@LeviMorrison I'm beginning to hate the internet in general.
@bwoebi people are just commenting to look clever, and not actually helping. Even just reading all the comments has a cost of stopping other people from actually doing useful stuff.
parsing a ~185MB json file with json_decode: total memory used ~2G; with streaming pull parser: less than a megabyte... pull parser is way slower, but holy crap it feels good to have this thing mostly working
Productive discussion on event loops @ async-interop. Very soon we will have a very important standard for #php - https://github.com/async-interop/event-loop/issues?q=is%3Aissue
aaron seems to be interested ... so I'm probably wrong ... but question whether this is really needed, and cringe at the thought of it evolving into yet another PSR ...
interop isn't always a net gain, it stifles creativity and binds everyone to the same interfaces, while you can provide others, nobody is going to use them ... if there is going to be 5 reactors, fine, let each of them grow organically with their own features and let people choose ... it's not like you're going to switch, I mean not in the real world ...
none of them can take a leap and try anything really new, is what I'm saying ... and then what's the point in there being 5 options ...
> let each of them grow organically with their own features and let people choose
Or even better, grow them organically, and once you've got something usable that people want to re-use across projects, at that point figure out what should be the standard.
@Trowski Don't the technical details of the implementation (beyond what an 'interface') defines mean that really a standard implementation would be the way of achieving holy interoperopabilty ?
you can see why the user might think it's useful to have interop ... because they've been told it is for everything else ... but I can't see any benefit for any individual project, or in the long term for the user ...
@Danack That would make a lot more sense. Of course there would be different implementations of the loop depending on available extensions, but there's no reason to have several implementations of event loops around that do the same things.
I suppose I can blame myself in some ways for refusing to use React's event loop... but I really don't like the way React modeled other async components.
@JoeWatkins You could have your own event loop that does what you need, but then have a bridge that allows the same loop to act as the standard event loop as well.
no, I see the aim there ... so that if I, as a consumer of icicle and react, can swap one for the other ... I'm not sure that's really doable, before you can have interoperability you need to have interchangeability, before you can have that, you need to have comparable levels of stability ... we don't have that ... they are all in various states ...
I'm saying what is there to gain for you, or for amp, or react ?
@JoeWatkins You could have your own event loop that does what you need, but then have a bridge that allows the same loop to act as the standard event loop as well.
is a thing you might have to do, doesn't seem very smart ... long term ...
I wonder about these things myself, having the same concerns you've raised. The types of packages you'd write for Icicle are not going to work well with React, so where's the value in having a standard loop interface.
totally valid concern, that's what I mean by interchangeability as distinct from interoperability ... if I actually manually remove icicle stuff and put in react stuff, it's not going to work most likely, they're not interchangeable in that sense, and nor will an interface force them to be ...
If you had an event loop (and perhaps promise implementation as well) that was interchangeable, you could write a package and not care what framework it was run on, Icicle, Amp, or React.
You might have to write a little bridge code between packages (especially if integrating React callbacks or promises into a coroutine), but it's doable.
That being said, I totally agree that we need more stability in these projects before we try forcing some standard interfaces and implementations.
I remember when they wanted PSR-7 to become the "DIC standard" .. if all fell apart, since they couldn't even stop people with service locators from pushing it as DIC standard
is that how we end up with monstrous standards ... just because everyone is trying to do damage control ... it's okay to be selfish and put your project (or it's users) first ... competition is fine ...
nah you don't really want that ... you want stability ... but you want everyone to keep innovating, and you want to be able to keep innovating ... we wouldn't be having this conversation if a few of you hadn't taken a leap and written this kind of software, I'd rather have more of that than you all just sit back in your chair ...
@Trowski I'm rather over committed right now ... if by the time my workload thins out, nobody has started on it, we can bunch a few people together and get started at that point ...
@JoeWatkins Sure, innovation is a good thing. But too often it's breaking BC. We had innovations multiple times in Amp's development, also for Aerys. Big innovations. Too often they were breaking small things making it hard maintaining all our own packages.
trying to provide BC guarantees too early doesn't work ... I don't think any of this stuff is mature enough for that to be a concern, beyond reasonably versioning stuff, everybody watching would rather see you pushing on and adding the next thing, or fixing the last, than worrying about BC and making compromises you will still be paying for in 2025 ... break stuff all the time if it makes great software ...
the time will come to change your attitude, it's not now ...
I'm always wrong ... never act on anything I've said ...
@JoeWatkins Sure, we did that. We even retagged Amp v1.0.0 for such a change. The thing is … nobody will use unstable software without any promises. Either because all the required libraries require different versions of Amp and aren't compatible in any way and so you can't actually use it or because it's unstable and users wait for it to become more stable.
There's some time where you think it's stable enough. Amp did not receive any new features for more than half a year now, just a few bug fixes. I think it's time to stagnate a bit, build and extend the docs. That way we ensure other's can use the library and build great software with it. Then when we have feedback from a broader community, it's time to break stuff again. :)