@LeviMorrison i think i use covariance (TIL the name) only when i want to simulate generics, say: use Something as T; interface BazSomething extends Something {} interface Foo { setSomething(T $t) : void; getSomething() : T; } interface FooBar extends Foo { setSomething(T $t) : void; getSomething() : BazSomething } so it's definitely good enough
@ircmaxell This is very much valid. strict on its own is not very descriptive, and it could potentially be difficult to add new constraints in the future
By the way, I think we can call it "type information" (or "type info" for short). This aligns with what we already call things internally (zend_arg_info for example).
@LeviMorrison As far as I'm concerned: 1) We always seem to call them type hints, 2) If we're to change that, then there should be an effort where we update the manual and php-src and everything rather than just referring to them differently in new RFCs, and 3) It's more convenient as it distinguishes types and type declarations
@AndreaFaulds Yeah, but by preserving the terminology of "type hint" in your RFC and directly adding it to user-land in the form of declare(type_hint) will prevent me from ever making the change.
That's now a technical BC break.
So please, in the very least, don't call it a type_hint in declare.
@LeviMorrison Fair point. But first come up with a better name. Because declare(strict_typehints=TRUE) is more descriptive and less misleading than declare(strict_types=TRUE).
I don't really understand why parameter and return type declarations would need to have their behavior linked in the first place. They're only vaguely related.
Not really thought through and currently done with the bare minimal implementation (and I'm not the one that should implement it in the end as my c-foo is way low). But would there be a remote chance to get something like this in php `function call() { echo 'hello world'; }
Is there any real conflict with =>? I understand that symbol reuse may make it more difficult to know what it is at a glance, but is there any technical issue with it?
Hey @Sara, on a more practical note: have there been any discussions about a different syntax for function signatures as parameter/return types? Something more palatable using the callable keword, perhaps?
@LeviMorrison I think we disagree on palatability. I don't like the whole new-keywordness of calling them callables instead of functions (which is how they're defined using closures)
Yeah the Hack function type syntax is pretty fugly, but I don't think callable is significantly better. Typedefs help, and is how they are usually used at FB, but I think that's a symptom of the absurd syntax more than anything. I always envisioned something more fancy, function foo(int -> string $x) or along those lines. But I haven't though it through very carefully.
@AndreaFaulds The challenge as always is going to be dealing with parser issues; I haven't tried to implement anything like that to see if any (probably more like, how many) parser hacks are necessary
right, but you could get creative and not emit bytecodes for them, but instead keep them in a separate table. Though now that I say that out loud that feels really like a bad idea...
well, you'd still need bytecode, but you wouldn't need a "properydeclaration" bytecode
yeah, I would see something like:
class Foo {
protected $x = bar();
public function __construct() {...}
}
into
class Foo {
protected $x ;
private function __preConstruct() {
$this->x = bar();
}
public function __construct() {...}
}
I'm having a very weird problem. I have a function, which accepts a parameter, then queries the DB appropriately and then returns results. The function is called from within a for loop.
for ($i = 6; $i < 11; $i++)
{
print "<dl>";
switch ($i)
{
case 6: /* do stuff */ break;
case 7: /* do stuff */ break;
case 8: /* do stuff */ break;
case 9: /* do stuff */ break;
case 10: /* do stuff */ break;
}
$t = function($i);
// do something with $t
print "</dl>";
}
I can't believe this: function($i) works until $i = 8. But once it turns to 9, it fails. The function doesn't return anything. But if I go into the function and hard code 9 into it, it returns the right results from the DB.
@SaraGolemon not a problem with a simple function call. But in reality it'll more look like public function someLongName($with, $some = $this->api->getFoo(), $args = $this->api->getBar()) and then it doesn't really get readable.
"Prevent unintended return types" suggests it's the return type that's wrong. I assume you meant "Prevent unintentionally returning values of the wrong type"?
> This proposal adds an optional return type declaration to function declarations including closures, functions, generators, interface method declarations and class declarations
You probably mean class method declarations
@LeviMorrison Is covariance for return type existence permitted? Oh wait, I see it is:
> This RFC requires a return type to be declared only when a method inherits from a parent method that declares a return type; in all other cases it may be omitted.