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00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00

00:00
yeah this is killy behaviour
Why do I get parallel\Exception with "Runtime unusable" when calling kill()?
bad bootstrap ?
possibly you're swallowing an exception ?
or it was already closed
	if (php_parallel_monitor_check(parallel->monitor, PHP_PARALLEL_CLOSED|PHP_PARALLEL_ERROR)) {
		php_parallel_exception("Runtime unusable");
		return;
	}
error is only set on the parallel monitor when bootstrapping failed, or pthread_create failed, both raise an exception, and I've never seen pthread_create fail
and closed only set when closed or killed already
I think it was throwing an exception the the thread.
that shouldn't matter
only effects the future, the runtime swallows exceptions - you can run more stuff after ex
!!rfcs
@JoeWatkins That's odd then, because the bootstrapping should be working, since it works in the other tests.
Ah, found the problem. I had another method that called kill() again.
you super confused me for a minute
still these exceptions are a bit crap
I'll do something to improve the messages
Took me a moment that unusable probably meant not running, but it's largely the same.
@JoeWatkins So unfortunately for me, interrupting the VM still doesn't interrupt select, so I'll need to set up a timer.
@Andrea I was excited, until I saw the biggest block of global I've ever seen ...
@Trowski so you still gotta have additional socket ?
00:17
@JoeWatkins No, I just set up an empty timer that repeats so select will only block for so long, say 250 ms.
oh that's a bit better then
I don't have a way to interrupt calls like sleep(), but that's not actual problem so much as an artificial testing problem.
yeah in the real world, this should be okay ...
although killing is wrong and I can't get it out of my head ...
so we're ditching the parameter and having this as default kill behaviour you think ?
Yeah, that's the expected behavior of kill.
You could add another method such as terminate() that would allow the currently queued job to complete.
I dunno if it makes sense, I can't think of a reason you would want that behaviour ... can you (real world) ?
00:25
@JoeWatkins Hmm… no, not really.
that's a bunch simpler
I'm not happy with it :(

but it's a start
yeah, is this for the parallel running of tests ?
or rather line-by-line copying from the old patch and slightly cleaning it up
@JoeWatkins I do wish I could send a socket resource to the thread as function parameter, that would eliminate the socket server and key exchange non-sense.
Can I use fopen('php://fd/resource-id-in-parent', 'w+') to re-open the resource in the thread?
00:33
I don't think so
I'm not sure how that wrapper works, try it
if it doesn't check some strange table deep in the heart of streams, then yeah ... but php, so probably hidden in a table somewhere ...
I'm reluctant to special case streams, I can, but if anyone gets around to making streams objects, I may not be able to do the same thing ... it depends what that implementation looks like ...
Didn't work.
@JoeWatkins It's not really vital, since I have a solution.
@Andrea I'm cheering for you, quietly ...
there's pom poms and everything, if you like ...
@JoeWatkins <3
00:49
@Trowski if you had the actual fd number, you could use php://fd/num ?
(that's what I thought you meant by resource id, it's 2am)
@JoeWatkins Oh yeah, forgot the resource ID is not the FD.
How do I get the actual fd number?
you don't, but maybe I can give you that ... but then if I give you that, why not just give you a new stream ...
I need to think
casting gives you the resource id right ?
00:54
streams are a horrible mess, but I can cast the abstract to struct {FILE*, int}, int is the actual fd ...
resource ptr -> php_stream* then php_stream->abstract to struct{FILE*, int}
Looks like Sara did most of the for you there
php_stream_cast(stream, PHP_STREAM_AS_FD, (void**)&fd, 1)
yeah but when you dig down into these, I think they access module globals
no no, I remember the problem, the le for streams is not public I don't think, so you can't tell if a resource is a file stream
it is public ...
in that case I don't remember what the problem is
@JoeWatkins with no context whatsoever, just fyi, on windows this makes no sense
...which may be the problem
that could be it
windows underlying socket/file/handles in general is an absolute shit mess
although PHP streams are also batshit insane
01:01
it's all very horrible indeed
Whatever then. Having a function to retrieve the FD in that extension would be a bit weird anyway.
imho it doesn't make sense to talk about os-level fds in PHP
not with the current userland API, anyway
the abstraction is just way too deep
Right
so socket is FILE in windows ?
(...although also I am a huge proponent of redesigning a whole new OO stream API that doesn't pretend to replace resource in any sort of like-for-like way)
01:04
I'm not understanding how the casting function works in windows ...
I know it's used ...
@JoeWatkins it's SOCKET, which afaik are both effectively still guaranteed to be lossless cast to uint32_t, but there can be collisions in the value because it actually uses some sort of pointer insanity inside the black box
@Trowski merged interrupt into develop ..
that's just something I vaguely remember, maybe partially or fully wrong
I do know that bsd sockets are guaranteed to behave like fds in POSIX, and FILE and SOCKET are not interchangable in win32
windows does it's best to emulate bsd sockets but the core paradigm of window handle alerting vs IO descriptor alerts are just fundamentally incompatible
bugger
this is going to keep coming up, I just know it ...
what are you actually trying to do?
this is one of those rare things where I actually approximately know what I'm talking about :-P
01:09
@Trowski wants me to pass a stream to another thread ...
he's only the first person to ask, there will be a million others ...
interesting
the php stream handlers abstraction makes that not terrible
but you probably want a new ...CAST_AS... type
depends if it buffered, and depends if the buffer contains anything
Hello there. So i have a question about modular programming in PHP with MVC pattern. Given that standard MVC app could become pretty messy rather quickly, it made sense to organize groups of related features into modules/packages, with their own Models,Views,Controllers. Question is what is the best way to define/organize modules, use intermodule communication and define submodules.
Imagine situation when 2 modules share similarities but they aren't quite different to define them as 2 seperate modules.
pthreads just does it (in the worst possible way), but it very easily breaks because of buffering ...
@JoeWatkins that's a problem specific certain stream types though, if you create a new cast tyoe that can be left up to the specific type handlers
01:11
I was hoping I could find some nice way without introducing new api ...
which will be necessary anyway, because the TCP and SSL buffering layers are very different
@JoeWatkins so afaik that's just new cases in a switch
so there's no possible way with current casts you're saying ?
and it is literally per-stream type
and it will 100% definitely need handling at that level
crappyshit ...
streams are an abstraction, you can't move part or the abstraction to another thread and expect it to magically work :-P
this isn't a PHP specific problem
@JoeWatkins so as an obvious example of why, userland stream handlers...
01:14
well no, what I was thinking was casting in the thread that created the stream, to something that could be cast back or recreated in the target ...
but not all streams have an fd
you could make a file-specific thing and a socket-specific thing
which would cover almost all actual use cases
well no, but I believe FILE is ts
I thought there was only FILE and int
I'm not against making stuff like this *nix only, btw
but that's actually only stdio now that I look again
6 mins ago, by DaveRandom
but you probably want a new ...CAST_AS... type
^ I would argue that's not a bad thing to do
01:16
but I can't justify it to internals ...
"hey can I merge this thing that shouldn't be possible and breaks all the rules" ...
not going to work ...
the same problem also make sense in the context of SCM_RIGHTS
or some of it does
well if we can find some deeper justification for it ... that's maybe a way ...
so maybe we could make a generic thing which accounts for that (a legit thing to do)
but someone else would have to do it ... and even then, I couldn't get it into anything lower than 7.4 probably ...
yay rebased parallel testing works
01:19
oh wait a minute
there is a third way
@Andrea woop
you can replace the stream set option handler for individual stream types
I think
which makes sense, who bothers to make significant changes to run-tests.php that would break it :p
on a per-type basis
during ext warmup
let me think about that
if you can come up with a thing, I'm very listening ...
but now I need to sleep .... ping me though, I'll check in the morning ...
@Andrea /me awaits pr
01:21
it will still be a fucking massive hack, but it would at least be contained within the extension
@JoeWatkins soonâ„¢
I can't brain atm, will play over the weekend
cool, I'm also struggling to brain ...
@Andrea cool
nn all
@JoeWatkins sleep tight!
don't let las chinches bite
01:33
If anyone is still up, i would really appreciate if you gave me an idea how to organize my code.
@NemanjaMilosevic I'm really sorry, I saw and read your message and I meant to respond but I was in the middle of a thought and it fell out of my head
unfortunately I don;t have all that much useful to say that will actually help you :-P
that said, do you use composer?
Yes, i could organize my modules as composer packages
My biggest concern is how to define submodules, maybe somekind of strategy pattern?
how big is a "module"?
also, do you have a code sample?
The word "module" is about as nonspecific as it's possible to get
Think Orders, with all functions related to orders. Including web layer, data layer, logic etc
you may as well have said "thing" :-P
01:38
Yeah sorry about that, think about core piece of functionality. So pretty big.
@NemanjaMilosevic so disclaimer: I have spent far too much of the last ~10 years thinking about this sort of thing, and reading stuff, and generally trying to understand the problem. I still do not understand the problem, and I do not have a solution I am even slightly happy with.
I make computers talk to other computers, as soon as you get people involved stuff get's very messy very quickly :-P
Yeah i think i understand you. I've been reading lot of Martin Fowler, microservices, modular monoliths, DDD etc
Still can't figure out good enough solution
I'm hesitant to highlight people (especially at 2.45 CEST) but there are a few regulars here that can be a lot more useful than me, and if you were to come back here... say between 9-5 CEST on a week day then you might get a lot more useful answers
(most of those people are currently drunk and/or in bed)
Good enough, i would appreciate if you dropped the names :D
I really don't want to do that because bad etiquette, but srsly if you you just read the transcript for 5 mins on an average Tuesday you will see what I'm talking about :-P
(the transcript which is publicly navigable and searchable btw)
but really really seriously don't ping people unsolicited, that is a really quick way to annoy people. Or at least, don't do it randomly out of context, and don't do it more than once
01:47
Will do. I am also pretty fascinated by that wizardly jargon on php internals. Thank you very much for contributing to this awasome language.
Have a good one.
you too o/
02:10
@Andrea I'm not entirely sure what a rocket emoji is supposed to mean but I'm running with it anyway
02:39
@Paul :D
02:53
random rambles, using Fast Route, if I want to POST a form to a page like /charge, can I add a route to my routes file to handle that? like new Route('POST', '/charge', new blahblahblahblah('charge.php');?
03:04
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I may have kind of gotten rehooked into PoE, maybe
@Tiffany :D Yeah that kind of happens
@Tiffany yeah, that's how it's meant to work.......unless you're asking permission maybe?
If so, then - yes, go for it.
@Danack was making sure I had the right idea. I got sort of stuck though, I need to wait for @DaveRandom to wake up since he's helped me build some of this and I'm a bit lost where to put the business logic for this
@Tiffany Squarely handling the request through the include of a file is a bit different than calling a method on a class
03:23
yeah, going by some of the other examples in the file, they're calling a WebPageController and passing a string, and reading through the WebPageController file, I'm a bit lost
It can be a include_legacy_file function, or handler. Depending on how dispatching is automated, that or a class.
04:20
it's a handler, Target
@Andrea the failed test in the appveyor build is likely because the random mode generator (line 97) didn't account for a possible MYSQLI_ASYNC bit being set .. be nice if the mode was included in the output to be sure
04:42
@FélixGagnon-Grenier @tereÅ¡ko if you like horror games store.steampowered.com/app/433550/DARQ (watch the trailer with sound)
the physics looks pretty cool, but horror elements freak me out
Wes
Wes
are directories read all at once? looks like the first readdir($handle) fetches the directory contents (rather than opendir)
and if stuff is deleted from that directory while still reading it, it will still appear in the results of readdir
 
1 hour later…
Wes
Wes
06:26
so that is true about unix but still can't find info about windows... it's likely the same tho
07:15
posted on February 15, 2019

News will be up if and when I write it. Emphasis on "if", not "when".

08:00
gibbous marked by convexity or swelling
 
1 hour later…
09:10
@NikiC @bwoebi ping
something I thought I knew forever is not right, need your brains please ...
@JoeWatkins brain is here
5
compilers can optimize away volatiles if they detect they are not changed ?
Haven't ever seen that - but don't know.
I thought I knew that volatiles could not be optimized away, and would always reload
I doubt it, but to be sure check the generated asm
09:18
ok ok, I'll get it, may need help to read it ... but gdb says it can happen, and I can observe behaviour only explicable by volatile monitor state being optimized away
@JoeWatkins Can you point me to the c function and the specific generated asm?
(gdb) info threads
  Id   Target Id         Frame
* 1    Thread 0x7ff8cae76c40 (LWP 7122) "php" 0x00007ff8c9d65072 in futex_wait_cancelable (private=<optimised out>, expected=0, futex_word=0x5586bfadb580)
    at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/futex-internal.h:88
  2    Thread 0x7ff8b8227700 (LWP 7123) "php" 0x00007ff8c9d65072 in futex_wait_cancelable (private=<optimised out>, expected=0, futex_word=0x5586bfadb580)
    at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/futex-internal.h:88
(gdb) back
#0  0x00007ff8c9d65072 in futex_wait_cancelable (private=<optimised out>, expected=0, futex_word=0x5586bfadb580) at ..
trace, getting it to happen is not easy ... trying now
(gdb) p parallel->monitor->state
value has been optimised out
(gdb) disassemble
Dump of assembler code for function php_parallel_destroy:
   0x00007f63809cad10 <+0>:	push   %rbp
   0x00007f63809cad11 <+1>:	push   %rbx
   0x00007f63809cad12 <+2>:	mov    %rdi,%rbx
   0x00007f63809cad15 <+5>:	mov    $0x11000000,%esi
   0x00007f63809cad1a <+10>:	sub    $0x8,%rsp
   0x00007f63809cad1e <+14>:	mov    -0x60(%rdi),%rdi
   0x00007f63809cad22 <+18>:	callq  0x7f63809c9ef0 <php_parallel_monitor_check@plt>
   0x00007f63809cad27 <+23>:	test   %eax,%eax
I've also read that volatile doesn't work as I expect it too anymore, that it's more or less useless now, which I just don't understand ...
(gdb) disassemble php_parallel_monitor_check
Dump of assembler code for function php_parallel_monitor_check:
   0x00007f63809ca5b0 <+0>:	mov    0x58(%rdi),%eax
   0x00007f63809ca5b3 <+3>:	and    %esi,%eax
   0x00007f63809ca5b5 <+5>:	retq
and code with the volatile specifier is?
typedef struct _php_parallel_monitor_t {
	pthread_mutex_t  mutex;
	pthread_cond_t   condition;
	volatile int32_t state;
} php_parallel_monitor_t;
@JoeWatkins Volatile accesses cannot be optimized away, but they can be reordered relative to non-volatile accesses
It goes without saying that volatile is used for memory mapped I/O, not for threading...
09:34
@NikiC I've been fixing race conditions in past with volatile though…
I'm very confused, what bob said ...
so what is the modern thing to do ?
what does gdb mean by "value has been optimized out", if it doesn't mean it was optimized away ?
@JoeWatkins It just means that it doesn't know which register/stack location at that place holds information about the parallel variable
@JoeWatkins Debug information has not been preserved. Is that a release build or what?
yes
but I can't get the same behaviour with a debug build
I'm looking at a deadlock
Yeah that doesn't mean anything per-se
09:37
oh
@JoeWatkins Atomics with appropriate memory ordering
you mean atomic as first member, right ?
this, in particular there's a race condition possible between getting the state and setting it
@JoeWatkins xchg and consorts
gotcha
09:51
@NikiC can you point me at something to read that will explain why volatile is for mmio, I still don't really understand that statement ?
@bwoebi I got rid of the race, I think ...
i have a php 7.0-zts zval which has Z_TYPE_P = NULL, but is actually a string/zend_string with data containing it.
compiled from an interned string in a ph pfile
was php 7.0 zts so broken?
I'm still interested in this idea of using atomics
@JoeWatkins so that the compiler cannot assume a value unchanged and needs to refetch it every time
it's in general for atomic reads on shared resources
I know what volatile does, I don't understand why its not used for threading
I've always used it
but it's not for atomic swap and compares
because C has no native way to do that without intrinsics or assembly
perfectly fine to use volatile for threading … just not for swap&compares
10:02
ah i remember, its accessing arguments after execute_ex is called for the frame, 7.0 reseted them or something
@bwoebi so you're saying I've been relying on it behaving like atomic xchng incorrectly
yes
I get it
and I'm correct in thinking that if I eliminate the possibility of a race, I don't need it to be atomic ?
sure
that's what I've done, I'll have to read up about the other way, it's clearly superior, if I can make it fit ...
til, I love that, thanks @NikiC and @bwoebi :)
@beberlei sorry I was deep in thought ... sounds odd
I've used xchng before, but I can't remember what application it was for
oh yeah I do, it was the cache thing
race gone, heartbeat normal, and I got to learn ... a good saturday morning ...
10:15
@JoeWatkins in zend_execute_ex callback in 7.0, when you access the arguments from execute_data, then 7.0 would modify them / reset them in some way in execute_ex, so that in your overwrite, if you have a "leave callback" it would not work
we account for that in many places in our instrumentation, but i added something new and forgot about it, got confused :)
is your workaround to addref args before invoking old executor ?
I've not come across this myself, but it sounds like you're reading the wrong frame after old executor was invoked possibly ?
yes that might be possibile
the workaround is to access args only before calling execute_ex and only return value in leave callbacks
yeah, that should be the general rules, you can't rely on them being there in any version after you invoked executor
have you tried jit branch yet? did bad stuff happen ?
I was thinking about it, I think if you may actually be able to have compatibility with it without anything else from zend
it's possible it already works, but if it doesn't, the idea of overloading user functions is not going to effect the jit at all for you ... because you have such specific targets ...
@JoeWatkins bad stuff as in instrumentation is not called anymore yes :)
overloading functions works, but we don't do it for userland yet, only for internal functions
if you like, tomorrow I'll put together something that just overloads one user function and you can try that ...
it won't be neat or ready made, just poc that there's another way for you to go
10:37
@JoeWatkins that would be awesome <3
@beberlei PHP 7.0 ZTS is completely broken, yes.
@bwoebi Using volatile for threading is UB. It's perfectly fine in the sense that it inhibits enough compiler optimization that it's unlikely to go wrong.
Hello there guys, i asked this question yesterday, but i will try my lack this time. Given standard monolith MVC app, how do you organize your code into modules, more importantly submodules. By module i mean a complete functionality, say orders system, with its models, views, controllers etc.
Also how do you avoid code duplication when 2 MVC entities share common properties. Imagine two order modules that implement different controllers based on given context, but share models and views
@NemanjaMilosevic i doubt chat is the right medium to sufficiently answer this complex question. My answer would be to look how frameworks do it and just use that approach.
Problem is that even most frameworks haven't solved modularity issue quite efficiently.
because for a large monolitih its a very specific problem to your application
10:48
I thought that maybe there was somekind of architecture design standard.
How about a smaller problem. Given that you have piece of code that does one thing on two different ways based on context how do you implement this. Strategy pattern?
MVC, maybe HMVC, Event Dispatcher, View Model, Data Transfer Objects, I could list more. a pattern on its own is easy to understand, combining a bunch of them makes the complexity
Great, so i read bit about HMVC, essentially it would allow sharing the resources between MVC entities?
it depends on how you implement it
@beberlei Thank you very much your effort. Know this question is bit complex, but i've been just struggling to implement module,submodule system that would be robust enough for my project.
in my experience, you shouldn't overthink it in the beginning, but do regular checks on how the current state is, step back and take a birds eye view, evaluate if you can refactor in a way
otherwise you trap yourself into some overengineered way of doing this right from the beginning, evrything is slow and painful
11:00
You are right, i dont quite yet understand the full complexity, but i wanted to implement something right from the start. Project is still in early phase, but business requirements are such that there would be ton of modules, most that share common code, so it made sense to define submodules, multi tenancy, licensing system that would give access to different modules to users based on their license and much more...
11:30
@NikiC technically yes - practically it's fine, yeah
12:12
Morning
12:43
@JoeWatkins what do you do for work btw? something C / Zend as well or entire different?
13:40
@beberlei I'm basically paid to be me ... actual tasks include reviewing all code before it's committed, for a few different teams, mentor juniors (and some seniors), improve testing and dev methodologies when/where I can ... I don't write much PHP myself anymore, if I'm writing code it's normally C ... and I can publish whatever I want to publish regardless of whose time I used to write it ... it's a pretty sweet deal ...
Wes
Wes
13:55
so it's not possible to avoid file read/write concurrency problems entirely, despite my efforts. all i can do is lock an entire directory, through a "lock file"
@JoeWatkins all code? how much code is actually committed?
yeah, well all php anyway ... rather a lot is committed, I might do 20+ reviews some days
there's mostly no friction at this point, because we got good processes, I've spent a lot of time teaching in the last 5 years, they mentor each other a lot, and know what I won't accept ...
there's lots more than 20 devs committing every day, but they work in teams together and when phabricator says some feature branch or bug fix branch is passing build I review the whole thing, not the individual commits of each dev
Wes
Wes
well that was bloody disappointing. at least i've learned something tho
@bwoebi sometimes though, a couple of days will go by where I don't do any reviews, when they're starting new stuff and such ... they might ask the odd question, but there's nothing for me to do until they have something worth reviewing, and I'm not going to hold their hand through every feature ...
@Wes ...
Jan 13 at 17:23, by Joe Watkins
you have an empty, existing lock file, all processes open that in any mode that will succeed on an existing file, all processes lock that file exclusively, you perform modifications to the file system, including directories and target files while holding that lock, then release it having modified the target file and or file system ... the lock file is never read or written, just locked and unlocked, used as a kind of mutex ...
Wes
Wes
14:11
i didn't understand you were suggesting that
i thought you were explaining linux advisory locks
:B
a whole month ...
I tried to explain it several ways ...
Wes
Wes
christ a month. I AM WASTING MY LIFE
next time say you don't understand, there's no problem with not understanding ... or ask someone else ... but never waste a month on elementary stuff when you have everyone in r11 to lean on ...
Wes
Wes
@JoeWatkins i'm sorry but i'm stoopid remember?
i was just optimist on file locks not being so blatantly stupid
but they are :B
on a positive note, i have learned stuff
yeah it's all good, it could have been a lot faster is all ... I'm not the best with words, but someone in here would have been able to say what I was saying such that you understood it a month ago ... but it's all good ...
Wes
Wes
14:17
i knew the lock "placeholder file" trick way before i started this @JoeWatkins :B
i just considered it cheap... but apparently it's the only solution
Jan 13 at 17:24, by Joe Watkins
most unix daemons since the start of time use strategies like this, it works, for damn sure ... they typically use it to lock their /var (runtime) directory where they may write many log files, sockets and so on, and must do so exclusively ...
:D
it's a bit awkward, but you are using a file as a mutex ... just do what everyone else does ...
Wes
Wes
now i understand why all file manipulation wrappers suck
it's because file systems suck
well I dunno how ordinary a requirement it is for web stuff
you'd think it comes up ...
Wes
Wes
what comes up?
probable english expression i don't know :B
but anyway, i learned a lot of in depth stuff, also on linux which i normally don't use
oh, I'm saying you'd think some other people would have needed to do it ... "comes up" -> "situation arises", roughly ...
Wes
Wes
14:26
there are some wrappers but they don't really work as i expected them to work. not their fault though, file systems are a mess :B
now you could do your own wrapper, with blackjack, and hookers ...
Wes
Wes
i will
not even joking
Is there any known reason why __toInt() and __toBool() and __toFloat() aren't a thing?
I suppose you're looking for some deeper reason than we only admitted to ourselves that these are important differences about 5 minutes ago ?
Yeah, I meant was it ever discussed and rejected I guess.
14:39
I don't remember, but objects do have that ability, just not in userland
I think it might gain a bit of traction now actually
with typed properties, it makes a lot of sense to have it in userland
couple of other rfcs at the bottom too
looks like none of them got very far, but one of them is >10 years old ... I think go for it ...
@JoeWatkins I was about to say exactly that...
@Danack __toString() is a mistake
how people use it is a mistake, but allowing a strongly typed string is good.
what is a strongly typed string?
> How could and will this interact with comparison and control structures like, if($obj) ?
it's not clear to me how to answer that question ...
14:49
class FirstName {
	... implements toString
}

class LastName {
	... implements toString
}


function greetCustomer(FirstName $firstName, LastName $lastName)
{
	printf(
		"Greetings %s %s",
		$firstName,
		$lastName
	);
}
without having to cast the names to string.
because they represent strings already.
You are trying to solve the wrong problem
We need type FirstName extends string;
(or whatever syntax we decide to use)
I sense that you see that as obviously superior, but I don't know why ?
one is a magic string and the other is a magic method, what's the actual difference ?
@bwoebi i wouldn't be opposed to that:
Aug 28 '15 at 16:53, by Danack
class NonNegative extends int {
    public function __construct($value) {
        if ($value < 0) {
         throw new \ValueException("blah blah blah");
        }
    }
}
Well, types can be reused for many features, they could be used to define type unions, type restrictions, etc.
being a string, or converting to string is entirely different, being a string means i can call all functions on it that work on strings, but maybe i want to hide all this in my wrapper (LastName here)
14:54
@Danack There should be an explicit interface you implement, if anything.
@JoeWatkins it's the difference between one object be castable to other types, and one object representing a single type.
And for other, they make it clear that something is a string, an int or whatever and not a class which happens to have some magic method
@JoeWatkins sounds cool, wrt to your position :-)
@kelunik something beyond:
interface int {
   public function __toInt(): int;
}
(though the 'to' semantic is misleading....)
as* maybe ... I get the difference, and agree
it's just practically, I'm not sure what will be easier to get past internals... making an interface of int sounds really nice, but I dunno if it can actually happen ...
14:57
technically or sociologically ?
latter
we've only just admitted that there are important differences between types ...
and NOW YOU WANT INTERFACES ???
Moar types, but yes.
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