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Wes
Wes
00:08
damn that brings back some memories
01:00
@NikiC Does our allocator put any values before the first item in an array? The reason is pointer operations on one-past-the-end are well defined. Operations on one-before are undefined, but if our allocator has something there then as long as we don't actually access it we are okay.
Wes
Wes
bought protein shakes. they taste like chicken butt diluted with milk
i want some spaghetti :(
We can still work it out even if we can't do one-before, just a bit more work.
Wes
Wes
sorry for interrupting with trifles. feel free to move to bin
01:51
Anyone here live close to Sussex?
@Wes I take Syntha-6 protein.
Wes
Wes
there are like 100 brands over here. i bought the one that seemed to have more votes
not what i imagined. i think i'll pass :B
Syntha-6 Vanilla Ice Cream flavored. It's delicious.
It does have sugar in it though.
02:18
Am I the only person who has a habit of typing () after class declarations (e.g. final class Foo () { ...)?
Wes
Wes
yes
i write mysql when i actually want to write myself
02:46
Who is left in the World Cup?
Heading to be early. Night.
 
2 hours later…
05:19
posted on June 30, 2018

New Cyanide and Happiness Comic

05:37
I want to rename ArrayIterator to ArrayObjectIterator and write a new ArrayIterator sanely with a sane API.
Wes
Wes
05:47
why. spl is all wrong
06:19
I have deployed a project on google app engine. I have purchased domain from Godaddy. Now, I want to link godaddy hosting to google app engine but it doesn't work for some reason. I tried A, AAAA, CName, etc all the stuff but no luck. FYI, domain verifcation is done. Can anyone help me achieve this?
06:32
My web backed is live on Google App engine. It is developed using Node JS. Database is PostgreSQL. To access database I need to setup authorization for which I need to enter IP of app engine instance. Problem I am facing is IP of app engine instance get changed automatically periodically. Can anyone tell me if we can assign static IP to instance or remove need to enter IP for authorization?
07:06
A newbie question here :D

How could i require composer autoload in my website's php file when composer is installed in a server root directory?

Basically what i want to do is

I need to include an autoload file from

servername/vendor/autoload.php
But my website is located in
servername/domains/www.mydomain.com/htdocs/www
@drpzz would a relative path, i.e. require '../../../../vendor/autoload.php'; work?
Also, the setup you describe gives me a hunch you are not using composer in the way it was meant to be used.
07:23
I have a question about the CQSR as outlined in @Patrick 's book. It seem to treat every action as a seperate command and query, as the name implies. However, in practice the separation starts to become quite limiting a simple example if when you create a record, and then what to redirect the user to that record's page. You basically want to create something, then query its id. So it is both a command (create thing) and query (what did I just make).
How should I go about providing such functionality without violating good practice rules?
@LeviMorrison I'll review when it's not 3am, actually quite excited about the idea. Might be worth adding some tests for behaviour when modifying the array during iteration. Not sure how Array Iterator handles that actually.. maybe as long as it's the same as that?
07:40
@GiantCowFilms it's good practice to not blindly adhere to acronyms or books. they cannot think for you, they cannot decide when you're adding unnecessary complexity to your code base (which you likely are)
@PaulCrovella That is why I am asking a question. Rather than just muddling through with some super complicated workaround, I am looking to see if there is a pattern to solve my problem. I used to just makeup my own patterns, but I have regretted it nearly every time.
Also, I am willing adding unneeded complexity to this current application, but I am doing so because I want to learn how to write good scaleable code. I don't want to spend the rest of my life writing insignificant stuff all by myself.
@PaulCrovella Ultimately I don't break good practice unless I understand why the reasons for recommending that practice don't apply in my situation.
what makes you think cqrs does apply to your situation?
@PaulCrovella I have seen it used by people who know more than me in very similar situations. Also, CQRS is very general. And in this situation, I have a very obvious command and query that are being lumped together.
07:58
Good question :P
armamentarium the aggregate of equipment, methods, and techniques available to one for carrying out one's duties: The stethoscope is still an essential part of the physician's armamentarium.
Darn it. You popped my bubble. I was enjoying the comfort of thinking I was doing everything wright by following a book.
*right.... this time of night is when my spelling is at its worst.
there's no such thing as doing everything right. every decision is a tradeoff.
So many ways to do things. Most of them wrong, some of them less wrong......
:(
I guess I was hoping that I could learn a "right" way to do something as in a way that has been tested and proven to work at least pretty well by other people.
it's sometimes a right way, but also often not
08:41
@GiantCowFilms yeah it's possible but how should i use it then?? Sorry for taking so long to answer
btw ../../ Won't work for some reason with require_once
/htdocs/postit../../../virt73405/vendor/autoload
error outputs
08:53
Should the composer be installed in the root of web dir?
Wes
Wes
09:09
morn
@GiantCowFilms i'm not sure what the question is
what's these "good practice rules"
Can i require something from PHP that is is deeper than htdocs?
Wes
Wes
postit..
there is no such thing
postit/..
/htdocs/postit/../../../virt73405/vendor/autoload
Okay, let me explain it again, it's much easier that way.

I need to access composer autoload file from web directory but my server handler have installed composer in the root directory which is
root/vendor/autoload.php
i need to access this file from
root/domains/mydomain/htdocs/www/postit/index.php
It's my first time using composer so i might be doing something wrong
Every tutorial i see shows me that i should require autoload like this
require_once __DIR__ . 'vendor/autoload'; // change path as needed
But then i get an error that
: require_once(root/domains/mydomain/htdocs/postit/vendor/autoload): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in
DateTimeImmutable::format() returns invalid result for DST date time – #76554
09:54
nvm, my composer files were installed in a wrong directory
@bwoebi I am super confused by the property type checking APIs
Regarding how the zval freeing works
For example this snippet: github.com/bwoebi/php-src/blob/…
If coercion is triggered, isn't this going to destroy value?
 
1 hour later…
11:20
Unexpected default of phpdbg.eol ini setting – #76555
@Jeeves weird
 
1 hour later…
12:38
@drpzz your autoload files should be in your web root directory, and I dunno where Composer gets installed on Linux, but on Windows it gets installed in Program Files I think... I can't remember actually, been a while since I've done it o_O
 
1 hour later…
14:03
@rtheunissen Copy-on-write means it will iterate over the original array.
14:45
@NikiC I'm not sure we should do bidirectional iterators.
It's rare that reverse is necessary; it's even more rare that being able to go forward and backwards is necessary.
Should go either forward or backwards. If I'm given an ArrayIterator, I shouldn't have to check or query what direction it's going in.
It goes whatever direction the caller drives it in. It's not a property.
Regular iteration -> forwards. Wrap in ReverseIterator -> backwards.
That's the current design, anyway.
It works for an array iterator. I'm thinking about generalization. I think something like ReversableAggregate would be more useful.
I guess we can still have bidirectional iterators but what I'm saying is that it's not going to be as useful as ReversableAggregate. Consider a tree structure: navigating forwards OR backwards is easy; being able to do both in a single iterator would be difficult.
Make sense, @rtheunissen?
@NikiC coercion is only triggered if the cast is working at all, otherwise the value is never freed
@bwoebi It is
I checked later, that case causes memory errors
If arg!=ret and ret is used then arg is freed
14:59
I think it would make more sense to not free arg
@NikiC I anticipated it would be if (castable && coercion) { replace_value(); } basically
15:30
Here's my BidirectionalArrayIterator proof-of-concept.
@tereško I've written a short biography of you plus your image in Asana. Please take a look at it and let me know if it is ok.
15:44
/cc @salathe
 
1 hour later…
17:03
@LeviMorrison how would reverse iterator know how to reverse an array iterator? I don't see how it can be generalised.
@rtheunissen It would work off an extended Iterator interface including prev() and end() methods
Yeah I just read back over your messages with Levi
I was imagining it with the existing implementation of array iterator.
@NikiC were you thinking something like this re: numeric string? Not sure if it's 100% correct, some adjustments don't cause any tests to fail which is a bit concerning. github.com/php/php-src/pull/3351/commits/…
cli_get_process_title is the only failing test.. which seems unrelated.
Hmm I think I see some mistakes in that diff.. op1 and op2 mix-ups
Should the call the CRT_CONSTANT_EX always be opline->op2?
17:27
Heh, IS_VOID internally needs to be nullable in order for internal functions to work, which gives them a return signature of ?void.
This is funny because in user-land:
> Fatal error: Void type cannot be nullable in php shell code on line 1
I think void needs to implicate nullable and then not show it in the string representation.
@NikiC tests were passing before and after this change: github.com/php/php-src/pull/3351/commits/…. I would like to write some tests to cover this but I don't know in what context these would be covered. Any ideas?
@NikiC can you please give me a repro case? I don't see it currently
class Test {
    public int $x = 42;
}
$str = "2";
$str .= "4";
$obj = new Test;
$obj->x = $str;
var_dump($str);
@bwoebi Under valgrind
I'll check it out, thanks
17:44
@LeviMorrison Is does?
It shouldn't be necessary
@NikiC Yes.
It's not supposed to
We definitely have special code for that case
Pull this down and change the nullable flags from 1 to 0 and you can see it in action: github.com/php/php-src/commit/…
Gotta add a test case I guess
I would also appreciate comments on the todos and/or the reversed function.
Should be array | ReversableAggregate | BidirectionalIterator, actually.
17:52
@rtheunissen Typo fix applied upstream github.com/php/php-src/commit/…
Thanks @NikiC, will rebase.
@NikiC I can do this the next time I get a break (at my parents' place).
@NikiC reckon it's in a state where I can get useful results from a benchmark?
@rtheunissen yes
Also, since IS_VOID isn't a return type on any internal functions currently how should I test that?
I can make one, but seems weird to have one there that actually goes into prod but only exists for the test...
953  	/* Special handling for IS_VOID is not necessary (for return types),
954  	 * because this case is already checked at compile-time. */
Ha, not for internal types.
18:09
@LeviMorrison there's a separate function for that, it's just broken ^^
working on a fix...
^_^ Ah, you beat me to it.
Thanks. I will rebase and fix my code.
@NikiC when I bench these, I should make sure that opcache is enabled for cli, right? Should I do anything with optimisation level or other config?
I'll guard by IS_CONST first though, thanks for that.
@rtheunissen no need to use opcache for the benchmarks
Please include a case where the key starts with an ascii codepoint below '0' as well
18:26
Thanks, will do.
morns
18:54
I've tried reading a couple articles on covariance/contravariance, but it isn't clicking. I think understand their definitions, but what sort of use cases are they for?
@Tiffany When you want to specialize a return type or want to generalize parameter.
Say you have a FooFactory which makes Foo objects, where Foo is an interface. You might have a FooImplFactory which returns FooImpls, which are concrete.
@NikiC ah, I see the mistake, it's only incref'ed in the IS_CV case after the cast
(via zend_assign_to_variable)
That situation happens in Java all the time because of some sick obsession over factories and interfaces even when there's only one concrete type. But it makes for a good example of covariance.
A PHP version of factories that make more sense are creating iterators with the IteratorAggregate interface. A Stack might want to return a StackIterator, a Vector might want to return a VectorIterator, etc.
@LeviMorrison To be sure I'm following correctly, FooImpls would be instantiated objects created by FooImplFactory? ... Actually, after writing that, I think follow this.
interface Foo {}
class FooFactory { // something like return new Foo(); I guess? }
class FooImplFactory implements FooFactory {}
Is this right?
interface Foo {}
interface FooFactory { function makeFoo(): Foo; }
class MyFoo implements Foo {}
class MyFooFactory implements FooFactory { function makeFoo(): MyFoo; }
@Tiffany The return type of MyFooFactory#makeFoo() is where variance comes in ^
19:06
@NikiC first benchmark, average of 5:
Fixed: 7.90096
Master: 7.75926
@DaveRandom and without variance, Foo would be returned instead of MyFoo?
I need to do more OOP sometime this year.
@Tiffany without variance, the declared return type of MyFooFactory#makeFoo() must be the wider type Foo, even though it only ever returns the narrower type MyFoo. In PHP this doesn't strictly matter, however in a strictly typed language it would mean that any code that uses MyFooFactory and is explicitly coupled to it has to cast the object in order to access any members of MyFoo that are not part of the Foo interface.
However we still want it in PHP if possible, because it makes for more explicit, self-documenting code, and makes it possible to have much more effective static analysis tools
Wes
Wes
\o
user1804599
@Ocramius Did you ever look into using Petri nets for restricting which events may occur in which order in an event sourcing system?
19:12
btw @Tiffany gtalk
@DaveRandom thanks, makes a lot of sense
I should install hangouts on my home computer
...I miss Google Talk, hangouts is such bullshit in comparison
I just use it through the gmail web page
At home, normally I do too, but the box is small...
Wes
Wes
i still miss msn messenger
the only im that ever worked
I miss full-functional Pidgin
Wes
Wes
19:14
ah portugal is losing
Discord is becoming close to my new favorite though
Wes
Wes
can't wait to see ronaldo's disappointment face
@Wes you forgot to /cc @pmmaga
Wes
Wes
:B
YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
2-1
CAVANI PO PO PO
only usa it seems @Tiffany
and i don't recall seeing those brands
19:52
Damn
There's so many varieties of whey protein here
Wes
Wes
sorry man @pmmaga :B
@rtheunissen for which case is this?
For those changes in zend_inference
Or are they simply better than before, but don't change behaviour?
That makes sense actually.
So that's like a very rough 2% performance hit for that test script.
@rtheunissen Would it be possible to separate out the different test cases rather than only having an overall result?
Mainly interesting to see how performance changes a) for a clear non-numeric string b) for a low ascii non-numeric string and c) for a numeric string
20:31
Morngins v2
@GiantCowFilms Feel free to return stuff from your command. CQRS is about separating the write from the read side. You can still return things on the write side (and use queries, for validation etc).
21:11
Can somebody give me a specific example why I would want wiki.php.net/rfc/object-comparison ?
@PeeHaa there are a list of examples in the rfc
@PeeHaa the decimal thing and datetimes, that is literally the only concrete examples I have though. Essentially, boxed primitives.
Like $dateTimeInstance > '2000-02-06' seems like a not-completely-unreasonable thing to do
and using == with math operations is already a not-completely-unreasonable thing to do, in some circumstances, although I don't think I ever actually do it
@rtheunissen There are?
obv the datetime thing isn't really applicable in PHP, but it's a decent example of a data type where this does actually make sense
Comparing against the same type is probably the main use case though.
21:24
None of the examples tell me: "see this is a useful case"
"Strict sets that differentiate between "1" and 1."
@rtheunissen Yes, but in those cases I could just implement my own comparison method and be done with it
The default PHP object comparison alg doesn't support that and the user has no control.
So the main thing of the rfc is the actual overloading?
Not if you want to use array functions like in_array.
Not the overloading, the definition of equality and ordering for that class. Right now there's one rule for all and that doesn't always apply.
21:28
@rtheunissen strongly disagree, but not really a relevant or useful argument so I won't start it. Suffice it to say that I can see myself using __compareTo(), but not __equals()
I'm still kinda sad it's not an interface btw
But I guess I see why
Still can be. What's a good case for it being an interface?
@rtheunissen Less magic involved
it's just better classical OOP
21:30
Why magic methods over an interface?
> Python uses magic methods because there are no interfaces
That's a bit of a weird reasoning :P
PHP uses magic methods because they were introduced in PHP4 when PHP had no interfaces
Is that really the reason though
imho that precedent not a good enough reason to keep doing
@PeeHaa it's the precedent that was set
Wes
Wes
the objects are comparable anyway, even if the interface is not implemented
the magic method is just a hook to the existing functionality
i think it's ok to use magic methods here
for stuff like __toString() it was really stupid, instead
as objects are not stringable by default
I am agree on the last point
Wes
Wes
21:34
we should have interface Stringable{ function __toString(): String; }
many have it
God damnit. I want generics
Please
I like the ToString function in C#
Sorry not a reply to you, but just a weekly somewhat related rant
full of typos
!!rfcs
21:36
There are no RFCs in voting. Sorry, but we can't have nice things.
@PeeHaa how did @Ekin react to my pancakes? :P
@Tiffany Don't think she noticed it or it was that bad she didn't want to talk about it :P
lol
did you expect her to react negatively or positively?
I'm guessing negatively, but I dunno
@Tiffany Dunno. She was complaining about my brown sugar. Not sure she will survive that monstrosity you call pancakes :D
haha
21:41
what can be negative about pancakes :P you also do crystal sugar on them?
@Wes OK I have an actual concrete argument here I think: Imagine I create a generalised custom object comparator function, e.g. for use with usort(). Somewhere in the logic it uses ==. Like a lot of people (I suspect) I have inspections enabled in PHP Storm to warn about use of ==. If I can type-hint for Equatable, static analysis tools can safely determine that this case is explicitly intended. /cc @PeeHaa @rtheunissen
@Ekin Worse
Much much worse
crystal meth?
2 days ago, by Tiffany
user image
@Ekin there's a brown sugar/melted butter mixture in between each pancake, topped with strawberries and a mountain of whipped cream
21:42
that is... horrifying
that is... really another level
it was amazing though
Wes
Wes
brb
and I say that as someone who ate 18 profiteroles for breakfast a few weeks ago
21:43
@DaveRandom php storm can check if __equals is implemented.
@Wes You feel the sudden urge to make pancakes? :P
Wes
Wes
no. i am fat
I thought you were doing a diet thing?
the worse part is the waitress offered syrup... cause there's not enough sugar already in that
Wes
Wes
thats why i don't eat pancakes
21:44
Fair enough :)
Wes
Wes
also sweet things bleh... never liked sweet stuff
I'm not sure I can go a day without eating at least one sweet thing... I'm truly a slave to sugar
Wes
Wes
i need to recover a shirt i dropped on the floor under me's balcony
@rtheunissen not if it's generic
Wes
Wes
going full mission impossible
because nobody is occupying the apartment currently
21:45
@Wes me's should be my or you probably know that and that wooshed over me
the signature of the comparator would have to be function(object $o1, object $2): int but with an interface it can be made explicitly type safe
@Wes hehehe
@Wes borrow someone's fishing line?
The real issue here tbh is that hidden magic leads to weird, hard to find bugs. If some idiot accidentally deletes the magic method and the tests are inadequate, it may get through QA and create a bug that will only manifest in production in a way that's really hard to find. If there's an interface, that's much less likely to happen because the error will scream at you
accidental removal of the magic method will not cause anything to actually fail, it will just change the behaviour. Accidental removal of an interface method is instant compile-time error
Wes
Wes
so yeah now i have two things to recover from the balcony below
21:53
hahahaha
There was an old lady who swallowed a fly...
@DaveRandom that's a good case. Another one is for maybe deprecating object == default behaviour later.
Then the whole "all objects are comparable" case falls through.
Maybe we should vote on either magic, interface, or neither?
@rtheunissen I would do two votes: Should we have this functionality, and should we have interfaces. Even with interfaces, I would still have them named as if they were magic methods, so they can be separated into two votes and they can be decoupled such that the failure of the "interfaces" vote need not affect the overall functionality vote in any way
Wes
Wes
ok i did it :B
I've no issue with naming according to the magic method convention, ti makes sense to do that since those names are explicitly reserved and this is core engine functionality
22:04
@DaveRandom They can also do structural checking for __equals.
@DaveRandom I can see people implementing the methods and forgetting to implement the interface. That can be hard to debug too.
@rtheunissen the point of the interface would be that it doesn't change the behaviour unless you implement it, you could easily have a compile-time error if those method names are found in a class that doesn't implement it
@DaveRandom you said before "not if it's generic", what do you mean? PHPStorm can use reflection to check if the class implements __equals and won't warn.
only if it can actually infer the class
by generic I mean "any object"
If it can't infer the class it can't infer it would be equatable...
22:06
@Patrick Ah okay. Thanks.
@LeviMorrison no, but if you had an interface then you can fix that declaratively
@var MyClass $obj
@DaveRandom I think it has to be one or the other. Magic method method names with an interface is strange, like we couldn't make up our mind.
Wes
Wes
@DaveRandom that made me think that i really don't want to use == for stuff that is not objects
needs another operator, one that works like === if operands are primitives, otherwise calls __equals/__compareTo if objects, finally resorting to ==
@rtheunissen while I sort of agree, it solves the problem that there will be a lot of naming collisions without the double underscore prefix. The prefix is explicitly reserved since day one, for use by things internal to the engine - this will still be internal to the engine, it's just augmenting the existing precedent with a level of explicitness that wasn't technically possible when the original precedent was set (PHP4 did not have interfaces).
I feel I'm fighting a losing battle here, and that's fine, but I really strongly feel that there is enough historical evidence of "magic things generally lead to trouble" that it's a battle worth fighting :-P
it there wasn't such a strong move toward improving the type system and encouraging explicit typing, I wouldn't be nearly so bothered, but it just feels wrong adding new things that are completely magical in the context of the general direction of PHP develeopment. I know strict classical OOP is not the One True Way, but it is the way that PHP has been moving.
22:22
@DaveRandom not a losing battle at all, there are good arguments for either, and for neither. It's a tough one.
weirdly I think this is another one of those rare case where @PeeHaa agrees with me :-P
Wes
Wes
@rtheunissen we need something to maintain backward compatibility while allowing new features
like declare(compat = 7.3);
@DaveRandom Which makes me rethink my entire stance on it :P
@Wes further up that thread.. declare strict comparison
Wes
Wes
i am starting to dislike it too.. which makes 3 of us, all agreeing on something
22:27
@Wes lol!
@rtheunissen when I say that I don't mean to imply that I'm battling you, rather that if I'm having such difficulty putting a solid case into words here amongst a group of some of the best PHP devs in the world, many of whom are also my friends, then the chances of reaching a consensus on it in the wider community (i.e. internals) are basically nil :-P
Wes
Wes
@rtheunissen god imagine the endless discussion we need to have all people agreeing on this
That will never happen.
Wes
Wes
i don't see this ending well unfortunately guys
Just need a majority to agree. :p
Wes
Wes
22:28
2/3 is quite a lot of people
imho it's simpler if you introduce a new operator
==> (joking)
Wes
Wes
if($a eq $b)
bleh. dunno
eq might work
(()====D~~~~
if ($a ❤️ $b)
22:30
@DaveRandom lol nice
$a ^=^ $b
I like the idea of voting for the feature first, then on magic vs interfaces.
has there ever been a similar proposal for ecma that has gained traction?
they have the same fundamental underlying issue, i.e. the existence of both == and === (even though the semantics are different)
@Wes You mean a new one that does what === does?
@GiantCowFilms no
no, that invokes the proposed magic methods
but that would be silly
Wes
Wes
22:34
yes, except that is overloaded with __equals() optionally
I'd rather have an implicit __equals() method on every class that can optionally be overridden, and invoke it explciitly
@DaveRandom naming collisions in userland?
I don't want that
Why not invoke it with ==?
@Tiffany I have written methods named equals() loads of times
22:36
Yeah, it makes sense
Is there any way to allow it to use an interface without colliding with userland implementations?
@rtheunissen just because of history. If we could do something like remove == for object comparison in 8 and then introduce this in 9 I'd feel differently, but I wouldn't touch it if I was writing code that might reasonably be expected to work on PHP versions that cross the boundary of the change
A lot of people have trained their brains to just never use ==, the only way that I could un-learn that would be if I was confident that code relying on the old behaviour was long gone
Would never remove == for object comparison, just the default behaviour of that. It'll fail for objects that aren't comparable.
Like if it exists already, use magic method; otherwise use interface? I dunno. Not sure if PHP could work that way
And probably too confusing in practice
@rtheunissen yes, that's what I mean, if you could do that all at once then I'd use it if I had a case. Obviously you can't do that, so I would just not use it (but ftr I wouldn't vote against it)
The reason I said 8/9 is because I'm not confident it would be practical to remove it in 8 - if there is a 7.4 in which you can start throwing E_DEPRECATED then you probably could
also btw I suspect that this won't get into 7.3 no matter what you do, after what people were saying about typed properties and the lateness of the proposal
There was discussion of delaying 7.3's release
22:47
and there's no way in hell you'd ever get the new mechanism and the deprecation in to the same minor, and throwing errors definitely can't be done in a minor
@Tiffany the entire point of an interface is to give a contractual guaranteed behaviour, there's no half measures with that
7.3 will likely be the last, and 7.4 for deprecations only.
Could be wrong but I'm pretty sure I read that somewhere.
@rtheunissen if that is the case and this can be pushed through into 7.3, doable in 8 then (in theory)
now all you have to do is persuade internals :-P
Working on it. :P
btw @rtheunissen if all of ^ that actually happened, how do you propose to handle stdClass? Give it an explicit __equals() which implements the current logic? You can't really stop them from being comparable imo
stdClass would have a compare handler that does what compare_objects does currently.
But the default for other classes will be null / not supported.
23:00
@rtheunissen ofc, but (imo) that should be done in such a way that it's consistent with the userland mechanisms from the PoV of reflection etc
@rtheunissen basically I'm keen on avoiding stuff like this shitshow, it should be done in such a way that method_exists($obj, '__equals') (or $obj instanceof Equatable if interface is done) covers all cases and you don't have to special-case for internal magic
obviously callables are a much more extreme kind of special hell, but the point still stands

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