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23:00
(Well, every method call, actually; functions never have to do covariance checks)
@LeviMorrison I'm telling ya, delayed binding is what you need
Depends how you implement it.
@ircmaxell sounds right
@ircmaxell Define that, because we have lots of different kinds of binding in PHP.
just like how inheritance is bound
I actually reuse that binding.
23:02
nice
And it has issues, which is why we're talking :/
and honestly, I think autoloading is fine with covariance
if they textually match (parent and child), then no loading happens
but if they don't, trigger an autoload to check to see if they are covariant
So what's your preferred order? 1 > 2 > 3 or 1 > 3 > 2?
still puts errors where they need to be (compile time), has no runtime hit, and only has a compile-time hit if you're actually using covariant methods
@LeviMorrison what are 1, 2 and 3?
27 mins ago, by Levi Morrison
1) Accept that in some cases using covariant return types will require you to autoload, whereas that same code without the return type checks currently works without autoloading it.
27 mins ago, by Levi Morrison
2) Move the covariance check to some later time, such as the first time the class is used or maybe when the method is called.
27 mins ago, by Levi Morrison
3) Make return types invariant instead of covariant.
23:05
1 > 3 > 2
but 1 >> 3 > 2
Hey, that made me think of something.
Presumably, opcache stores pre-constructed classes, yes?
Because that's how we represent classes as "opcodes", isn't it?
it can't go that far, because of inheritance binding
so it stores them in an intermediary state
partially compiled, partially not (delayed early binding is the mechanism)
So it's compiled, except inheritance hasn't been done, yes?
23:07
Basically.
In that case, is covariance checking by autoloading really going to be that slow, if all the files are in opcache and execute no code (just contain class defs)?
Ah, let me clarify something:
It's not the performance of autoloading that is the issue; it's that it requires an autoloader.
or the classes to be predefined
well, I guess that's not possible in some cases
23:09
But in some cases... here's an example:
You can't do late binding? :/
aka circular references
<?php
class A {
  function foo(): B {}
}
class B extends A {
  function foo(): C {} // triggers autoload here
}
class C extends B {
  function foo(): C {}
}
If I rewrote the parser a bit to use a three-pass technique it would fix this particular issue... but it wouldn't fix all issues:
<?php //A.php
class A {
  function foo(): B {}
}
<?php //B.php
class B extends A {
  function foo(): C {}
}
you know what you could do, and this is going to be tricky, but make a verification stack. So you push late binding checks for covariance into a stack, which gets completed later, after the file is done compiling. You'd make the autoload calls inline as you find them, but do the check after compilation is finished of all files (the outer most compiler file)
<?php //C.php
class C extends B {
  function foo(): C {}
}
<?php //main.php
require "A.php";
require "B.php";
require "C.php";
@ircmaxell Doesn't work; see this long example I just posted.
23:13
Can't you use incomplete classes in your checks?
Of course, you could switch to using an autoloader if you did this.
@LeviMorrison right...
Anyway, so that brings us back to whatever option we prefer.
^^
I don't know if that's possible then...
23:15
Perhaps - and this'll sound crazy - make the checks work like a human does the checks.
Don't verify whole classes. Verify individual cases.
@AndreaFaulds when
Yeah, when is the issue ^^
@ircmaxell As soon as possible.
As humans we skip the code execution and jump around to the various definitions and make sure they all work.
I mean you could make a "todo list", a hash table of types
23:17
Yes, that's what I'm thinking.
so when compiling B.php, you'd set todo['C']->list[] = check_this_method. Then when C is declared, check the todo list for that class.
Something like that, yes.
you could even make a flag on the method which indicates if it was checked or not, and if you get to the return method call without it being checked, you know by definition it must be failed, and hence can error
however, that still pushes the output of the error to the wrong place and time
hence I think if that's the solution, go with #3 by making return types invariant
Hang on a sec, guys
I'm writing out my thoughts on how to do it
It's not incredibly complicated.
errors about invalid class definitions must happen at definition time. The example above needs to output the error (assuming C doesn't extend B) when B.php is being compiled, otherwise errors are going to be difficult to track down, and it will become a nightmare to debug
23:22
<?php

class A {
function foo(): B {}
}

TODO:
* Need to verify A::foo
* Information needed: B.extends

class B extends A {
function foo(): C {}
}

TODO:
* Need to verify A::foo
* Information needed: B.extends
* Need to verify B::foo
* Information needed: C.extends

New information:
* B.extends = A
We have the information needed to verify A::foo.

TODO:
* Need to verify B::foo
* Information needed: C.extends

class C extends B {
function foo(): C {}
}

TODO:
* Need to verify B::foo
* Information needed: C.extends
Damnit, StackOverflow ruined my formatting
Lemme make that a gist.
no, I get what you're after
and yes, that will work
but it'll still output the error that B is invalid when C is defined, which is a problem, since if you never include C you never know it's invalid
with autoloaders, you can solve this
without, I don't think you can...
Well, with B, you just know that you don't know
right
The question is really what to do then: Wait until you know to do the checks, or give up immediately
which isn't enough to error
hmmm...
I wonder
what if core was invariant, but was built in such a way that an extension could add support for variance later on
not saying that's a great idea, but would solve that problem, since the extension could just require autoloading
Is it really a problem to wait until we know for certain before we error?
yes, because we successfully compiled a bad class, but depending on what you do later in the program it may or may not error
not good
Bad sad bad.
This is a problem because of autoloading and inclusion at runtime, really
If we compiled everything beforehand, it'd be easy :p
Which is why Hack's typechecker can work ^^
23:34
yup
dynamic FTL
@LeviMorrison 1 > 3 > 2 - I would have guessed that autoloading wouldn't be a large hit for anyone using OPCache, though would be worth measuring. Accepting the return type as invariant for now might be okay - do you think that would present a sociological problem in the future changing it to covariant? i.e. getting it past internals.
I don't think so, variance is an accepted concept, and it's be nice to do both parameter and return type at the same time
@ircmaxell A lot of people use autoloading these days... I don't think requiring it for this to work is too bad.
Basically: Run the check (using something like my method, maybe?). If there are unknowns and we've finished autoloading and parsing the files, we give up.
perhaps
Actually, @LeviMorrison that's true. In your example, if you required C before B, you'd error as B was not defined. So it may be OK to simply error in that case
23:52
Hi! if a string $query contains + or / and then I do preg_replace('/' . $query . '\n/', '', $mystring, then there are problems because of these + or / ...
How should I deal with such cases ?
preg_quote
@ircmaxell would you do :
$query = preg_quote($query, '/');

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