[joe@localhost jit]$ /opt/bin/php -dextension=jit.so fib.php
resource(6) of type (jit function)
resource(4) of type (jit context)
resource(5) of type (jit type)
int(102334155)
jit: 21.734 seconds
int(102334155)
php: 56.258 seconds
calculating Fibonacci because apparently we need to do that ... 40th number ...
jsperf.com/closure-prototype-static-performance/22 This is quite a problem .. Although it says static objects are faster in Firefox .... Processing an image without creating objects is faster on my intel atom with firefox
I was even thinking of removing objects and using c-style
I think maybe, it's too difficult to come at the JIT thing from an engine perspective, we all know it's not necessary for the vast majority of the things php is used for, PHP will call mysql api functions no slower than C, same goes for curl or insert library here, maybe an approach we can bring to production quicker would be an extension of the Closure idea, with Compiled Closures (Closure::compile() : CompiledClosure) giving us somewhere to deal with signatures and what not ...
then if you have a unit of code that performs very badly, you wrap in compiled closure, it's not dependent on opcache, doesn't disturb anything else ... workable ??
you would have to give a signature yeah, you can build structs/unions .... but you would provide more than that, you would have to have some way of array[int] or int[] for those arrays
I don't know everything or very much at all about it yet, I guess by the time the wrapper is complete, I'll know enough to take it further ... or give up and nikic can do something cool with it :D
Well, I'm glad I mentioned libjit the other day. Unfortunately I've been really busy and haven't got to do much with it but if it got you interested then it was worth the couple hours I invested.
Also, you should measure the build, compile and optimization time in your fib.php so we can see what it is like.
yeah I'll do more detailed tests when more complete, also I'll do integration tests too ... I didn't think I'd get this far so quickly, usually write them as I go ...
okay, but some people, me included, refer to the thing we work on as a system or project rather than an app, because the things we work on do incorporate things like android and ios applications and web services and backend services and network infrastructure ... so "app" doesn't really describe the thing we work on very well at all ...
well a bit, but, it's a bit shortsighted to think even on that scale, I know that many do ... but how you write an api is largely dictated by the hardware you have at your disposal, what languages you can use, where those languages will execute, so you have to think about more than the classes and methods you are designing, all the time ... if you want to get it right ...
what is important is that you know the ones you use really well, it's not sensible to rely on one language to get you through life, just like you have more than one pair of pants ...
@Jimbo I have but it still required a good internet connection and decent machine on both ends. Though I haven't much looked in to it I would VERY much like a cheap solution to being able to play my PC games on my TV in my living room without moving my PC.
I know C, php , JavaScript and mysql and java . In my spare time I try to put my knowledge to practical use, like I am reading image processing and hence trying to implement with js ... And of course I am trying to improve
that seems crazy, what are you doing, does gd do it ?? do they need to be rendered by the browser for some reason, some part of a game or something maybe ?
nobody really cares there is too much code ... because java ... there's nearly always too much code ... because try { try { try { try { till you're blue in the face }}}}
imagine that was PHP, if someone showed you that, you'd say it was pretty crappy ... there's no reason to treat any language differently from any other, SRP and those other principles or techniques stand whatever language you are using ...
even in languages where there are no objects, we still separate responsibility reasonably well, we're almost forced too by tradition ...
@Fabien Something either short or long term. i.e. some going in a doing a short term project, or finding a company that looks good to work for longer term. But trying to avoid 6 month contracts on something that isn't fun.
I lack projects that have succeeded....a lot of the companies i have worked for (or setup myself) have lacked a clear business plan, and so failed to deliver a sucessful project, which doens't look awesome on a CV.
@Fabien they're getting there, (and I really need to put github.com/Danack/Imagick-demos live) but the kind of company that I want to work for, would be interested in making sure that their employees are capable of delivering projects succesfully, not just having the technical knowledge to do programming.