I don't care about pretty code or design patterns or frameworks, I want to make it do things it was never designed to do, in the face of all those idiots :P
Ok, it's deeper than that, @derp have you any experience with LALR parsers? (i'll admit my experience is narrow, but I think I have enough to explain this to you)
oh, T_LOGICAL_OR is now also used in Anthonys constant scalar expressions, but we can ignore that because it needs to be in a constant definition
yea otherwise has come up a lot
maybe I should just add options to the RFC and let internals bikeshed... but to me that seems like a way to get it rejected more than coming with a concrete solution to start with
Really??? I thought md5(md5 was about the best you could do for passwords!! Do you have any other suggestions? As far as matching up, I'm not quite catching it. — Kim N Anthony Stole20 hours ago
I'm not really sure how to vote on this integer semantics rfc ...
I really don't think necessary ... "we need this", 20 years in, changing many many tests (presumably tests that passed on all kinds of architectures) is not positive reason for change ... this is the only negative thing about it though that I can see, that it changes so many tests, but it does seem to change them to something better ... so I'm looking for reasons, either way ...
if anyone who voted yes has anything useful to say ... @rdlowrey @DaveRandom ?
@JoeWatkins I voted +1 because a) consistency is good. The whole NaN etc thing doesn't actually bother me at all, it's an error plain and simple. The same probably goes for negative shifts, anyone relying on it has certainly done the wrong thing. b) The shift wrap-around element has bitten me a number of times, << 32 should be useful, but it isn't. This RFC makes it useful.
As it is, a bunch of bolierplate is required to get an integer with the least significant 32 bits set (a useful thing in binary ops when the input in a 32 bit int)
@derp I will document all of this in the RFC, if you want me to put your name there, let me know what name you want :) you can contact me at leight --> gmail if you'd rather not have it logged on SO
doesn't matter does it, if we are going to say that we should make this sort of change for consistency, then the first thing we should be consistent with is common sense, the second is the rest of php, as far as I can see this isn't consistent with either ...
@LeviMorrison If you're still there, I just encountered a possible bug in Auryn. Can you just check pastebin.com/WVxEAVZp - would you expect that code to work?
@JoeWatkins I cast it to 0 because it's as bad as any other value, and I want to cast to something consistently. Also, if we have bigints, PHP_INT_MAX ceases to make sense
infinity isn't a number and there's precedent for using 0 as a value when casting things that aren't numbers to ints. (int)INF === (int)"INF" makes perfect sense
moving forward by trading one crutch for another is an extremely inefficient way of moving forward ... I'd rather we were voting on the final implementation ...
php > var_dump( (int)new stdClass() ); PHP Notice: Object of class stdClass could not be converted to int in php shell code on line 1 PHP Stack trace: PHP 1. {main}() php shell code:0 int(1)
@JoeWatkins Yeh but that's ignoring the bigger picture. There is no value that makes sense here. The fact that you performed the operation in the first place indicates that you did something wrong somewhere else - emitting a warning is a last ditch "your code is wrong, fix it because what you are doing has holes in it" flag
On an entirely unrelated note, I spent several hours (on and off) concluding that openSUSE is the 2nd worst OS currently available. I've just discovered that the thing I was trying to set up also supports CentOS :-/
I was a debian man, until I entered an environment that was purely redhat.... it's not that I like redhat more, it's that I hate having to switch between two different ways of doing the same thing
user895378
@JoeWatkins My reason is that I think the current behavior is illogical. Inconsistency and lack of uniformity across platforms is a worthwhile goal. I'm in favor of addressing issues like this in majors.