That generics RFC… I'll just everywhere specify any (or whatever it's called) as generic parameter and it'll always work… There's no real point in this RFC… It just adds Generics for the sake of Generics… \cc @LeviMorrison
Really… 80% of the time it will be annoying, 15% not inappropriate and maybe 5% gives a real hint.
Are you talking about in hack or with types in PHP?
I think if PHP has a use strict mode that required types it would be a nice feature. Maybe not for variables since that could clutter code, but as return types and parameter types it would make for more readable code imo
They already have type hinting, i wish they allowed it for primitive types also
> The ^ operator behaves very similarly but it sticks closer to semantic versioning, and will always allow non-breaking updates. For example ^1.2.3 is equivalent to >=1.2.3 <2.0.0 as none of the releases until 2.0 should break backwards compatibility. For pre-1.0 versions it also acts with safety in mind and treats ^0.3 as >=0.3.0 <0.4.0.
Yeh I was looking at that before, not sure why ANY isn't working, looks OK to me in terms of defs, probably a stupid buffer consumption bug, that's what most of them have been
All these cool features traits, generics, new typehints ... it make sense only for experience programmers .... the most useful RFC will be consistency across php functions (yeap I know it breaks BC) it will be more useful escecially for newbies
@kirugan Well the big obvious one is 2 vs 3, but there's also smaller niggles like the optional arg for range() being the first arg, and fuhm.net/super-harmful (cba explaining myself, article is way better than I would do justice, TL;DR inheritance does some surprising things when you start overloading stuff)