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00:01
@Danack heh, imsi catchers are the new pineapple it seems
@Patrick Have you plannend any further updates for your no-framework-tutorial repo? :)
something something stingray all the things: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stingray_phone_tracker
@Duikboot i pushed some things this friday
@Danack If you're piqued by this kind of stuff, try and get to 44con
Oh nice, the 11-page-menu sweet.
00:04
will see you there :)
Maybe soon some database implementation too? :-)
@Duikboot need some feedback on that, not sure how well that approach works out :D
@Duikboot yes. I think I'll do some frontend stuff next and then add the db in part 13 or so
@Leigh And leave my phone and every other post-electromechanical device at home rite?
Sweet!
@Danack it's actually pretty friendly, people stick to the CTF targets
00:06
Just a suggestion. :) Maybe something on how to recycle code for further projects?
$data = [
    'name' => $this->request->getParameter('name', 'stranger'),
    'menuItems' => 'menuItems' => [['href' => '/', 'text' => 'Homepage']],
];
this is valid php?
cc @Patrick ^
I think it's a typo
yup, thanks for catching that
=> => looks a bit broken
fixed
What do: [[ stand for?
Defining an other array in an array?
00:08
@Patrick nice chapter :)
I like it
@Duikboot yes
especially the "replacing mustache with twig takes 2 lines because DI"
I also like the complexity building up
little bit by little bit.
@FlorianMargaine ha... that's only because I messed up earlier and didn't look at mustache properly :P
I guessed that :D
life does things right :-)
you have a link?
00:10
the FrontendRenderer part seems a bit rushed though
thanks
@Rangad start at the beginning :)
I am always thinking when writing things like that... How do you recover them? Lets say you write in this no-frame-work a register/login part. How to distribute that part only to multiple projects? Creating a kind of bundle/package for it is possible? What are those requirements to do that?
@FlorianMargaine hmm, do you mean the text or the code?
the text
I mean... more like the backstory
00:12
@Duikboot I tried doing an auth component. I gave up after a while... I guess it's better to do that custom for each project and just copy code over if you want. But often you need customization for it
@FlorianMargaine I'll make a note, thanks
you're doing layout stuff and then suddenly, 3 lines of prose, and bam, frontendrenderer is done
What do you think about the code there? Is it the right approach?
yeah
cc @tereško ^
@Patrick but I like it anyway.
Thanks :)
00:31
The Group use declarations RFC was updated according to requests. @Andrea I copy and pasted part of one of your emails because I couldn't write nothing better ;)
What PHP talk have you seen last?
There is also a condensed discussion section, perhaps some of you might want to add something to it. Thnx.
(if you're hesitant to click, check today's date in the UK)
@mikedugan oops, will fix
00:41
/me wonders if it's a trap...
/me needs to get hacking on some documentation so I can haz karma
@marcio hint: it's not Friday in the UK any more
@Andrea So clicking it will end up with a cat?
@mikedugan I'll start this on monday, because I'm itching to vote
@PeeHaa hah, no
It's an actual RFC
00:43
:(
Weird, I know
unless @Andrea or someone who likes the scalar rfc would like to donate karma because something something kittens
At first I thought that just sending bug fixes on github would give me karma to vote but no :(
the examples could do with more cats
@Andrea It's really odd how you (yes you personally) categorise things as "not for PHP programmers", then suggest something like void types
00:44
@marcio I think GH is just a mirror
not super sure though
@mikedugan well, but my commits are going to be on the main repo in some way, won't they be?
not sure how "karma" is "calculated", BTW
@marcio one of the supreme overlords of internals could answer that for you, I'm not familiar with how they manage the source in that regard
maybe some more experienced people can tell me the formula
@Leigh my objection with integers was that we don't need to copy C
C lacks bigints because it's 40 years old and bare to the metal
But there's little reason not to have void
@Andrea It's OK, you don't need to defend yourself. I'm selfish with my contributions too
* I * want, so I suggest
00:47
Hey, I'm being honest :/
I don't think PHP programmers aren't entitled to word-sized integers
I'm saying that the arguments for them vs. bigints don't really apply to PHP
PHP absolutely does not need a void type. It's actually a kind of strict typing
It's useful, though
It makes for more descriptive interfaces
yea, so are lots of things, to the right people
We already have strict class typing
function returns_nothing(): void {
    return; // valid
}
// However, it does not accept returning a NULL value:
function returns_null(): void {
    return NULL; // error: returns_null() must not return a value, null returned
}
^ is this just for the strict mode?
00:50
strict class typing, weak scalar typing, void typing just because
No, always
@marcio the second NULL case points out why more clearly
function returns_null(): void {
    $x = some_computation(); // might produce null
    return $x; // error: returns_null() must not return a value, null returned
}
You'd have to allow ridiculous stuff like this
welcome to "null is something, only void is truly nothing" and surrender your brain for the fucking
@mikedugan not quite
It's more that you shouldn't be explicitly returning anything
I really can't comprehend, how you who pushes so hard for weak typing, would want to introduce something as strict as this
If you're trying to return a value from a void function
@Leigh I don't push hard for weak typing, I push for scalar types
Seriously, how does this make sense?
function returns_null(): void {
    $x = some_computation(); // might produce null
    return $x; // error: returns_null() must not return a value, null returned
}
00:51
what's the difference between return; and no return statement at all?
@mikedugan None
@Andrea not sure I like the part about inheritance. Given how we are fully invariant currently
@NikiC We should have limited covariance for practical reasons
it's like, any means necessary to augment the language with yet another useless thing
00:52
@Andrea Well based on my ML thread about parameter typehints it seems that people do not agree ^^
@NikiC We should allow dropping typehints, too
It's the only way that makes sense
ESPECIALLY for return types
hummm... I like it because I'm familiar with other languages, but seeing it in PHP (specially not restricted to strict mode) seems a "detail" that could be easily out of the lang.
@Andrea this is a great example why return and return null are different
@NikiC yep
I like the strongly typed direction PHP is moving in. There's ruby and python if I want to go all hardcore duck-typing
00:54
@Andrea You should emphasize it much more strongly in the rfc, I overlooked it
It's also that PHP's type declarations don't stop you from being lazy if you want
@NikiC Hmm, suggestions for how to?
@Andrea In particular put it in a separate code block
@NikiC Ah, okay.
i.e. first one shows it's not allowed and then the next one is an example of why it is important not to allow return null
Yeah
any Sprint.ly users here?
@NikiC Refresh it. Better now?
wdafu* this guy is talking about? news.php.net/php.internals/82636
use PhpParser\NodeVisitorAbstract;
use PhpParser\Node\Stmt;
use PhpParser\Node\Expr;

then foo(Expr\New_ $expr)
It's really more readable in some case.
 } elseif ($node instanceof Node\Expr\ArrayDimFetch
&& ($node->var instanceof Node\Expr\Array_
|| $node->var instanceof Node\Scalar\String
)
) {
It's obvious that Array_ is an expression and that String is a Scalar and not some string helper. The node Prefix is annoying, though, might have to touch that code again -.-
ok, he is arguing that aliasing a namespace is sometimes more readable, but when you alias a namespace you don't have an explicit list of dependencies declared anymore. You need to look all code to see what's being used from that given NS fragment.
01:10
Also @NikiC you might need to rename Scalar\String for php7.
@marcio no real argument against your RFC. Just noting that it's sometimes handy to have more than the class name available without defining an explicit alias using as.
Not a fan of aliasing namespaces, but I see the point in some cases.
@Andrea I'm with @bwoebi on the "none" or "null" or "nothing" issue.
PHP always returns something.
The difference between "return;" vs no return statements at all is not worth differentiating in an error message, methinks.
@LeviMorrison the distinction is pretty critical for void tho
doesn't matter much for the error message, that's true
@NikiC Which doesn't exist, so there's no issue.
@LeviMorrison I think talking about null is misleading
01:18
@LeviMorrison yeah, I mean if we're going to add it
If there's no return NULL;, don't pretend there is
@Andrea Saying "returned null" when there is "return;" should alert you to the fact there is always something returned.
The NULL return is implicit, you shouldn't mention it in errors
This is a completely documented behavior.
There are people taking advantage of the fact PHP always returns something.
but, if we don't declare strict, everything will just coalesce to null for void types anyway
01:19
No it won't
Pretending you don't return "null" is worse.
That's my opinion anyway.
@LeviMorrison I don't think it's pretending
I think it's useful to distinguish them
especially for return; vs return $x;
There is no distinction as it stands today in PHP.
@Andrea Right, so what you're saying is, lets just make a bunch of random rules for the shits and giggles
@Leigh what random rules?
01:20
x is strict, y is weak, z is strict again
huh?
void isn't a scalar return type, it's a doesn't-return-anything return type
null would be
class typehints stict, scalar is weak, void will be strict
@Leigh It would be pretty dumb to start doing weak typing for "void", which is the one thing we can 100% easily check at compile time
also there are no lossless casts to void
So the concept of weak doesn't even make sense
true, we don't ever cast to null anyway
PHP has only ever casted from it
and the Scalar Type Hints RFC (deliberately) avoids doing so for userland functions
I would be totally pissed if PHP starting silently converting my return values to null
01:22
the whole point of return types is catching errors
On the other hand "PHP will silently discard your return value" totally sounds like a PHP feature :P
a weak void would be ignoring them
you mean like, strict types
@Leigh not even weak types blindly cast
ah, catch errors as long as we can't hide them and pretend there was no error
01:25
huh?
@Andrea I don't think a weak 'void' makes any sense at all.
@LeviMorrison nobody does
You either hit the end of the function body and implicitly return nothing, or you exit early with "return;"
Hmm
wait what
HHVM doesn't check return types?
lol
Oh
If there's no return; statement it doesn't, what the hell
On 13/02/15 16:41, Andrea Faulds wrote:
> But with Marcio’s proposal, we could instead write this:
>
>     use function SomeLibrary\Math\{sin, cos, tan, degrees, radius};

Well it used to be simply ...

require SomeLibrary\math.php;
I thought that was funny ^^
01:30
Perspective. :)
I'm not sure I understand why the trailing \ exists.
@LeviMorrison sigh, good times when we threw everything on global namespace (irony)
Maybe I just read it too quickly, but it doesn't really say much about it.
Is the trailing slash required?
@LeviMorrison I got accustomed to it after a few minutes. I'd prefer not to have it, but people love it, go figure it.
01:34
I am fairly certain it is, yes.
From what I understand, a lot of people are bitching about it because they find it ugly, while others like it because it makes it more readable for them ... Why not just allow both?
@marcio Can you give me the short-short version of why there are so many no votes
There's been such a huge volume of mail I can't read it all.
@Narf people would bitch about allowing 2 syntaxes anyway
@LeviMorrison there is no compelling motive, I think the RFC was caught on politics war xD
Oh never mind; there is stuff after the vote
I didn't expect that
@LeviMorrison yes, start with wiki.php.net/rfc/…
01:37
So why did Zeev and Kalle vote no
@LeviMorrison By the way, whether or not you like it, the none/null error message thing is a prerequisite for implementing a void return types
Maybe I haven't been clear about this but it doesn't exactly exist right now.
Yes, I know
In order to add it I have to incorporate that patch, though
@LeviMorrison No justifications on mailing list yet, just no votes.
If you'd prefer I could make it lie and always say "null"
01:41
@Andrea I'm just saying I'd rather focus on functionality we actually have. We always return null, so that's what I'm going with. If you want to change that then it belongs in the void RFC.
@LeviMorrison Then at least make the error messages consistent
If you always return null, why even support void? :/
I have it on a todo item before 7 launches (verify the error messages, I mean)
@Andrea There are some people who probably think we don't need void because we always return null, yes.
No, I mean
If you always return null, why even support the type check here?
You have all this infrastructure for missing return values. Why?
01:43
Because "null" isn't valid for any declared return type.
But that's not what I'm talking about
Why do return types currently support missing returns?
Because if you do this:
function foo() : array{
}
And call it that's an error.
It did not return an array.
OK, but why are they special-cased?
Why isn't that the same as return NULL?
I'm not sure what you are saying
It goes through a different code path
Why doesn't it go through the NULL one?
01:44
We emit a return opcode when we see return.
We emit another one at the end of a function body always
Right, but why is it a different codepath in the VM?
Not sure what you are saying.
You're gonna have to spell this one out exactly
The return type check for implicit return has its own code path, completely separate from the return type check for return
zend_verify_missing_return_type vs. zend_verify_return_type
It even has its own branch in ZEND_VERIFY_RETURN_TYPE
Because a value isn't passed, I guess.
OK, then why pass a value for return; instead of omitting a value?
01:47
I did not design nor implement that behavior ^^
Fair enough
yay 23:18, thnx @LeviMorrison
Still, if you've got this infrastructure you might as well do something useful with it (like a more helpful error message)
Yeah macio, I'm not really sure why that has so many no votes.
@Andrea The issue is that I see "returned null" as helpful, because "return;" is returning null.
You see it as "returned nothing"
(yeah, we are still very far)
01:49
Well, it's just returning. PHP fills in NULL for you, but why do you need to know that?
The error isn't that you returned NULL, that's not actually checked. The error is that you didn't return a value explicitly.
If we supported nullable types and you did this:
function foo(): ?array {

}
I would absolutely not expect an error.
I'd consider that an error
Not based on the way PHP has always worked.
@LeviMorrison it's an "omg syntax" knee-jerk
It clearly always implicitly returns null if you hit the end of the body.
01:52
Does it?
I mean, I know it does at an engine level
@Andrea Yes, and always has.
(at least in relevancy)
( don't know about pre PHP 4)
It just doesn't seem right to allow that
A return type regulates what you return
Right or not that's our longstanding behavior.
If you're not returning anything and it just happens to match the type, it shouldn't be accepted
It's a logic error
Not really. Given that PHP has always implicitly returned null why is it a logic error?
01:55
You should have to explicitly return null for a nullable typehint, otherwise errors slip through
@Andrea I suspect that would not be well received on Internals.
@LeviMorrison Screw internals
@Andrea If you screw Internals then the RFC doesn't pass.
lol
Error-checking beats obscure "features"
Until PHP 7 functions could return nothing
you should supply X for X typehint, but, lets weak cast the shit out of a bunch of stuff
zzzz
01:56
PHP would fill in NULL for you, but there was no actual return value
@Andrea In PHP-land this is not true. I understand from an engine perspective maybe but
In PHP you always, always always get a null.
Yes, but you really shouldn't be relying on that :/
It's not good practice.
Be explicit in what you're producing
@Andrea It's clearly documented. You can rely on it.
Sure, it's documented
Whether that should have ever been the case... I dunno.
01:58
So is @$x returning null if $x doesn't exist
and it's not like we have to consider BC here
if $bar = foo(); leaves $bar as null then I would expect function foo(): ?array {} to be absolutely fine. An error there would be a wtf inconsistent php
@Andrea You don't have to suppress assigning a return-value of "nothing"
This is not a 1-to-1 argument.
I just see this causing horrible bugs
@Andrea You should open an issue on github.
@LeviMorrison Maybe
02:00
I will if you won't or don't
I can't think of any language with return types that doesn't force you to return something explicitly
@Andrea Can you think of a language other than PHP with return types that has always implicitly returned null if you didn't return anything?
Hmm
C
for main(), anyway :p
Yeah main is special cased for all sorts of horrible things because of legacy ^^
oh
actually... C.
02:03
C does at least warn though. No warning in PHP.
Is that even standard-mandated?
And I'm not sure it even gives "null" in C.
It could be undefined.
it does on my machine
:p
Oh. Only for -O0. Hah.
@LeviMorrison Y'know what?
Let's produce a warning, then.
PHP Warning: control reaches end of non-void function
bam
I work with at least 4 people who wouldn't understand that message ... :)
@LeviMorrison Oh yeah, Hack gets this right.
function foobar(): ?int {} // invalid
function foobar(): ?int { return; } // invalid (void is incompatible with ?int)
Yet another reason to quit PHP...
02:15
... to join PHP's feature farm-league?
what?
In sports, a farm team, farm system, feeder team or nursery club, is generally a team or club whose role is to provide experience and training for young players, with an agreement that any successful players can move on to a higher level at a given point. This system can be implemented in many ways, both formally and informally. The term is also used as a metaphor for any organization or activity that serves as a training ground for higher-level endeavors. For instance, sometimes business schools are referred to as "farm clubs" for the world of business. == Contracted farm teams == === ...
may not be entirely fair to hack, but that's pretty much how I see the language
@Andrea But HHVM doesn't care, right?
Seems odd that they are strict on their inputs for scalars but not return types, given that there was zero BC to support for return types.
@LeviMorrison Sure, but HHVM doesn't even look at the return type for an empty block, apparently
I just think allowing implicit returns and return; here is really bad from an error-detection standpoint
Sure, it's technically valid
But return types are new, they can throw out the rulebook if they like
> It is incompatible with void because this function implicitly returns void
... what a great message, Hack.
02:21
@LeviMorrison yeah
They meant "It is incompatible with void (this function implicitly returns void)" I guess
Hmm
@Andrea I started trying to contribute to HHVM, but it takes a day to compile so I decided to come here and give it a chance. PHP compiles in 1 min. Be aware of that diff if you're not yet :P
writing a patch for void now
should be very, very simple
The bulk of the work is done: my "Correct and test none/null return types distinction" patch allows me to accurately detect returning of no value, and the Scalar Type Hints RFC patch allows me to reserve class names
Also, you must reserve void if you propose this in case you didn't realize that for some reason or another. If it wasn't reserved you could theoretically have a Void class and thus a conflict.
@LeviMorrison ...yes, I realise that
I'm reserving it using the same mechanism as the Scalar Type Hints RFC
Rather than as a reserved word
As in, can't use it in a function or class name?
02:36
Can't use it as a class/interface name.
Permitted for everything else.
uh
Please just reserve them.
function int <- please no
it probably already exists
and the less BC breaks the better...
You are already breaking classes.
Just break them all.
True... :/
That'd be (yet another) RFC and vote, though.
Also note that a class is the far more likely case.
@Andrea I don't want to bring it up on list but I feel like I should.
It maybe was noticed but if it was that was a long time ago ^^
02:41
It's been brought up before, I think
I hate Internals right now.
Oh sure
It is not possible for me to even READ all the mail that comes across it.
Let alone analyze and respond to any of it.
$ sapi/cli/php -r 'function a(): void {} a();'
$ sapi/cli/php -r 'function a(): void { return; } a();'
$ sapi/cli/php -r 'function a(): void { return NULL; } a();'

Catchable fatal error: a() must not return a value, null returned in Command line code on line 1
$ sapi/cli/php -r 'function a(): void { return 1; } a();'

Catchable fatal error: a() must not return a value, integer returned in Command line code on line 1
^^
It's sad that scalar types were never reserved keywords. I would hate to come across code using both (int) $x and int($x).
02:57
yeah
someone, somewhere, has public $string; though
hey, whatever makes their $boat->float()
> Do you seriously plan to include such bullshit in your RFC ?
This is my favorite line from an internals email in recent memory.
03:41
wiki.php.net/rfc/… grosses me out
night
damn you! got Rebecca Astley'ed
 
1 hour later…
05:15
Good Morning
Anyone to help with htaccess rewrite rule?
06:13
@AlmaDo It was 1 am here. Anyways, working overtime is really bad thing for everyone including the company, imho...
morning
07:05
Anyone to help with htaccess rewrite rule?
Just need a quick help
07:56
66:33 now
08:18
That's really damn close…
 
1 hour later…
09:39
Is it 2/3 requirement or 2/3+1?
the former…
but people will bitch about it.
Hehe, yeah for sure
Is type casting PHP variables a good practise?
09:59
@HassanAlthaf Type casting itself is neither bad nor good. For PHP type casting is frequently pointless due to the way the type system works (as well as the separate operators for numeric addition and string concat making your intent always clear... unlike some languages!)

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