@AndreaFaulds I really hope this is accepted. It's not quite as strict as I would personally prefer, but it feels right for PHP and will be far more useful than PHPDoc type comments. Thanks for all your work on this!
@LeviMorrison Well, they are officially called type hints. That is what the manual (and indeed the core for quite some time) refer to it as. If you want to change it, write an RFC or something.
IIRC There was a lot of argument about type-hinting "number" to cover int/float or strings with a numeric value back in the 5.4 days, nikic might remember it
@hakre - Very useful for certain types of mathematics, particularly in the field of engineering
I've been looking at Java, which uses a single class for the complex with all its mathematical operations; but also a "utils" class with a couple of extras for display formatting and conversion between polar and complex numbers
It feels like there's way too many methods for all the different mathematical operations, but I'm struggling to work out a best approach for refactoring
That approach would work for a lot of the functions that reflect PHP native functions, leaving just basic additiona/subtraction/multiplication/division in the main complex class.... because I can't overload the operators in core
@PaulCrovella I think that constant battling lets us improve. You could say that my preferred question is 'What do you want?" instead of "Who are you?" (obscure sci-fi reference)
@tereško - That'd certainly be a lot cleaner approach, and maintaining the +-*/ in the complex class itself would match the approach to add()/subtract() in DateTime so it has precedent
When you have method objects instead of functions, you can benefit from visiblity settings to create a group or family of objects, e.g. "scalar" operations have more specific access and can read/modify the "scalar" value.