@ircmaxell also, there are tons of str_replace, addslashes and stripslashes in code… a lot of things relying on the fact that single quotes are escaped to be able to inject them into javascript quotes etc.
Aha! @ircmaxell Remember when I said not everything that is is_callable()//true could be called properly? There was a bug fixed in 5.4 yes, but I think I was remembering this behavior: 3v4l.org/1oSO3
@Patrick hmm ... well, they are offering a bit more money then my current job and the company seems to be moving from codeigniter written legacy code the custom-written projects and looks like the primary focus would be on an in-house project. But ... the locale is worse and by extension - the nearby eating options. Not sure about the commute.
I think I will be visiting them this week, then I will decide what to do
@ircmaxell FTR, thinking it through some more I'm definitely voting no, for two reasons: 1) what are you passing through as arguments if it doesn't exist yet? How do you know if it can be called that way if it is added in future? and 2) the obvious issue of side-effects.
@Patrick main issue is that I actually wanted few month off, because I have not had any vacation and have been on the edge of burn-out for past 3 months
@tereško the eating options at my workplace are horrible (very expensive and not really good), so I resorted to just bringing my own meals (precooked or salads). Inconvenience made me eat healthier in the end... :)
callable(A::foo(λ)), so whenever you pass the magic lambda constant to a function or method it will automatically return a closure for that. because magic is awesome :)
@tereško oh and about the burnout stuff, ever thought about switching to 80%? (if you can afford it). I usually use the additional day to learn new stuff/work on some projects or just relax if I feel like it. A very big quality of life improvement...
@NikiC If you think of something actionable for PHP 7 and callables from methods + contexts let me know. It's one of the highest priority items on my list, I just don't know what to do about it so I don't have a proposal.
vim: the editor you need to know how to use, because when you are in the middle of nowhere and having to fix a crashed site of your fucking phone , vim will be all what you got
Honestly, I'm okay with dictating IDE's if that's just what you've done from the very start. There is a certain level of productivity of everyone using the same tool. I've experienced this in a class I have taken at a university. In our case we agreed to it, though; it wasn't demanded by the course instructor.
We also aren't working on an existing code base or with developers who worked on the project for a long time.
Totally disrupting someone's long-standing, productive work flow to mandate an IDE? Yeah, I would quit that job unless I needed it badly for some reason.
I really just wanted to chime in and say it's easier to help each other when you are all reaching for the same tools.
tbh I already worked as a consultant, and the manager wanted to mandate an IDE for all their devs, I supported him. The devs all used notepad++ and didn't know how to use a debugger or didn't know what that was. And their "best" dev used said-IDE.
You can mandate people needing to be able to debug stuff....but mandating an IDE would probably violate several laws in the UK/US if you didn't allow people who suffer from RSI to use vim.
would someone be willing to look at a discussion in comments of an answer to my question and tell me if i'm off base with my understanding of polymorphism?
Something outside the scope of PHP, has someone information in how you can grow as as web project manager? There is no study like 'webproject manager' :D internetarchitects.be/jobs/online-project-manager
Having to go back to using a mouse would slow me down a ton. Lots of people underestimate the amount of time and how many motions are wasted going back and forth between the mouse and keyboard.
@NikiC I like the explicitness i.e. that you're documenting in code that you explicitly don't care about a param, and the fact that it will produce errors if a function being called has a change in the number of parameters.
@Danack somebody pointed out that, for consistency, ones should be able to use the same blank identifier allowed in list: list($a, , $b) = ['good', 'trash', 'good']
@SteveBuzonas You're fine, I think the confusion in the discussion comes in part because the original question is sorta poorly put together. Your Vehicle example isn't great, and one of the more important things about Traversable isn't just that you have to implement it by way of implementing an interface that extends it, it's that you have to implement an interface from a particular set of options that extend it
@NikiC Do we know what caused news.php.net/php.internals/80910 ? I had a similar issue when porting php-uv a few days ago, only issues without compiler optimizations… and started working when I substituted everything by zend_string*
@PaulCrovella thanks for taking a look, I couldn't think of another example like Traversable. I had one when I initially had the question, but I was just loosely throwing around ideas in a brainstorm.
oh, yeah, null would works for list() but not for function calls.
Frankly I wouldn't pick a word for that, a very generic and less semantic single char token would be better. I'd just pick a char, call it "blackhole assignment" and move on:) In golang, they use a "_" as blank identifier and it just works (we can't use _ for PHP, just an example)
@SteveBuzonas No problem. To run with the example anyway, really you just want to typehint not that you can take a Vehicle (since my Train would screw the pooch) but that you can take either a Car or a Boat - since you can't do this just kill the hint and check the parameter within the method.