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Wes
Wes
22:01
@Andrea @Sara @LeviMorrison @ircmaxell as the idea keeps getting discussed in here, can we liberalize constants (at least non-class ones) so that they can hold anything, not just immutable primitives, so that people can do const strlen = Closure::fromCallable("strlen");
ie, constant references, rather than immutable values
@Wes I'd like that for various reasons, but const strlen is a poor example because it should already be magically defined by the interpreter imho
ThW
ThW
but your book is still the best entry point, is just doesn't have the new stuff
Wes
Wes
in the future i hope to get too unified symbol tables for constants, functions, classes
@Andrea Copy on Verifiable Failure Everyone Freaking sEes
@Wes define('strlen', Closure::fromCallable('strlen')); ?
Wes
Wes
22:04
correct
No, I mean, how's about that?
Or do you mean treating SOME_CONST('foo') as (constant('SOME_CONST'))('foo') ?
To which I'd say..... yeeeeeeeah, sorta maybe doable.... awkward though
Wes
Wes
namespace Bar;
function whatever(){}
const whatever = Closure::fromCallable("Bar\\whatever");
...
use const whatever;
use function whatever;
$c = whatever;
$c();
whatever();
that actually works already‌​... although andrea said something might not
@Andrea awesome
Wes
Wes
(whatever)->bindTo(...)->__invoke()
see I like this diagram because it's mostly true
22:08
@JayIsTooCommon I do too
Well, it works, but like.... Does it work by calling the original whatever() or by calling the closure::fromcallable of it
that is the actual architecture (so far as I can remember, I made some guesses)
and yes OPcache does produce garbage sometimes
Wes
Wes
@Sara is there a difference?
@Dereleased right, that makes perfect sense... but why does PHP fall back to using a constant of the same name, when i clearly stated use function? that's the million dollar question for me
In this example, no. But what if that 3rd line had been: const whatever = Closure::fromCallable("iDunnoStuff");
^ @Wes
22:12
@Andrea what I don't understand there is why the compiler doesn't go directly to the optimizer before going into opcache
why is the optimizer acting on opcached stuff instead? O_o
@Ocramius it may be the other way round, I don't actually know
I'm pretty sure opt is pre-cache
Wes
Wes
@Sara do we care about that? we just want to give the liberty to the user to create kind-of first class functions if they want
Not worth optimizing if you can't cache it?
Makes sense to me.
22:13
@shadowhand It didn't? You used define() and put a constant named "a" in the global namespace. Check this out: 3v4l.org/tLq4K
@LeviMorrison yes. but it probably occurs earlier. I've no idea though.
@Wes We care about that precisely as much as we care about allowing users to redefine existing consts/functions/classes (which we do).
@Dereleased define is not global... is it?!
Wes
Wes
@Sara i'm not saying that "use function whatever" should import both function and constant
@shadowhand define() requires a fully-qualified name. Since you passed "a", you got "\a"
Wes
Wes
22:15
you will be always required to do both "use function whatever" and "use const whatever"
@Wes You used both. How is the runtime to know which to honor?
holy f, it is global 3v4l.org/qojPv
Wes
Wes
@Sara same as currently?
and const is namespaced... TIL
Wes
Wes
foo() function, (foo)() constant
foo->__invoke() constant
22:16
@Wes Right, but you were asking about foo() being able to invoke a callable constant.
@shadowhand 3v4l.org/8cp80
@shadowhand define() can make constants in other namespaces. Use these powers for evil.
@Dereleased LMAO oh dear god
Wes
Wes
@Sara no. i didn't say that
@Dereleased that's enough PHP for today then
Sigh. Okay.
**Goes back to binging Battlestar Galactica on @Hulu.
22:18
@shadowhand =D
Wes
Wes
foo() will call the function, (foo)() will call the closure in the constant
@Dereleased ahaha this is reminding me of my best Composer package
@Wes And never the twain shall meet, since having collisions between names of constants and functions would break bc, and WE CANNOT
Wes
Wes
guys, are you drunk?
@Wes caffeinated, actually
22:20
@Andrea I'm going to send you a PR where I replace all your semicolons with ?><?php
Wes
Wes
they will stay two separated entities as they are now, no conflicts
@Andrea my EYES rub rub rub
Wes
Wes
of course i can do
function bar(){}
const bar = Closure::fromCallable("whatever"); and have different results
ThW
ThW
I had a class reunion last weekend, meeting people after 20 years is weird ..
Wes
Wes
but i just don't do that, and i'll be ok...
22:23
Oooh, next I'll add a "redefine" function to change constant values and life will be meaningless!
I should go home
Wes
Wes
people are always condescend to me...
ThW
ThW
@brzuchal wth?
@brzuchal You mean an interface is ok if used more than once? AREN'T YOU THINKING?! Question more!
22:25
Question Everything :)
@brzuchal just reverse the output of finalizer and you got it
:-P
perfect advice for newcomers
@Ocramius I just implemented it
And also wanna add removing typehints and return types
Waste of time! :P
nice
Consider making a de-objectifier too
converts all classes into functions that act as data structure constructor
Thats for fun. You know I wanna have first tool for Question Driven Development :)
ThW
ThW
@brzuchal why? seriously why? ...
22:27
@Andrea Don't use zend_string_addref, use zend_string_copy
@NikiC oh. why?
@brzuchal or you could try Disaster Driven Development ... wait, no, that's what most us already do
@Andrea It's fine, but inelegant and fragile
@ThW Have you watched Laracast about Questioning Everything?
E.g. you are performing the addref after operations, which is generally invalid
22:28
@NikiC does copying actually dup?
@NikiC …good point
E.g. anything that performs interning will actually deallocate the string before you get around to the addref
@Andrea no, copy = addref + return
oh fuck
@tereško Question Disaster Development :D
@NikiC oh okay
I misunderstood then. I'll try that.
@Andrea It usually works out fine because most strings are already interned anyway ;)
Wes
Wes
22:29
@Sara battlestar galactica sucks tho. adama dies in season 3
:B
@NikiC I'm worried interning is hiding from me which addrefs are unnecessary :p
@brzuchal that's kinda my role at work. I ask a question and team-lead goes a bit pale
ThW
ThW
@brzuchal the "visual debt" stuff, yeah. It actually adds a lot of debt to remove the declarations
@Wes that could be ...difficult...
not to build, but to explain side effects from
... those question usually begin with "Did you know that in our code .."
Wes
Wes
22:30
for example @ircmaxell?
@tereško You have very interesting work :)
Wes
Wes
ah, like that people assume to get immutable values from constants, rather than immutable references?
yeah I have no idea why this segfaults, at all
;-;
or rather I do know why it segfaults. what I don't know is how it got to that state
objects (which closures are) contain state by definition
that state is odd to deal with in that context
@ircmaxell oh yeah, we have no notion of an immutable object
22:45
nor should there be one (though immutable references and properties I'd LOVE
@ircmaxell You mean immutability from the exterior (public scope)?
ahhh, PHP only does early binding for class ASTs
that's why enums weren't being early-bound
@ircmaxell I'm totally on board with that
22:51
though it could be interesting to have, I think that's something where static analysis could help far more than a language flag
@Andrea well, we have a function zend_string_dup …
@ircmaxell how do you mean?
a class is immutable only if all of its properties and methods are immutable
> (CG(compiler_options) & ZEND_COMPILE_IGNORE_INTERNAL_CLASSES)
huh…
the class immutability can be inferred
@NikiC @bwoebi what's this option for? (I can see what it does, but why have it?)
Wes
Wes
22:54
@ircmaxell what i'm suggesting is that constants should be variable references that can be assigned only once, like those in js. const foo = new MutableObject(); foo will always be that specific object. we don't care if it's mutable or immutable
@Andrea I guess it's related to that we'll then have pointers into the ro memory
@bwoebi is that a problem?
oh what the hell
it's… doing a delayed inherited class decl, but only for the final class
hmm
I wonder if my cache slots are f'ed up
not ro memory, but the internal ce memory location
if it were ro memory, it were easy.
@bwoebi what's the problem with pointing to it?
but the internal ce memory pointers are not shared between processes
23:00
@bwoebi ahhhh, gotcha
yeah, opcache is filling CG(class_table) and userland ce memory anew upon each request, but internal classes are permanently in there (at potentially different locations between processes)
yeah, that makes sense
23:18
I've pored over this and I can't find anything wrong with it
23:43
I don't want to have to like, ping dmitry, but he might be the only one who can help me
@Andrea What's the issue (I'm too lazy to scroll up), also: Why values via function calls? Why not make them look like constants? (e.g. Suit::Diamond )
Oh, you're making them return an instance of the object. Hrmmmm
@Andrea Somewhat orthogonal to this, what do you think about an internal object handler zval* get_const(zend_object *obj, zend_string *const_name);
I've wanted that in the past for foreign object binding (e.g. Java, COM, etc...) and it would be quite usable here as well.
23:59
@Wes I know what you mean, and I'm ok with that :)
/me shutters at the mention of const

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