@Girgias I'm skimming the container/offset RFC and see deprecating ArrayObject as future work. That would greatly help ArrayIterator as well, which currently almost always will duplicate the array before iterating over it (which is obviously incredibly wasteful and still blows my mind).
I couldn't figure out a nice BC-free path for a more efficient array iterator that people liked. For instance, Nikita did not like my ForwardArrayIterator and BackwardArrayIterator classes.
My only remaining idea was to deprecate all the horrible methods on the iterator and eventually remove them. I didn't like this because of how long it would take to get there, timeline wise. But if ArrayObject is also deprecated, that does make it more palatable, at least.
I know one project that uses them quite heavily but I talked to the maintainer at the AFUP Forum PHP 2023 and they needed to rewrite it and do a new version anyway
Would either of you (@Girgias, @Derick) object to deprecating methods on ArrayIterator which don't belong to any of these interfaces? SeekableIterator, ArrayAccess, Serializable, Countable
@Crell The last time I foreach'd over an InfiniteIterator I accidentally created a singularity on the server, and let me tell you, trying to eject an entire server out of the Earth's gravity well to stop us being destroyed is no small feat.
@Girgias The real problem IMO is not the infiniteness of it. The problem is that some iterators rewind, and emit a warning, but then yield empty sequences, or null, and crap like that. I distinctly remember hitting this with databases once... was horrible.
Iterators should not be "automatically" rewindable.
At one point Amp's ConcurrentIterator interface had continue(): ?array{value, key}, but we abandoned it for a couple reasons, one of the main ones being that Psalm/PHPstan would throw errors saying null could not be destructured, even though PHP allows it.