why php cares about this 3v4l.org/E051B? bob? paul? i totally get why is allowed on trailing parameters only in function declaration, but why does it matter on unpacking? if there's a reason i can't see it :\
ie as long types, count of arguments match, why care where it's used?
gah. i'm working wit some code that is a complete mess... it works perfectly, but it's a readability and efficiency disaster... need to find the strength to refactor it -__- changing functioning code feels so wrong...
looking for api inspiration? in my experience, c# is similar but better than java. i have the feeling they actually copied java, as most of the api language is identical, but they got rid of bad things in the process (hopefully)
it's only really a copy of socket ext api but oo instead ... but I don't really like it ... (so I stopped)
the plan is to provide Socket, and on top of that Stream, and on top of that user wrappers like php has ... but that's eventual, I need to just start with a decent socket, the rest may be written in userland ... pthreads/io package or something ...
normal use is only to set a couple of options though, I like that, but it might be wasteful to create additional objects for options ... remembering that accept() must construct a Socket ...
anyway, depending on the use that could be good enough, even if it's "procedural with an oop api". but i don't know about sockets enough to express an useful opinion. there are several things you could do, like having smaller interfaces (like one for reading only, one for writing and aggregate the thing with a class doing both operations)
well not fully, but will be able to get the underlying socket if you want mostly an easy interface, but also want to do something fancy (set some non-standard socket option or whatever)
sockets are generally accepted to have pretty low level apis, exposing send/recv/recvfrom/sendto, where a Stream might have a readLine(), a format/printf and that kind of thing ...
@JoeWatkins but imho a javaish api would be welcome... people always wrap php core functions with their own api, it's the php way :B if you did that i'm sure it's gonna be better than anything casual developers would produce thinking they are doing a better job than you with their api design
@JoeWatkins on the other hand, it's not too bad that high level api are written in php by wrapping extensions, as php code is easier to read, maintain, collaborate to, etc. compared to C code
the codebase I work on at the moment suffers very badly from thinking they are better than php-src at API design ... now we have 3m loc for which the php manual, the single greatest source of knowledge in the PHP ecosystem, does not apply ...
@JoeWatkins don't get me wrong, i use "almost plain" php, but for instance, how can you possibly use htmlspecialchars today without wrapping it? as it takes 98 parameters each with a bitmask of minimum 72 constants that look like ENT_POSSIBLY_NO_QUOTES
@Wes taking a thing that covers all use cases, and turning into something that must cover all uses in a different way, doesn't make much sense to me ... why not just use it simply where you have a simple use case, mutatis mutandis for complex use cases ... this creates more robust systems, where the documentation still applies, where new hires don't have to spend 6 months learning code before they are useful ...
we've had people leave after 3 months without writing a single line of code ...
the loss is immeasurable, and the win is almost inconceivable ... to me ...
having some object, or function (to a lesser extent), which must invoke internal functions in some specific way, this is normal, but if that object or function is invoking a wrapper around the function you actually need, something is wrong ... you took it too far ...
that can only lead to the kind of monstrosity I told you about ..
@Wes there's a difference between just doing your job, writing your high level API's and actually setting out to try and correct what you see as mistakes in php-src, so that nothing is allowed to call normal functions any more ...
I'm only talking about the latter, not normal code that invokes internal stuff in some specific way, but the attitude that no piece of code can use any internal function, because it must use some wrapper, that somebody who left the company wrote 5 years ago and never documented ...
it starts with PDOWrapper, and ends in the kind of codebase I described ...
it might be hard to imagine the kind of codebase I'm talking about, because you're thinking that "everyone" uses components and frameworks ...
now, we do use some components, even composer, we are getting there, but at first, at the core of the many applications we deployed was a "framework" that just does as I described, wraps every single thing, the codebase grew up in a world where dependencies were unheard of (it's at least 10 years old), the only dependency was this "framework" ...
just because nobody came in and said "stop that" before me ... they got into a rut where they really believed they were solving problems by taking every piece of internal functionality on which they depend and incorporating it into this "framework" ...
@Saitama imo, give up on internal resources, there will be a usable socket soon ...
I wish to write a bootable program in assembler that would be capable of sending and receiving network packets. I do not wish to use any libraries, I'd like to create it all by myself (and also learn while doing so). Unfortunately, I was unable to find any information regarding communication with...
i don't know @JoeWatkins that is my opinion, and it's what is happening with js, with people wrapping wrappers of wrappers of wrappers. it works, for some reason :B
well, if I'm using dependencies, where dependencies actually means that some small team of people or possibly one individual has put effort into documenting and maintaining - for free, most of the time - some component, then I don't actually care how it does that, so long as they meet my definition of dependency ...
there's obviously nothing wrong with that, there is something wrong with seeing an internal function you need, or even some component (on packagist say), and thinking you can do a better job, and so adding some usually very restricted version to some class in your mountain of one billion classes, and sticking a docblock next to it ...
I wish to write a bootable program in assembler that would be capable of sending and receiving network packets. I do not wish to use any libraries, I'd like to create it all by myself (and also learn while doing so). Unfortunately, I was unable to find any information regarding communication with...
you can also call external functions (in shared libraries), so networking in a non problem ...
you can make it a problem by saying you want to do it all yourself ... in which case you are bat shit crazy, and there is no conversation to be had with people who are bat shit crazy ...
I would send my euler solutions and he would nitpick everything :p
but well... that's how I learned stuff
it was the weirdest but most awesome connection I had... we exchanged books :p his books either didn't make it till here or made it on 3rd postage from scunthorpe
the "Lets start from the beginning" got me wondering.. quite honestly their last 4 questions might all be trying to solve the same problem, just along scrambled tangents
is "get your ritalin dose adjusted" an acceptable answer?
The thing I always start wondering when I see a user with 5 questions in 1 day is: Did you pick the right job? And I actually already know the answer...
> I am currently writing a message proposing a way to complement these 'piped calls' with a way to get rid of the '$$' placeholder. This will address the long-running sadness of argument order.
@bwoebi well yeah, there's no way to print to the browser that's pretty, that's a very messy way to do things, and it doesn't work when you're writing an API
@Andrea you can always turn it off again when it annoys you
@Andrea printf() debugging is usually my last resort (like in cases where a function is called many times and I need to debug a specific call … also helpful to set a breakpoint then to that call)