So... I just stumbled over a bunch of `E_WARNINGS` and think they should be more than warnings: http://lxr.php.net/xref/PHP_TRUNK/Zend/zend_compile.c#5555 What does the room think?
(I needed to reboot so took some time.) expected input of a routine should be such which doesn't break the routine. so type hints in a loosely typed environment can help to ensure such. right now if I need an int, I need to typecast it inside a function or method close to the top. just to ensure preconditions for the following code are met. similar with string.
@AndreaFaulds so you have user data that is not an int that you pass to a method that explicitly wants an int? And you don't want to validate it for some reason? How does this make sense?
@AndreaFaulds if the user data (valid or invalid) is not relevant, then the cast is perfectly ok
if the type of the data is relevant, then useland-specific validation (via a validator component, with user-friendly messages, etc) allows for safe casting
I hate to do the casting all the time actually. not that I dislike having cast in PHP generally, but just for strictness reason writing the boilerplate code, perhaps forgetting it, then it would be more useful with parameter hinting.
@AndreaFaulds It should error if you don't pass an int. If you want something int-like, then you can validate for your specific constraints and then cast it.
But say PHP adds strict hints. If we have strict hints, this encourages lazy developers (like perhaps myself if I'm hacking something together quickly) to use an explicit cast: getUser((int)$_GET['id'])
@AndreaFaulds Great that we're at this point! So, it needs validation. Strict types force you to do validation+cast. Weak types allow you to not validate.
@LeviMorrison Anthony just wanted to cast them, but I agree, it should be an error
@NikiC For float values, just returning NaN is actually quite nice. If you fail to validate something, you end up with an error value as the result of your calculations, rather than just garbage.
@NikiC Or, you can just do this if you're lazy: getUser(parseInt($_GET['id'])); - in the event it's an invalid ID, it's false and fails the typehint :)
@NikiC No....it's actually worse problems. FIG are trying to solve hard problems with a single solution for everyone everywhere for all time.....even though there are obviously multiple 'correct' solutions that people could choose between depending on their use case. It's just possible to have a single solution that satisfies everyone.
@AndreaFaulds For example, they are trying to define the One True Cache interface that will cater for everyone everywhere, as well as be very simple. That is a problem that does not have a solution.
Instead of seeking solutions that everyone will use everywhere, they should be allowing multiple versions of solutions and allow people to choose between them.
That's kind of the same thing - suggest some solutions, if people want to use them and they're useful they will. If they're not useful then trying to force the One True Way is a pointless waste of time.
@DaveRandom Are you in a position to recommend a place for people to meet for drinks for Friday before PHPNW? How about nicholsonspubs.co.uk/thebankmanchester
@NikiC So... I have an idea to do covariance checks at 'compile time'. It must actually happen at runtime, but it could happen immediately after the class compile time. Does that sound reasonable to you?
The idea is add a field to the zend_class_entry which contains functions to check for covariance. Alternatively I could iterate through all functions in the function_table and check for return types that need checked.
Anyway, when I have a list of functions that need checked, I could emit an opcode for each one.
This is the last big piece of the implementation I need to work out.
@Patrick My only feedback is that the first thing on each page is a description of what the rest of the page will do. e.g. "A front controller is a single file that all of the requests will be sent to. This allows us to have a single point of entry to all of the code that actually processes the requests".
of course, for that to become important, you need to have codebase where you have one business model, with several front-facing apps: cms, website, rest api, etc
`A front controller is a single point of entry for your application. All requests for the application will be sent to it and your code can handle them.` is that technically correct and easy to understand for a beginner?
@tereško I want this to be an entry point for people who come in here asking what framework they should use and get the answer 'use php'. So it's aimed at people who have experience but mostly with frameworks
I'll just shorten it to the first sentence and add a link
Turns out there was a function that I thought was being called at compile time that is called at runtime that I am already hooking into. Yay! End of return type patch is in sight!
well of course, because the typehint in class C is for an object of type... C. The error is in the definition of the class, not even getting as far as calling the method.
if I wrote class C extends A { function M(A $a){} } then it compiles fine, but C extends A, so why is defining the method with a typehint of C instead of A incompatible?
"Is there a legitimate reason why it should be considered incompatible, " 'i.e. any call to C::M with class B as the parameter will break, and you can't tell that it will break, if you are only aware of the abstract class A.'
....because it's not compatible.
i.e. you need to be able to pass any type of object that is a subtype of A, not just some subtypes.
@Danack No, you pretty much just came up with something irrelevant that would violate the typehint at runtime, where my question was related to a function signature incompatibility at compile time between a more specific subtype guaranteed to have the implementation required by it's abstract parent.
@Markberg: if you can include in your question why you are splitting up <script> tags, that would be helpful. That looks like it is designed to evade XSS detection.
@Leigh The whole point of the type-hinting is to guarantee that the code meets a certain set of requirements and can be called safely. By making the subclass have a more specific type for its method, it means that the method cannot be called safely. And so it shouldn't be compatible.
Anyway, as I say, if you don't know what it does, delete it?
Will do @Patrick. First minor item - maybe on the front page explain what skill level someone should have to follow the tutorial. With Git, Composer, MVC-ish structure, I'd say it's not for beginners.