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user924016
20:08
Double Mornings =]
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are you really introducing strict type hints ? :)
cause I like the sound of that :D
@OIS Yes, but you have to explicitly specify that you want them at the top of the file. That sounds bad, but it fixes some of the issues strict hints would otherwise have
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strict type hints don't have any down sides afaik. if you don't want them, accept anything like today
In particular, with my approach:
1) We also get strict typing for internal/extension functions (anything in the PHP manual, stuff like `htmlspecialchars`, `str_replace`, `imagecreate` etc.),
2) Existing libraries can add hints without breaking stuff,
3) Existing projects can migrate gradually,
4) People who want weak hints won't be upset, and aren't forced to use strict hints
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I would hope it was the other way around, strict type hints are the default, weak type hints has to be specified. But as long as I get my strict type hints Im happy :)
no more if (!is_int() && !ctype_digits())) throw NotIntException();
20:30
@OIS Strict hints by default would be nice, but then we couldn't fix the behaviour of built-in PHP functions.
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the int checks are very varied :I
@Andrea is this for PHP7?
as in 7.0?
@OIS Yes.
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nice
the only thing is I will of course require UString instead of string ;)
j/k
IMO, we should have such things in a PHP namespace (to avoid collisions)
@OIS As in "7"
Also morning again room 11ers
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20:39
you can't do like function test(string $name, weakString $phone)
@OIS I didn't want to allow that, I'd rather not deal with both weak and strict typing at the same time :/
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well, as long as ppl program towards an interface strict type hints is ok for me
interface all the things
umm, can you specify strict/weak at interface level and all implementations has to follow it?
what about a weak/strict trait in a strict/weak class?
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what if I implement one weak and one strick interface?
@OIS Nope.
You just have scalar type hints
Whoever calls your code gets to choose the mode they're using
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20:47
so if my code works with this imlementation of the interface it can fail with this other?
@OIS I'm not sure I understand, could you elaborate?
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person A makes a weak class B which implements interface C, then person D makes a strict class E which implements interface C
person F checks to see if object G implements interface C, if so do stuff. but when G is made iwth E it fails even though it worked with the original B
No, classes and interfaces would not be strict or weak
They would simply have type hints or not. The caller gets to choose whether the call is strict or weak.
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the caller gets to chose?
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20:50
no no no, the method has to chose
@OIS Why?
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the point of type hints is to push the checks that the parameter is correct out to the callee
if the callee can just skip that step with weak type hints, they might as well not exist
The step isn't skipped
Weak hints convert parameters where possible. If you mark a parameter as integer, you always get an integer. But if the calling file is using the weak type checking mode, that value might have been converted from a string, say.
Here, let me give you an example.
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yes, like "123 my address"
<?php // api.php, declares some function
function foobar(integer $int) {
    var_dump($int);
}
<?php // a.php
declare(strict_typehints=TRUE);
include "api.php";
foobar(1.0); // errors, 1.0 is a float not an integer
foobar(1); // succeeds
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20:54
there is often a reason I don't just call (int) on input parameters
or (bool)
<?php // b.php
// no declare() so it's using weak type hinting mode
include "api.php";
foobar(1.0); // succeeds, 1.0 is converted to integer 1
foobar(1); // succeeds
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or (string)
In your case, you'd probably do what a.php does there and use declare(strict_typehints=TRUE) in all your files so you'd get strict type checking
But someone else using a library you wrote wouldn't have to use strict checking if they didn't want to
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well, Im not the only programmer at my company :I
so they will send some garbage and guess who will have to fix stuff...
"" will be 0 I guess
@OIS there's no difference if they use weak hints or blindly cast themselves anyway
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20:58
I don't blindly cast to int, which is why I don't want weak type hints
@OIS IIRC that's not accepted for integer/float
@OIS they, not you.
Just thinking out load. Shouldn't it be the methods responsibility to decide what constraints(maybe the wrong word) on data are required? Anyway, having file level definitions could end in debugging hell. Passing the same data to the same method may yield a different result (or an error) in a different file sounds bad.
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@Paul no Im the one who cares about error logs and security
/me gives up.
File level toogeling may be a solution (even if I'd prefer a dedicated syntax for both ways). However, wouldn't a toogle on the defining file lead to much more predictable code?
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@Rangad aye when I read strict type hints I hoped I could specify in the method/interface that this had to be already a string, float or int, like I already can do with array or a specific interface/class.
the type of used typeannotation would essentially become part of all symbols signatures defined in that class.
@AndreaFaulds Would this always be per-file? If a.php includes b.php, would b.php also use strict type hints or would it still be weak?
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The point being that fastAndLoose"Programmer" doesn't make type hints useless
I don't really see the point of type hints if they aren't strict
21:13
@TheodoreBrown Always per-file.
@Rangad Maybe, but then you'd be forced to use strict or weak hints by the API, and I don't like that
Reading code, it wouldn't be clear what would succeed and what wouldn't
Because function a would be strict, function b would be weak, function c would be untyped...
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:)
obviously what I wrote is wrong, because reddit gave me -5
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I think I could use a few Zend html functions from a few years ago in Symfony 2 actually
user924016
@tereško lol =]
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21:24
Yii sounds as modern as ZF1 ...
@OIS if you where referring to ZF2, then that would probably be achievable, because both of those frameworks are modular and integrate well with composer
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I just took a quick glance at the Yii tour and it reminded me of ZF1
if you are referring to ZF1, then it is a horrible mess .. which is kinda what Yii2 is like now
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basically MVC without M
.. please don't go there
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21:28
:)
Hey guys is there anyway we can generate VLAN tagged traffic through PHP?
or somesort of traffic generator that I can call from PHP through API
wat x2
I want to open websites through php script
file_get_contents works fine
but I am not sure how can I generate tagged traffic
21:29
what is "tagged traffic" ?
VLAN tag or 802.1Q tag
I'd say you need to configure your network stack or the router then if you need to tag it. PHP can't tag the traffic.
yeah, php "is" in the wrong network layer to affect it
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yeah thats OS level
@AndreaFaulds Granted. Might be obvious that I'd not be a big fan of file based decisions, if I can't controll how my code behaves (Not thought through, may change my mind after some thinking about it anyway.). This just feels not right. I'm in no way a person that should have a big say in that anyway. With just 1.5 commits to php-src and a few mails on internals.
21:32
@Rangad Your code always behaves the same, this just affects how strictly types are checked when code written by others calls yours
You'll always get the types you ask for, by the way
I think I've probably voiced it already, but I don't like declare ^^
yay, going to Hawaii in a few weeks :-D
How is declare really that different from a ini setting aside from granularity? It's the same idea, isn't it?
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@ircmaxell neato
take me with you?
@Rangad don't make your contribution smaller than it is. compared with mine, it's infinite times higher than my core contribs.
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21:34
I think weak type hints is like function test($intParam) { $intParam = (int) $intParam; }
Speaking of core contribs, can you guys review this? github.com/morrisonlevi/php-src/compare/typed_returns
@ircmaxell so ... visiting colonies of the american empire
@OIS what happens when casting to integer fails in your example?
@tereško ?
hi all
21:35
@AndreaFaulds Hmm, so if api.php started with a call to foobar("1") it would succeed when included in both a.php and b.php?
@LeviMorrison declare is totally different from an ini setting
The problem with ini settings is that you can't use them. because globals
declare doesn't have that issue
@TheodoreBrown The behaviour of api.php would be completely unaffected by whatever it includes or is included by
That's just granularity as I already mentioned.
@ircmaxell dig in some history. It was actually quite interesting how Hawaii "joined" USA
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@hakre when does (int) fail?
21:37
well, sure, but it's a full state now, unlike some other territories
@LeviMorrison There's another, more important difference: INI settings are part of the environment. declare is part of the code.
@OIS with an object I think.
But I couldn't get away(throw something at them) if my code is called with invalid parameters by those who consume it. (I wonder if I should care about that). As long as 12.9999999 wouldn't pass as an integer(12) I could adapt.
@AndreaFaulds It's still configuration depended behavior. Remind me how that's a good thing?
to all proposed soultions
21:38
For types I really think that's not just "not a good thing" but a "bad thing". Weren't you the one saying dart's model for types is bad because dev and prod are different?
@ircmaxell yeah , the "territories" was kinda crazy clusterfuk: youtube.com/watch?v=ASSOQDQvVLU
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@hakre no that's 1
@LeviMorrison It's not configuration.
@LeviMorrison Yes. That's a configuration setting. It's not the same thing.
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@hakre well, 1 or 0
What I'm proposing is much closer to what Hack's type checking modes or JS's 'use strict'; than it is to php.ini settings
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21:40
does JS use strict do anything besides requiring you to declare variables?
:)
It's not a property of the environment that's completely unreliable. It's not even global. It's a per-file aspect of the code itself
@OIS Yes, a few things. It makes this undefined in the global scope, for instance.
@OIS Changes behavior of eval as well.
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@Andrea ah, I never use eval or code in global scope...
what kind of owner / boss is it who always give the customer they want, and then the two programmers (me and another programmer) get yelled at (not litterally) for not meeting the deadlines. He always takes the customer's side. Like this major one ALWAYS adds something each time. He says its just common sense and they are not really adding anything. Funny thing is, after yelling at us... he generally apologizes 15 minutes later or so. Is that weird?
@OIS There are some changes that may affect you, go Google it
21:43
@JABFreeware Does he yell in front of the customer?
if you give him a realistic deadline, he says thats unacceptable and promises the client a bad deadline. Not to mention half our time is spent in meetings, going over stuff because they are so unorganized. I've been there 2 months. The other programmer several years. Thinking about quitting but am I just being too picky?
<?php

class A {
    function method(): self {
    }
}

class B extends A {
    function method(): self {
    }
}
@Rangad Remote programming position, so no.
^ This isn't erroring.
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@Andrea I always code in "use strict"; but I don't see how that is relevant to PHP type hints
21:45
It seems Dmitry merged the check code with arg info and retained the bad semantics of not checking things until called. And then when you actually call something you get an E_STRICT instead of a catchable error.
@OIS right 1.
@LeviMorrison D:
why the constant chew out and apologize loop? Hard to take him seriously like this...
@LeviMorrison Did your tests catch it?
@AndreaFaulds Not my phpt tests; he altered those to accommodate the behavior.
I didn't put it to vote last night because I couldn't build master and verify it was working properly.
21:47
@LeviMorrison eww
Today I can build master and caught this when running some sanity checks.
Hmm, I am wrong on a few details when double checking, but it doesn't match the behavior I outlined.
o.O no I was right. I just don't have E_STRICT turned on. This is exactly why I hate this behavior. Was actually wrong on that; it's just a bug altogether.
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@JABFreeware definately start looking for a new job
@JABFreeware Maybe he is angry about himself and you are the ones who gets his anger. After he calms down he realizes that he wasn't really professional. I'm sure there is a se site dedicated to workplace behaviour and the right way to tell your boss that he is an a*.
without loosing your job
well... i'm beginning to question if I even want it
its not well paying, and its frustrating that the customers are never happy for one reason or the other, which means hes not. And why not stand behind your programmers? without us...he would be nothing.
he couldnt survive without us for a week
and he is having me do stuff outside the job description. IE ADVANCED sql/ssas which I was quite clear from the beginning this is outside my skillset and I cant learn it if you are interrupting me all the time...
If nothing works brewers.se is the right blace to start a new hobby ;D Tbh, it's never wrong to have other options open. Does your boss have a boss?
21:53
@Rangad startup...hes the owner
I'm just wrapping my head around $a = null; $a['abc'] === null; it sure is logical but I needed a few seconds to think about why it's right. Maybe it could be wise to raise a notice when using a non-string/non-array value as an array.
I nearly told him to go f himself today and I quit lol
including $a = 12; $a[12 /* randmom offset */] === null;
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@Rangad $test = (string) null;var_dump($test["hey"]);
""[0] is "\0" ?
nah is the same for any index
Yes, hey is converted to 0 and (string) null is an empty string. I understand why it's that way when accessing a string. But why is $a = null converted in a value type when accessed as an array in the first place.
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21:59
cause "hey"[1] === "e"
@LeviMorrison E_STRICT for what error?
@LeviMorrison Did you get my ping about the PHP 4 constructors patch being near-done?
@NikiC Return type mismatch.
> visited 1706 days, 1703 consecutive
daaaammmm
@ircmaxell whoooaaaaa
22:03
@LeviMorrison As in function() : array { return null; } ?
@OIS What has hey todo with my example ? My question was about essentially allowing null['abc']; Example: $a = null; var_dump($a['what ever index']); without raising a notice.
@NikiC No, when overriding in methods.
ok
yeah make that fatal
<?php

error_reporting(E_ALL);

class A {
    function method(): self {}
}

class B extends A {
    function method(): self {}
}
^ That is an E_STRICT.
though of course E_STRICT is the consistent behavior ^^
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22:04
@Rangad aye, strings in PHP can be accessed as stringbuffers.
I wanted to make an RFC to move it to something better for parameters, but time constraints and whatnot.
@OIS but there is no string involved?
There is no legacy code here to be compatible with, unlike the parameter types.
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@Rangad this is the "curse" of weak typed languages
not doing contravariance?
22:06
@ircmaxell Unsure, which is one reason I don't have the time ^^
user1804599
Do covariance like Eiffel. Hilarity will ensue.
It's not just as simple as bumping E_STRICT to E_DEPRECATED or something.
@NikiC When I run the tests I get an E_STRICT, but when I run sapi/cli/php Zend/tests/return_types/inheritance010.php on the resulting php file I don't.
Any ideas on why that behavior is occuring?
Making it very hard to diagnose stuff.
@AndreaFaulds you ever been on a schnitzeljagd?
@OIS Not sure if weak typed language should really be an argument here. Allowing to access an offset of an integer variable makes no sense. And almost ever is a bug. It's also not consistent with other array related behaviour as an undefined offset should produce a notice on its own.
@igorw Ich weiß nicht was ein "Schnitzeljagd" ist. Aber es klingt lecker.
22:14
@igorw That sounds like an awfully personal question...
Looking it up, sounds like it has nothing to do with, er, schnitzel. What?
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@Rangad null is converted to a string not int. Im not sure if there is an error or not when accessing an index in a stringbuffer that is not set...
just always test your code and don't do weak type hints
:P
@LeviMorrison Did you run with -derror_reporting=E_ALL?
@AndreaFaulds yea we used to do them at birthday parties when I was a kid, was always rather disappointed at the lack of schnitzel at the end
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nah null prolly can't be strings with weak type hints, but never assume a variable is a certain type
22:17
@NikiC No, but error_reporting(E_ALL); is the first line of the file; I suppose that does actually make a difference given this is done at compile-time.
I did those as a kid too
Though in English it's not nearly as cool sounding
@igorw I'm not actually a massive Schnitzel fan, though it is alright. My GitHub username stems from a weird forum in-joke.
"Scavenger Hunt" </lame>
@SaraGolemon From now on all "scavenger hunts" shall be called "Schnitzel hunts" in English. No exceptions. Why? Because schnitzel. All in agreement? Good.
I don't know about the internals but $a = 'string'; echo $a[10] produces a notice. What I was suggesting is to let $a = 123;echo $a[10];` produce a notice, too.
user924016
22:19
wat
@Rangad That's weird behaviour, yeah. I dunno why it's permitted.
motion carries
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$a = "123";var_dump($a[10]); // ""
uhh
$a = 123;var_dump($a[10]); // NULL
scalar dereferencing should imply a string cast
Because PHP
22:22
$a = 123;var_dump($a[10]); // lottery winning numbers
It's weird to do "$int"[0] to get the highest number^^
@bwoebi But how do you know if it's a string offset or a array offset?
You guys make me hungry... schnitzel
@SaraGolemon well, we're dereferencing a scalar, so it isn't an array offset
@LeviMorrison yeah that doesn't take effect
22:24
@bwoebi But neither is it a string
@SaraGolemon But I don't care whether it's a string or an array offset. It's just an offset, when considering strings like an implicit array of chars
((Note: Strings aren't scalars, technically))
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because always use function test(array $param)
strings are stringbuffers
@SaraGolemon since PHP 7… yeah
what does that have to do with php 7?
22:26
well in PHP 7, strings are refcounted
@bwoebi Er... no
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@bwoebi that is not relevant if it's true
Strings have always been refcounted, that's irrelevabt
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or false
They're still not scalars
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22:27
but they are is_scalar()
@OIS Only because PHP is dumb
@SaraGolemon yeah, the zval was refcounted as a whole…
Yes, I know how the zval works. :p
but that's irrelevant… got something wrong… because hashtables are now also refcounted on their own…
@SaraGolemon you don't need the "is dumb". Because PHP is usually enough :-P
22:29
I don't see how scalarity and refcountiness are related
... what does refcounting have to do with this conversation at all?
@ircmaxell :D
@NikiC yes, my bad…
for the record, yes. I'm being a pedant about whether or not a string is a scalar
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in PHP string is just short for stringbuffer
@OIS ...
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22:31
:)
No... no it isn't.
**Makes an origami swan and gives it to @OIS as a consolation prize
Okay, I think I have return type mismatches being compile-time fatals now.
yay :-D
@LeviMorrison YOLO
Wait, compile-time fatals?
How are you hadling return $var; ?
Presumably not by clever static analysis...
I think he means where child class's have a type mismatch from the parent
22:35
Oh.... signature variance
Was gonna say... slapclap.jpg
erm, slowclap.jpg
at least that's what we've been talking about
I'm not sure what a slapclap is
But it sounds like it requires consent
according to google image search at least
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22:36
is it contagious?
Literal laugh out loud
llol?
is that a new thing?
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it is since ppl started saying "lol" out loud
If I could get a quick review of the implementation and the RFC for return types that would be great. /cc @SaraGolemon @NikiC @AndreaFaulds @ircmaxell @bwoebi
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22:44
is this a valid Iterator? yield $key => $value;
will look at it shortly
has anyone written a type checker for PHP, apart from Hack's and PHPStorm's?
mine?
although it's not really a type checker per-say
well I guess a subset of what recki does might qualify
@BenjaminGruenbaum thanks
22:56
Hi all! I have a DB with over 300 millions records (size - over 84GB). I need to make real-time search in one of tables (lookup, for example) with 100 millions records (~14GB). What I need to read? Any books, blog posts? I'm already searched for it, but nothing found.
@KirillDanshin what kind of search? text? check fulltext searches
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal in varchar (limit 105), and after that I need to get data in binary (limit 252) from its row
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal yes
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal indexes in BTREE.
do a search for solr
23:03
or sphinx
for 100 bytes mysql bundled fulltext search could be sufficient anyway
in any case you will need lot of ram
especially if you want to sort results
@ircmaxell please, see link above, there is that table structure
no thanks
@ircmaxell it's doesn't metters?
@KirillDanshin add a fulltext index and try if it's fast enough
23:19
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal ok, now I need to wait while its will make new indexes :(
meanwhile check the syntax of MATCH() AGAINST()
Dear Internals,

I have moved the Return Types RFC[1] into voting phase. A summary of changes that have happened since it was originally announced (but have been covered by discussion) are as follows:

  - Return types are invariant. This means a sub-type must declare the same return type as its super-type's method when overriding it. Aliases such as self and parent must resolve to the same type.
  - No reflection support for return types; another RFC[2] will handle this.

Dmitry updated a sizeable chunk of the implementation[3] to work on much more recent master branch. Thanks, Dmitry.
^ Any feedback before I hit send?
worth noting that a future RFC may change the variance behavior?
> Return types are invariant.
just for now, right?
@ircmaxell Will do.
(It's already noted in Future Work; dunno how many people read that section >.<)
23:32
I'm not saying it should be pointed out, just asking
can i ask why variance support was dropped since the first voting? what was that bug?
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal covariance support was dropped ^^
So, it transpires that one of the systems I am working with, the vast majority of users have a password of "password". I know this with absolute certainty because the passwords are stored in plain text
2
It's not just because of a bug. It's also because I have X amount of time between the original proposal and PHP 7's projected timeline for being released. I was not confident I had the time to work out the design and implementation for covariance in that period of X.
@LeviMorrison invariant = identical return type when overriding, covariant = identical or descending types ?
23:39
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal Correct.
For completeness, contravariant means identical or super-type.
Hinting against an Interface should always work as expected, right?
ok, so why was that dropped? :P just out of curiosity, what was that bug that invalidated the voting?
@DaveRandom sorry man
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal It's basically this:
class A {
    function method(): B {}
}
class B extends A {
    function method(): C {}
}
class C extends B {
    function method(): C {}
}
@DaveRandom lemme guess, there's also a "forgot password" button that'll send it to you via email?
23:43
@FlorianMargaine For the time being I plan to close the black box and pretend I didn't look inside it, officially it's outside my jurisdiction anyway. I have too much other stuff to do to get 3rd parties to fix their systems.
Hey, I just wrote v0.2 of the Scalar Type Hints RFC, which now proposes the dual-mode behaviour. Please give it a look-over, my eyes are tired.
2
@PaulCrovella No, the system isn't as advanced as that. It's purely internal, but it's still a fucking joke.
When the interpreter sees that B::method's return type differs from A::method's it needs to know more information about C to know if it is compatible with B.
But C isn't defined until later in the file and with the current interpreter's design you can't know C is defined later in the same file.
(and when I say "purely internal" I mean "cannot even be accessed outside the building")
@DaveRandom What, no VPN? :)
23:46
It could be solved in a few different ways. One possible way is to say we don't support it and to use autoloading.
@LeviMorrison woa, inception. is this solvable?
13 secs ago, by Levi Morrison
It could be solved in a few different ways. One possible way is to say we don't support it and to use autoloading.
pl0x star my 0.2 announcement kthx
If all seems well, I may announce it "officially" (read: Twitter, reddit, internals) later...
In any case, I have a lot of other things I need to work on and didn't want to risk not getting some kind of return types into PHP 7.
@LeviMorrison I suppose invariance is easier for the programmer to reason about without an IDE ;)
With invariance a return type can be more obviously wrong, I guess?
23:48
@AndreaFaulds It's easier to reason about in the interpreter too ^^
yes i agree, better pushing changes in small bits
@LeviMorrison :D
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal In this case I agree because the invariance doesn't prevent covariance from happening later. Not all things work that way when you 'push in small bits' .
@AndreaFaulds Uhhh... yeh. I forgot that I am accessing it from outside the building :-P
@AndreaFaulds if I declare strict typing in file1, then I call functions of file1 from file2, which type hinting is used?
(haven't seen this mentioned in the RFC)
23:50
But still, VPN is enforce L2TP + IPSEC with client certs, it'd be very difficult. By the time an attacker could do anything with those passwords, they could do much worse damage.
@AndreaFaulds and vice versa, btw.
@DaveRandom did you look at the recent NSA leaks, basically stating that VPNs were insecure?
@FlorianMargaine That file's. Read the Details section.
Though maybe I should add a note on that specifically so it's clearer
@AndreaFaulds Which one is that? The one it is defined in or the one it is called from?
@AndreaFaulds yes, please. Because after reading the details section twice, I still don't get it
@FlorianMargaine I am currently working on the principle that nothing is secure. I'm currently opening a strongly worded support ticket.
23:52
@AndreaFaulds so, file2?
In a really serious looking font.
Arial?
Comic Sans MS?
@LeviMorrison Added this note:
> Whether or not the function being called was declared in a file that uses strict or weak type checking is entirely irrelevant. The type checking mode depends on the file where the function is called.
Times New Roman. It's that serious.
woa
@AndreaFaulds ah. Makes sense now.
does it mean we'd eventually have to write declare at the beginning of every php file?
23:54
If you want fun internals details: It adds the ZEND_CALL_STRICT_TYPEHINTS flag to the ZEND_DO_FCALL opcode ^^
@FlorianMargaine Unfortunately, yes. Much like JS's 'use strict';. I think IDEs will help, and also I might like to shorten the name a bit.
ok. You might mention this in the RFC
I know it was tongue in cheek, but I would prefer "use strict"; at the top of the file ^^
nah, don't remove that easteregg ;D
@FlorianMargaine I sort of do:
> Should the strict_typehints directive have a shorter name? It may be rather annoying to have to type out the whole declare(strict_typehints=TRUE); for every single file.
23:57
@LeviMorrison Heh. I don't want to get rid of use strict; (the easter egg, I mean), and we already have declare(); specifically for this type of thing, so using it seemed fitting ^^
Fittingly enough, that declaration? It has a strict type. declare(strict_typehints=1); is an error (though for brevity I might want to allow that)
@AndreaFaulds The stringly typed version 'use strict'; would still work though
also it might be confusing to have use strict; modify runtime behaviour, have use abc; fatal and use abc\def; import/alias a class
@DaveRandom ew
@Rangad yeah
@AndreaFaulds generally agreed, but it does at least have the advantage of familarity
What's wrong with 'use strict';? It's at the top of every js file I write :P

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