and really simplified how we repeat a common pattern.