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17:00
It's pretty stable and constant, that matters more to me, HD stuff streams fine.
@Sara Has great reviews.
What do you guys use for sharing php code snippets?
Something like pastebin that isn't pastebin I assume
@LeviMorrison Deserved IMO. :)
Wes
Wes
is this intentional? possible bug in Exception/Error::toString(), message is trimmed out at \0 3v4l.org/1rBSs
@RizkyFakkel gist
17:02
I'm actually surprised the smaller nations in Europe don't have superb internet, similar to Japan.
@Wes A LOT of PHP's error formatting code isn't binary safe
I guess the political border isn't as big of a barrier as the ocean ^_^
@Wes Yes, known bug, and it sucks.
@Sara It's so stupid that anon classes include a null byte.
@DejanMarjanovic I get ~8mbit, between 4 people
Wes
Wes
@Sara what i'm doing is "error in: " . get_class($obj) and $obj is an anonymous class that contains the null byte. should i do something?
17:04
streaming not fine :(
@kelunik - 122000 installs of react/event-loop last 30 days
Anyone with Amp/ReactPHP experience? Need a second opinion from the one I got from @DaveRandom.
lolz
yeah...
@mbonneau Not talking about the usage part, but rather the maintainer part.
Wes
Wes
@kelunik why that tho?
17:05
The website includes versions from two years ago.
@kelunik I remember seeing somewhere that they're working on a new page
@Allenph Just ask, we're all here.
@kelunik Not only that, includes a null byte and leaks memory address info
17:06
Got an exploit, want to know the address layout, anon class \o/
they were lying, order incomplete ...
btw, I haven't had a chance to look async loop changes
@JoeWatkins #AlternativeStatic
people at bt business are so clearly better trained though ... they don't sound completely clueless, or ask stupid questions ... like "what is a static ip address?" ...
@daviddan We're hoping that the simple version of the accessor is what the React folks are looking for.
17:14
So, here's the situation. I'm creating a queue service on a server cluster. Each server will be assigned particular businesses. Each business will have it's own queue that fires off a request every second to a third-party API. The third-party API has a strict limit of 1 request per second, per business.

To further complicate things, each business has a list of queued items which will be sent at a programatically defined interval. (The queues will likely each have different intervals at any given time.) Furthermore, I have to fit one-offs inbetween these intervals and give them priority.
(see full text)
@kelunik React is certainly used a lot… but not much has changed in the last couple of years.
I had started working on something that had a controller-worker scheme, where each worker was a child process in react. @DaveRandom seemed adamant I should do it all in one process.
@salathe Could you merge those two PRs: github.com/php/web-people/pulls?
@NikiC The loop interop is the more important one.
@PeeHaa I've seen that already. I don't actually care that much anymore.
There's an attempt to visually explain the timelines...
Dose anyone know why large uploads to a LAMP server via HTTP would randomly fail with a connection timeout? I have set max_input_time and max_execution_time to high values, it didn't work. The max post size and upload size are well into the gigabytes. This worked (most of the time) before I switched my site to https.
17:27
Also hey roomsters
@GiantCowFilms, what does "high values" mean? Have you measured the actual constraints of a file upload vs your configuration to see if they're exceeded?
@Leigh Yeah had a brain fart. @Trowski already pointed it out. tnx though :-)
@Allenph yes. Those are time values. I set them to around 16 min execution time. It fails well before that. I also know my size limits are above what I am trying to upload
Why can't you use a different protocol?
17:30
@kelunik Is it? We can shim our loop to be a React loop. It's the promises that are a pain to work with.
I don't know. I can't suggest a protocol without knowing what you're doing.
Have you considered chunking or PHP streams?
@Allenph uploading a bunch of fairly large files via a user friendly web interface.
@Trowski It's much more pain to inject the loop everywhere.
@Allenph That sounds kinda tricky from a client standpoint.... besides. These files are only half a gig or so, so it should be able to handle them
It's just AJAX.
17:32
@kelunik It is. React libs wouldn't be compatible until they adapted the interop loop, which will require a re-write (which maybe explains some of the resistance).
@Allenph oh, so uploading via ajax will help?
@Trowski No, they don't. You can just inject the adapter loop there.
And you should only use that strategy at a defined threshold. Not to mention, without streaming you're going to obliterate your system resources.
No, you're chunking with AJAX.
If you just send an AJAX request with the file, there's virtually no difference.
@Allenph of which I have basically none
@kelunik new OldReactLoopAdaptor(Loop::get())?
17:34
You're going to have to chunk and stream at a certain filesize/bandwidth ratio with a maximum filesize before chunking is mandatory.
@Trowski Probably, yes.
@Allenph Okay.
@kelunik Clunky, but fine.
I'll probably just chunk and stream this entire form I've got here. Just about everything I'm stuffing into it is massive (relative to my puny server)
If it's anything other than files you should be fine. I send massive JSON objects all the time.
Are you uploading multiple files? Do they have to be uploaded in parallel?
17:36
@Trowski Can be a simple function.
@Allenph Its failing with one file
It won't when you start chunking and streaming.
but I do intend to upload multiple, and yeah, it would make it alot easier if they were parallel uploaded.
Make the file upload an async type deal, with a progress bar for each file.
I just wish I new why it was cutting out.
17:37
And if you can figure it out, do it in parallel.
It could be a billion things. It doesn't matter. You'll end up having to chunk and stream regardless.
@Allenph probably going to find a library for this.
<?php

function reactLoop() {
  $adapter = Loop::getState("amphp.react-adapter.adapter");

  if (!$adapter) {
    $adapter = new ReactAdapter(Loop::get());
    Loop::setState("amphp.react-adapter.adapter", $adapter);
  }

  return $adapter;
}
^ @Trowski
@GiantCowFilms I would as well. I don't know of any off hand. It shouldn't be too difficult to do the chunking on the front-end on top of jQuery or Angular. It's the async PHP side that I don't have too much experience with - that's why I'm here.
@kelunik Nice.
@kelunik @bwoebi So I had a devious thought this morning: I could write an React Adaptor lib for Amp that would use the composer autoloader replace the implementation of React's promises and loop with an interop compatible version. Including that lib would automatically make any React code compatible with Amp.
@Trowski Yes, that'd be awesome.
17:41
So no love on the alternative to controller-worker scheme? @channel
@Allenph I'm using a framework as well. Which means all the neat orderly code will go to pots after I try and actually solve a real world problem.
@kelunik It would keep Amp from having to depend on React's promise lib, but automatically make any React lib compatible.
I'll do that this weekend then.
@GiantCowFilms I have a seperate cluster for my api and my async services. I would suggest you do the same...if not in hardware, in endpoints.
I.E. fileupload.mysite.com accessing your async file upload service, api.mysite.com for your API, and mysite.com to load the front end application.
@Allenph That seems a bit heavy for what I'm doing here. Besides, my https cert doesn't cover subdomains, and I'm too cheap for a wildcard.
All this talk of Amp...React hasn't been updated in forever. What's Amp?
@GiantCowFilms Yeah. I'd give something like that a try.
17:46
@Allenph amphp.org
Also, for the record if the SSL is too rich for your blood, you can do it a different way. Use Apache to make separate configurations for mysite.com/api or mysite.com/fileupload.
If you're making a RESTful web service (which you should be) you should not violate the single-responsibility principle in your route conventions.
"React hasn't been updated in forever" github.com/reactphp/event-loop/commits/master the commit log says otherwise
0
A: Call to undefined function pcntl_fork() php-fpm nginx

Joe WatkinsThe PCNTL extension is meant to be restricted to operating in CLI only; You cannot use it in other server environments (fpm, mod_php, etc). What is supposed to happen is that extensions marked as "cli" only are meant to be statically linked into CLI binary, or allowed to load shared in CLI, and ...

thanks for explaining ... have a downvote for your trouble ... dick head ...
no good deed something something
@Allenph Okay, thanks for the help
Wes
Wes
17:56
do... you end exception error messages with .?
I end all communications the same way ...
Wes
Wes
me too...
with 🖕
Wes
Wes
i've seen them both used and in a very inconsistent manner most probably
@daviddan Perhaps a better way to put it is that there hasn't been much innovation from React in quite some time.
18:07
@Trowski which could be seen as a sign of maturity
@daviddan I became frustrated when there were PRs to fix issues that would go unmerged for months or years.
Master hasn't been.*
@daviddan How can something in beta have reached maturity?
@Allenph Not really the correct repo to make your point.
But you do have a good point… it's been in beta for how many years?
@Trowski I'm the first to admit, I have been looking into async PHP for all of 3 days.
18:13
sigh, my flatmates... their streaming is buffering so they keep turning the router on and off ... really interrupting my downloads
user895378
@daviddan It's not, though. The libraries aren't very robust.
But the fact that that's the repo I found when I looked...
user895378
There's no good http client. There's no good http server. There's no good async message consumption library. You can't build a real distributed application with it. You can only do one-off things.
@Leigh Their streaming issue would improve greatly if you could finish your downloads uninterrupted. :-D
Exactly
Considering setting up QoS to give me more bandwidth...
18:16
@kelunik nope chat logs of that channel aren't publicly available
We haven't had too much trouble building distributed applications with react.
@WyriHaximus Any thoughts on #149?
I'm planning on launching a service that my production API contacts with React.
user895378
^ no keep alive means your distributed application can't use http
user895378
18:18
not with any real performance
user895378
no gzip
user895378
that right there is a total non-starter
user895378
this is what I mean.
user895378
everything is a PoC and if one of my engineers tried to put that in production I'd lose my shit
Is there a non-blocking MySQL or Postgres client for React?
18:20
Meh. I'm not using the server, so if it works here...it should be fine. There's also failsafes for the workers.
@Trowski, I hope so, or I'm going to have to shift libraries. I had assumed there was...
Why would you start development based on an assumption :p
That was another question I had...is there anyway to use this to make a MySQL listener without just polling?
@Leigh, because I'm more feeling my way around. I have months before I have to release anything.
@Trowski There is something... wait...
!!package react mysql
[ react/mysql ] mysql driver for reactphp.
@rdlowrey This is a ZMQ and Stomp lib for React. I certainly don't disagree that the HTTP component was lacking.
user895378
18:22
@Trowski the stomp lib is also severely crippled
user895378
I know this because I just implemented the stomp protocol
ZMQ... doesn't that work on a custom IP layer?
This looks like I could connect this with an ORM?
@Leigh who doesn't love surprises during software development?
@Trowski we made one for postgres github.com/voryx/PgAsync
18:23
Also, did you know a company looking in Bristol?
user895378
the mysql lib is also pretty useless because it doesn't support pooling
@Danack How's the new project? :P
@Danack No, I know a company looking here
@kelunik Ah, seems to be unofficial, but looks like it actually implements the protocol.
user895378
because the mysql protocol only allows one request-response at a time the only way an async mysql lib is useful is if it does connection pooling
18:24
@Trowski haven't look at it will do later tonight
@rdlowrey Well, you can add the pooling on top of that, just like we do it based on our connection class.
lol
@rdlowrey Not entirely true, you can request, busywork, deal with response
18:24
@daviddan Nice, wasn't aware of that lib.
user895378
@Leigh busywork is not a real option
@PeeHaa did you see that twatter DM?
user895378
@kelunik right, but this is my point ... all these libs are incomplete
Taking advantage of the roundtrip time to do something else is always an option :P
errr don't think I did?
18:25
@Danack This is so how I feel right now…
lemme check
I didn't say viable
1 sec @Danack
@rdlowrey Agreed.
@NikiC or @bwoebi Can one of you chime in on-list to explain how HHVM's ==> still has the prefix issue? I'll update the RFC with a summary of whatever you say.
I'm just trying to get a wider participation and not dominate the discussion on-list.
So I'm hoping one of you will help me out.
Pro tip: if you're blogging and linking to a github file/line, make sure to press "y" to get the canonical URL (hash), and use that link.
^ That's awesome, TIL.
@rdlowrey if you're using generators for async, you're probably doing it wrong
@bwoebi @Trowski Did I already show github.com/imbrish/letsencrypt/blob/… to you? :-D
@daviddan Wat? Why?
This is a little confusing to me. It seems like that code is a loop overtop of a promise and a promise resolve.
Why even use a promise?
user895378
@daviddan fwiw I exposed everything necessary to do async things with php's standard bundled pgsql extension in PHP 5.6 so you can avoid all of the protocol details and just create a library wrapping pg_* functions and simplify. amp/postgres does this
user895378
18:31
@daviddan If you're not you're doing it wrong.
@Allenph Because everyone knows "callback hell" is horrible, but nobody talks about "promise hell", so it must be fine ... *nods*
I'm half kidding
I find generators to be very difficult to work with for async
user895378
@daviddan thenables were a hack because there was no better option at the time and now they're a relic of folks learning about async through javascript
user895378
(sorry for multiping)
Thenables like promises? Aren't coroutines just promise generators?
@mbonneau No, not at all.
@daviddan I couldn't disagree with this statement more.
I thought it was funny ...
@Leigh, no that was my question. Why async at all in what seems like a blocked loop?
@Trowski it's a personal preference, which is why it's not always bad to have more than one way to do something
@Allenph it's not blocked, it yields
18:37
@Leigh, Oh. I see. The repeated checking of watch is not from the wrapping Amp\run(). The watch method is a generator function.
@daviddan Of course, and nothing about what's proposed would prevent a Promise/A+ lib from working with the interop spec.
Everyone making syntax suggestions apparently has no idea how to write unambiguous grammars.
@LeviMorrison Perhaps you should suggest |param| expr on list?
Every single suggestion made in the latest email is ambiguous...
@mbonneau Coroutines yield to promises so that you don't have to define callbacks anymore. It's just like writing sync code with yield stuck in front of expressions that return promises.
@daviddan If you haven't tried async programming with coroutines, I recommend you try it.
18:42
@Trowski I've tried amp
@daviddan What were your issues? Genuine question, because sometimes when you're the designer of a system, it's hard to see it's shortcomings, especially for beginners.
If you haven't tried async programming with Rx, I recommend you try it
@daviddan I will have to look into it more, though that's solving a different problem.
Rx is solving all problems at the same time
@Allenph watch is invoked when the promise succeeds, the promise is yielded, and the scheduler periodically checks on it (events, timeouts, etc.)
sorry, not when it succeeds, when it is updated
user895378
18:47
FWIW that's the amp/v1 way and not perfect ...
@mbonneau It's just another way to apply callbacks from what I've seen.
is anyone going to be at SunshinePHP
user895378
@Trowski same, it's just pipelining promises ... it's async v1 ... the rest of the world has moved beyond this approach
user895378
even javascript has moved past it
@rdlowrey are you talking about Rx?
18:50
Man - I better get my nose back into the books
@rdlowrey The next version of Ecmascript has features I think PHP should have.
@mbonneau Take a look at async/await that is coming to JS.
async/await is broken before it gets here
it is a perpetuation of promises
@mbonneau I'm actually not familiar with how it is going to work in JS. Why do you say that?
@Leigh That makes sense. Where I'm confused now is the var_dump.
well - it is a different way of thinking I guess
user895378
18:52
It's just the difference between "functional" async and "OO"-style async ... I don't think one is any more valid than the other
I am really not trying to say "wrong"
I'm not really trying to say "wrong" either (sorry if I'm coming off that way)
yes @rdlowrey - functional instead of imperative
@Leigh does the surround Amp\run() take care of this running whenever an event is triggered?
@Allenph amp run handles passing the promise up to the scheduler when it's yielded
18:53
and that is a good point - there are a lot of different ways to approach async - that is why I think a minimalist approach on interop is best
user895378
In my position I'm concerned about entry level engineers being able to be highly productive on day 1 writing async code for pragmatic business reasons and there's a reason why large-scale software organizations don't use haskell ...
user895378
I think it's important to be able to do it in a way that's accessible to people ... I have very specific motivations
@mbonneau I'm in agreement here, I think the loop project was trying to over-reach before. Hopefully #149 solves that.
@rdlowrey I wouldn't be surprised if an entry level engineer couldn't write async with amp on day 1 :p
user895378
Even though I believe (as most sane people do) that functional is the more elegant approach I need to be able to support both
18:54
yes - and rx does not fit your goal - it takes a while to think in rx
Rx solves the vast majority of async issues very elegantly. They're composable, you can combine them, you can cancel them and they allow you to manage state
I can do all of this async crap on the front-end just fine, but I feel like I'm learning how to code all over again on the back-end.
@daviddan If it means anything, even without being totally familiar with Rx, one of my personal goals with the interop project was to be able to use Rx with Amp.
You can use Rx with Amp already
user895378
this is the point of interop, though ... so that everyone can play well with others and use whatever paradigm they like
18:55
@rdlowrey Async takes a lot of getting used to… I'd be very surprised if you got anything truly productive for at least a few days.
@Trowski it's a bit clunky with v1, but it's doable
@mbonneau I thought it depended on React.
user895378
amp v1 is definitely clunky
user895378
(sorry)
@Trowski - v1 is very flexible: github.com/ReactiveX/RxPHP/pull/50
user895378
18:56
/me apologizes
@mbonneau Ah, nice, for some reason I thought it was tied to React's loop.
Which I guess was true up until that point.
v2 we are trying to remove some of the scheduler and loop boilerplate - that is why we were looking at interop - make it easier for beginners
Shows just how unfamiliar I was with Rx I guess. I'm going to have to experiment with it.
@mbonneau Yeah, that would be fantastic. :-D
also the promise interop will help
with rx v1, you'll need to reduce the Rx stream into an amp promise
@daviddan Right, but with v2 it will be an interop promise?
19:03
that's right
Great. That's what I wanted out of interop — being able to use async libraries from different vendors without a bunch of boilerplate or interface conversions.
In React, is there a way to create and kill child processes and listen to their std channels while the loop is already running?
class Controller extends Process
  {
    public $workers = array();
    function __construct()
    {
      //Run the Process constructor before doing anything else.
      parent::__construct();
    }
    function spawnWorker($businessId)
    {
      $this->workers[$businessId] = new \React\ChildProcess\Process("exec php index.php worker $businessId");
      $this->workers[$businessId]->start($this->loop);
      $this->workers[$businessId]->stdout->on("data", function($workerOutput) {
        echo "Controller Heard A Worker Say: $workerOutput";
(see full text)
$controller = new Controller;
    $controller->run();
    $controller->spawnWorker(1);
@Allenph $controller->run(); blocks, so it won't get to $controller->spawnWorker(1); until the loop exits
@daviddan So maybe the controiller process should listen on it's std channels and call that function?
As a way to bring the call inside the loop?
why not just all it in the constructor?
user895378
19:14
@mbonneau because constructors shouldn't do things
user895378
makes your code very difficult to test
I actually did do that in the constructor and @DaveRandom yelled at me.
The worker process does that.
19:33
@Allenph without really understanding what you're trying to do: gist.github.com/davidwdan/731905903003b822aa906191d445ee19 that should at least allow you to spawn multiple children
@daviddan @Trowski @bwoebi That's another thing I like about Loop::execute: It doesn't allow people to just call run somewhere hidden and avoids issues like that one above.
@rdlowrey more than that, if you call run() in a ctor then you end up with an object that is partially constructed for the lifetime of an application, which could cause all sorts of nasty side effects.
@kelunik I was waiting for that :)
user895378
@kelunik +1
19:47
@daviddan So you're in favor of Loop::execute now?
@kelunik I'm not opposed to it in principle. My concern all along has been making the interop loop as inclusive as possible
All it needs is a wrapping Loop::execute, then it works even with the strict scope PR.
I really think we should combine efforts and work on a common loop implementation, not only an interface. There isn't much you can do differently. There's one implementation per loop backend then. If one implementation is more efficient for a specific backend, fine, PR a change to the common implementation.
This also solve the problem of always needing one implementation in require-dev and every application. It just has to depend on async-interop/event-loop then and get a loop and everything just works. Makes it more welcoming to newcomers.
@bwoebi @Trowski @rdlowrey @daviddan @mbonneau
@WyriHaximus
20:07
@kelunik In principle I agree… but we couldn't even agree on the loop accessor. Good luck with a single implementation.
With @bwoebi's proposal, we can write our own accessors again and have scoped loops like the current spec.
I did play around with making the react loop more like the interop loop github.com/reactphp/event-loop/compare/…
ThW
ThW
@kelunik I disagree, look at PDO I wish it would be only an interface with several implementations, not that complex driver stuff.
@daviddan Interestingly there was a proposal for this back in 2014. Never got anywhere to my knowledge.
I'd love to see a loop that acted more like JS, where you didn't really have to think about it
3
20:09
@ThW We'd still have the interface / abstract class.
ThW
ThW
@daviddan I used the method names from JS, like setTimeout()
@daviddan The example in the README currently doesn't invoke run / execute anywhere.
register_shutdown...
So your entire application runs in shutdown mode?
That's so ugly magic...
ThW
ThW
20:12
@kelunik but why a single 'standard' implementation in this case, not several?
I think I just found a good use case for adding defer { … } to PHP
@daviddan Your changes break if someone uses two or more loops, because Factory::create doesn't return a new instance anymore.
@kelunik yeah, I don't like having more than one loop
@ThW Several standard implementations, one for each backend.
@daviddan A 100% adapter should allow for it.
@kelunik - I have not run across a need to have more than one loop in my projects
ThW
ThW
20:14
@kelunik sounds good
@daviddan Tests might need multiple loops and rely on it being a new one.
@ThW Basically just merging amphp/loop into the interop repository.
ThW
ThW
@kelunik Do you have some material to read up about that. I try to understand how to nest event loops, but I hit a wall every time.
@ThW Usually you don't, because if you have a second loop, your first one basically freezes.
ThW
ThW
@kelunik Yeah, that is the wall I mean.
@kelunik you would still be able to create new instances without the factory, if you really wanted to
20:17
But it can be useful in edge-cases to ensure you have a working loop for fatal error reporting.
it's not perfect
@ThW So basically the use case is using async APIs where nothing other should interfere, so you don't need a second sync implementations for these cases.
using a second loop for fatal error reporting seems like it's fixing the wrong thing. if the loop crashes that often, it should be fixed
@daviddan It's not the loop crashing, but the application.
ThW
ThW
@daviddan still a valid use case, "expect the unexpected" and all that
20:23
@kelunik ah, and you're using async logging libs. that makes more sense
but you won't need stacked loops for that
@daviddan It's not about often and it's not about the loop crashing. It's ensuring nothing other executes anymore.
@daviddan Actually you might. It's better to stack a fresh one on and use that than attempt to replace the first loop. The first loop might be able to recover and continue after the error is reported.
@daviddan Thanks, but I already had that working.
The problem is that I need to spawn these and kill them on the fly.
@daviddan While replacement works for that case, it doesn't give us a clear scoping for all other cases.
ThW
ThW
@kelunik btw does interop define something like $loop->run($promise);?
20:26
And other register_shutdown_function callbacks might exist.
@ThW No, they're entirely decoupled.
@kelunik right, but I see that as two separate issues
@kelunik @daviddan does have a point. We can do our stacked loop scoping using the simple get/set accessors that are proposed. Our interop standard was probably overreaching if all we are concerned about is interoperability.
@daviddan Right, they're separate issues, but Loop::execute solves them both. :)
@Trowski I know that we can, I'm well aware. But get / set allow libraries doing stupid things, while Loop::execute does not.
ThW
ThW
Did you think about async in a sync context? Like some database queries in parallel in a request?
@ThW Yes.
20:29
@kelunik It does… but we can only enforce so much.
Loop::execute allowed stupid things if you tried hard enough.
@Trowski Sure, you can also change the driver via reflection, but it you anywhere need scoped loops and use set / get, it's way easier to fuck up.
ThW
ThW
@Trowski :-P
@Trowski Not really, show it. :P
I think v1 should be the minimum to get everyone onboard and then we can focus on other issues
@daviddan We have to get it right right away or it will be the worst dependency hell ever.
v2 won't ever be adopted then.
20:31
Yes - but will v1 ever be adopted if you reach too far?
is there a point if they don't reach far enough?
@mbonneau Yes, if Rx, React, Amp and Icicle agree on something, users will adopt it.
@PaulCrovella yes - getting everyone on the same page
I think a global accessor is a clear benefit for all react users.
The real problem currently is the React guys not participating in any productive discussions.
They just talked in a private room and agreed they won't adopt the spec in the current form without any hint why exactly. /cc @WyriHaximus
So just adopt their API and everyone will be on the same page
embrace and extend
20:37
Then we're stuck with that API forever, no thanks.
We want to built something that lasts and brings PHP forward.
3
React's loop is missing some features that cannot be implemented within that interface.
The promise lib is not lightweight enough to build a high-performance application. Simply resolving a promise requires several function calls and closure declarations… no thanks.
@Trowski I think @mbonneau is only talking about the react loop
@daviddan Then my first point… it's missing too many features. You could extend the interface for your lib… but then your lib requires a specific event loop again, so we're back to where we started.
@Trowski Except that it would interop with other loops
@mbonneau I can write a wrapper class implementing React's loop around Amp's loop and have the same result.
20:48
at this point I'm for anything that moves this forward
@mbonneau And any lib requiring my extended loop interface has just created a specialized segment of libs within the ecosystem.
Which is exactly the same state as having an Amp loop required by Amp libs and a React loop required by React libs.
@Trowski But - then you could use the different libs together still
@daviddan I think we go with the simplified interop spec proposed. Hopefully React is on board. If not, I'll write an adapter that fixes that problem for those wanting to use an interop-compatible lib.
@mbonneau With adapters, sure.
@Trowski I want to talk to all React people in chat first.
The inherent problem with any interop of any variety is that it's lowest common denominator.
ThW
ThW
20:52
"react people"?
@kelunik Same here.
@ThW jsor, cboden, clue
@ThW s/React people/React maintainers
I think that the react guys too busy working. I don't know what you guys do for a living, but this room is killing my productivity
@daviddan Yes, that can be true.
20:55
because we're having a discussion which is pointless if react doesn't agree…
@daviddan Yes, same here. I haven't done as much today as I should have.
ThW
ThW
@daviddan Balance - I get a lot from it. (Kinda like shortcuts to new ideas and stuff)
We've probably discussed this enough for the moment. Let's wait for someone to respond.
@Trowski @bwoebi I just joined #reactphp on Freenode now and asked for specific constructive points to improve.

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