@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
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
@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
@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
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)
@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.