There's the trick. Maintainable. In my opinion, clear, concise comments go further than any well known pattern to making something maintainable. (And which is why I listed my websockets server as brain damage in my PHP-as-a-drug spoof.)
no, they are both proxies, but one is the actual thing (just a fake version of it) (that would be the ghost object), while the other one (that you call "proxy") contains a reference to the actual thing (virtual proxy)
ghost object => a thing, but no properties virtual proxy => a thing, but actually contains a reference to the real thing
mostly implementation details, but really important in some edge cases
in particular, I tightened up some of the wording, tried to make things a little more clear, and removed filler like "simply", "just", etc. Also removed the "weird" characterization of the null-delimited strings. Saying something is weird has the added implication that maybe it's unnecessarily so.
anyone know if a docs review services exists? e.g. docs go in, volunteers smear on the red ink submit PRs with spelling, grammar, clarity, friendliness improvements
@Ocramius sounds cool. If you would, lemme know when it's working. I'd be interested in helping out OSS documentation, especially if there's a potential $$$ kickback.
stupid question. why documentation on php.net and other languages' too is annotated like "foo(void)" rather than just "foo()"? is that an actual thing in some language?
Used to be that void was required. I don't think that's the case anymore.
But, I think having that void that makes it explicit, this function takes no paramters
(that way there's no confusion in intent)
You might especially want that in a language like php where you can throw any number of parameters at any function, and it a) doesn't complain; b) the passed parameters can be retrieved anyway with func_get_args().
so there might be a small semantic difference between foo() and foo(void), but otherwise, no real practical difference.
in PHP, you can pass any number of parameters to a function you want, regardless of how many are in the definition. If it's too few, the function will complain. if it's too many, it's generally ok. Some functions, especially some internal functions, will complain about getting too many parameters. But otherwise, it's not an error (as it would be in C).
usually you use this with callbacks where you need to pass in a context parameter; the function itself doesn't care what the data is; by declaring the type to be void*, you cover all the bases.
When you give directions to your house, you don't include your house in the instructions. You include its address - a pointer to where your house actually is.
happens during refactoring/designing mostly, you get the function silently accepting the unexpected parameter and possibly a wrong result. would be cool to have a native way to make it strict
@jbafford simply: when i create an interface and i implement it, why should i care of how a function return value will be used (especially considered that void == null anyway)?
As I said, if it hadn't been used extensively in the manual, I don't think the void return type RFC would have passed, and we wouldn't have (from elsewhere) people arguing that we should change the language so that:
ehhhh. I could make the argument either way with void|Foo
But any function that could return void|Foo almost by nature is going to be fairly weird. The implication would be that the output type would depend on the input type, because otherwise, you could write code that fails at the call site through no error on part of the call site.
I'm having difficulty thinking of an actual practical example, but the general pattern would be, "if you give it a thing, then it could return something. If you don't, then it can't return anything"
but it's still really weird, and I wouldn't recommend it.
@jbafford searching for a key by primary key. If it exists in the DB then an object would be returned. If it isn't the object doesn't exist, and some people would want to return 'nothing'......which wouldn't have been a problem if that was represented by a null return type.
@PaulCrovella yes, modules, they're something people occasionally want
oh and another thing: I want to add a special optimisation some day for getter/setter methods, where the Zend engine never actually executes user code for them
such that $foo->getBar() would be closer to $foo->bar in perf than it is now
If something like that could work with e.g. Doctrine, where pulling out a row from the DB results in a proxy object that wraps your accessors with function getFoo(){if(! inited) init(); return parent::getFoo()}, then that could at least remove one level of function calls
internet just paid its way this month.. my tach/speedo weren't working and I found a video of a magic incantation of key turning + button pressing that invoked a reset procedure which fixed it
Threading in PHP... that's just wrong. I'm not against threads in any way, but for a language like PHP, they're off-limits because: A) There's no need for them in PHP. If you need threads, you're probably tackling something that requires more than PHP. B) A lot of PHP dev's would create horrible code if you give them threading. Protect the world from awful code, and protect bad devs from hurting their own sanity. C) I prefer threading in Go (but that's just me) — Elias Van Ootegem13 hours ago
it's a bad way to look at any language ... if all languages followed the principle that stuff that might me misused should be omitted, we would have no good languages to write with today
I've argued with so many people about this ... I've managed to change a couple of minds, but overall it's a waste of time to try to change the mind of anyone who sees php as it was 5 - 10 years ago, if they wanted to have their mind changed it would have happened already ....
they're silly arguments, I can give you the date that PHP became suitable for multi-threading (22nd may 2000), I don't know it, but I could give you the date that it got a GC too ... but it doesn't matter if you read once that X is bad because Y ...
I remember before that release ... /etc/rc.d/restart-apache-because-php and the endless cron
another one of my favourite stupid arguments is that fpm magically makes PHP faster ... because they read somewhere that nginx+fpm > apache + mod_php ... totally missing the point of both fpm and nginx ... both bits of their new stack ... because they read somewhere ...
@PeeHaa it does… as long as you don't have zend.assertions=-1 … or do you mean like raw request data? well, we could make Aerys\Options::$debug a bitmask instead to show detailed data depending on the flag?
we don't have to accept that as normal ... since speed is emerging as something important, even though that's pretty odd for a debugger, it's worth some attention, I think
nah, not surprised ... it looks pretty much as I first wrote it still, I didn't make effort to make it fast, simple as possible, but not fast ... everything being a hashtable is costing us dear I think ... it didn't matter when we didn't care ...
I'm not saying we should tear out the ht and write custom structures for all the things, I'm saying there's probably a better way to do things if we are giving priority to performance ... it might be that our use of hashtables themselves could be optimized in some way ...
or do you have a better suggestion API wise… note that we can't really expose it only in Response as this would delay socket checkin indefinitely (worst case: only until after cycle collector destroys the Response object)
websockets in any case require that websocket stream starts immediately after headers… so if that ever comes, we still need it that way @kelunik
@kelunik the current idea is to include a special frame type for multiplexing websockets on a same connection. It's really an issue we should solve when there is something more concrete than a complete draft.
in general, I'd now just make a reverse proxy transforming http/1+2 into pure http/1
we always can add it later, but not needed currently
We can't really be forward compatible to something we have no idea how it'll be shaped.
so, is that patch from before fine or not? @kelunik
I needed both to fix selinux and pass through the port
@bwoebi Maybe it's just me, but yesterday I would have loved to be able to run -d so that is showed my a proper access / error log. Like the host:port + path of the requests.
[12:44:26] info Using config file found at D:\Web\Platter\cli\run.php
[12:44:26] info Listening on tcp://0.0.0.0:8080
[12:44:26] info Listening on tcp://[::]:8080