also, sometimes I feel that internals appears as a closed community (can't describe why). Outer people sometimes say their opinion; just say anything in their rfc, but they rarely follow multiple threads or discuss a longer time with someone.
@ircmaxell I've said numerous times that I think they are a toxic kindergarden as a group. That's obviously a problem. But none that touches me a lot because I am not part of that group.
@ircmaxell thank you for sharing your concern. I just read through the last few threads and your comments here. I'm not sure I understand the issue, but I would like to. It seems like you're saying that internals is being hijacked by just a small number of people and the contributors that are proposing really solid RFCs are getting routed (at least in the conversations)?
lots of what goes on in internals is not really relevant for the general PHP community. it's discussing implementation details and such. but I think you have a good point. The RFCs affect everyone and it would be better to have more of the PHP user community involved in them.
@igorw opening up the process to the larger community would definitely be a good thing. however, I guess it will end like with all the bugs in the bugtracker. the majority of ideas will just rot because they are volunteers.
Wouldn't having more people involved make the discussion even harder to have? It's one thing if people are just reading, but if dozens more people are posting or responding...
@ircmaxell what I don't get is, why it's such a big thing with stas when the decision in the end is based on a vote. something I likely would partake in and that would make a bigger difference than getting into fights with people I don't know
@igorw sure, but just because I cannot write a patch doesn't mean I don't have ideas on how I want to use PHP that are worth hearing. In particular when PHP is considered a community effort.
obviously it's my job then to convince and inspire enough people to write that patch for me. but the current state is that I may not even write the RFC without a patch and that's pretty much shutting out people with ideas.
@Gordon sure. which is why it is possible to write a concept RFC and have a vote on that. which will make it more likely for someone to actually write the patch for it.
that mechanism already exists. an RFC doesn't need a patch. you can put the idea into the system.
@igorw @Gordon I sometimes hear that a vote should be on the implementation too… Even if it doesn't need a patch, it's not very well accepted by some devs I feel...
> There are many really good ideas for improving PHP, however some of them are really tedious or technically risky or hard. If you are about to email the "internals" mail list saying "someone should do ...", then don't hit "Send". Work out how you could do it, and then send a patch.
> Your RFC should talk about all PHP areas that will be affected: php.ini, different SAPIs, engine, extensions, etc. List similar features. List similar features in other languages. Link to references. Give an estimate of the actual positive impact to user code. Put the proposed voting options in the RFC so they can be included in its discussion
how would I know all that when I am not a core dev?
@Gordon you notice what you change. When it aren't changes of function signatures or macros (which is not so often needed), then there aren't not a lot things affected.
@bwoebi yes, that's an option. But I think the idea of the php community at large finding someone to do it for you from the internals folks is pretty flawed.
I never read or post to internals, everything always turns into an argument, not a constructive argument, a pointless argument, that I heard before a bunch of times ... a complete waste of time ...
@bwoebi it's one of the reasons why I think PHP should be a foundation of some sort that can get sponsoring and that pays full time devs to work on the language with it
@Gordon I don't see how that is flawed really, if you can get enough attention with an idea, and there is genuine interest then there will be no shortage of people to write the code ...
@JoeWatkins from my experience it takes a lot of time until someone from internals will actually start listening to you and it doesnt help that they hide on 90s channels like irc and mailing lists
@Gordon discuss it with NikiC or ircmaxell in chat… these two are the most willing to write a patch, I suppose … but generally there aren't many people interested to implement something which isn't their own idea...
@Gordon you have at least two really well known core devs in these rooms nearly every day, and me, plus you do know that they are on irc and where to find others ... it doesn't seem that much effort when you consider what you are asking of the people you seek ...
@bwoebi me is a different thing. I am talking about the community at large. just imagine each of them walks into IRC and starts requesting things. That wouldn't work.
@JoeWatkins oh yeah, IRC. That 90s medium that most people dont use because there is the web. and this chat, hmm. how many people know it exists, let alone that core devs are in here
well okay it might be inside information but as you point out, it would be a nightmare if every user with an idea came into irc and asked for a patch ...
you can't expect for every last bit of the work to be done for you, going to irc and first making yourself known, making your ideas known and getting some attention doesn't seem that hard to me, all you have to do is a sales pitch, its someone else entirely that has to create the product you sold them ...
it's just a coincience that there are devs in pecl irc rooms, I don't think it was ever planned ... there's no conspiracy to keep knowledge or skills from the community ...
@JoeWatkins there might not be a conspirary to keep the knowledge or skill away from the community but there is also little effort getting the knowledge or skill into the community.
we like to talk about some things more than we like to implement them, you know this, all programmers do it ... if an idea isn't being implemented it comes down to that I think ...
I meant C in general, if you think there is a book out there for every application written in (any language) that's wrong, there is one old (ancient) book by sara goleman out there but mostly if you are a c programmer you are quite used to reading source code for your documentation ...
just look at the C source of php… each day… and you will learn C. (really, I came from php to C … and reading C source of php helped me a lot to learn C.)
@bwoebi thanks, but tbh I dont see why I or anyone need to learn C to suggest an idea. all I want is an easy accessible place where I can do that. not some shady irc channel. but an official place.
At the risk of talking about something that isn't meta - @igorw I wouldn't mind your opinion on some code. Basically I'm an ex-game developer so I hate using large amounts of memory where not necessary, so I wasn't too fond of Composer using 650kB for storing a cache of class paths.
Basically it uses the fact that OPCache already has a cache of whether the file exists or not, to determine skip doing file_exists() rather than having a huge clasmap. Is there a standard speed test that the Composer team use for evaluating performance?
come to irc, you might get no attention, you might get the focus of one or a few ... do it in any other way, you will get the focus of the world, is that really a productive way to work ?
nobody said you had to learn C, I specifically said you didn't have to learn it, we'll do it for you ... all you have to do is present the idea to someone who is listening and you know exactly where to find them so I don't really see what the problem is ...
@JoeWatkins yes, getting the attention of the community at large over just getting the attention of those will implement is good and productive because it will reveal what the community wants from PHP and where it should be headed
@JoeWatkins Well, I kinda don't feel like I have a place to speak in this because I can't implement internal changes to PHP. But some of the arguments in some RFCs I've been seeing lately have been downright asinine. The PHP devs do not always necessarily know what PHP users want.
@JoeWatkins the only thing they are more qualified to say is whether a particular feature can be reasonably implemented. they are in no way more qualified to suggest new features.
what is the point therefore in going to the whole community at large with an idea and rallying support if the consensus among devs is that it cannot be reasonably done ...