so many frameworks use decorators by compiling classes, Magento 2 is the latest addition, Flow/Neos, oxid, old Shopware versions. It would allow awesome plugin systems
A challenge would be properties. What happens if we use a decorator and add __get(). Should that intercept all property checks? Or should it behave like if you added it to the base class (and hence not intercept accessable properties)
After finally getting around to reading the engine warnings RFC this makes me so sad:
> Rationale: This is generally a bug (and the “Array” string you get is meaningless), but in many cases also not a particularly severe one. Since string conversion exceptions are supported now, we could also promote this to an Error exception, and I'm generally open to that.
@Trowski depends on the abstraction the event set provides. If it's connection oriented, onConnect seems reasonable. If it's client oriented (and the connection is just a "means" for the client), then onClient.
Naming stuff is such a pain, on the main piece I work on, it's a webinar platform and it has lots and lots of collections of things. I have about a dozen different things all called Package, 6 different things called Session.
@PeeHaa @kelunik I've been thinking it might be best to start with getting only fibers in core. The entirety of ext-async is way too much to go into core and keep our sanity.
I know it's a very small sample size, but 3 people have complained about the nameValueError(just the name, nothing else). I really don't want to put that particular bike shed on internals, do you think it should be?
@Trowski Actually these methods don't accept callbacks but are implemented by child classes, so they probably shouldn't have an on prefix. Maybe handshake / handleHandshake / processMessages
@LeviMorrison I honestly don't know, the feedback has just been "I don't like that name!"... you guys have given more feedback in the last 60 seconds. :P
@salathe @ircmaxell We do have ArgumentCountError that comes from TypeError, so an ArgumentError does appeal in terms of naming, but thats just me, I got no strong feelings either way
To be honest, I generally think that as well and is one reason why I don't write patches for php-src often. I'd rather stab myself in the eye with a fork than have to go through the RFC process.
@salathe I agree, most of my patches probably wouldn't have gone in if I had to debate for 2 weeks and then another 2 weeks of voting for something like the IMG_FILTER_SCATTER or making ext/exif work with stream resources
When I was originally doing my chanegs for the throw errors, I asked on externals.io/message/106675 if we should define an API that included argument number so it could be identified by reflection, but didnt get any bites.
I am in the middle on that. In general I don't believe that RFCs are or should be needed for everything. However, in this case, exception hierarchy feels like something that may be worth discussion (whether or not it needs a formal RFC with vote, I don't know)
@salathe I expect ValueError to be thrown when the method does not accept this or a specific combination of arguments. Does it do that? Then the name is fine.
@ircmaxell Take adding ValueError; there's no way on earth I'd have the energy to spend a month championing adding that one class. Maybe that's more my failing than the processes though.
as far as i remember Error was just renamed from EngineException pre php 7 without any extra RFC. the RFCs are about the big picture imho and implementation may need to change stuff based on reality
@salathe oh, I think a full RFC for that is overkill. But the reason I would raise it as a discussion item, is it may broaden scope to do some other changes at the same time (or tweak this proposal). In the end, what I am talking about is basically a quick mail "I am thinking of doing this, any major thoughts or objections" and if nothing major for a few days shipit
@ircmaxell random question - I feel like the level of average developers in software arch has gotten worse over the last 5-10 year. I also feel like the level of arch discussions has gotten worse over the last 5-10 years (including conferences). Do you feel anything similar?
@NikiC Speaking of which, Firebird is having their conference in Berlin this year and there is a track for FB+PHP, I cannot anything else but I envy you being so close to that conf lol
@BenjaminGruenbaum define average? The number of developers doubles about every 5 years, meaning that the number of "new" developers doubles at the same cadence.
And that's what I feel. Not that it is going down, per se, but that there are more. I still see great people capable of awesome thought leadership and skill, and that they remain a relative fixed proportion of the main set.
I mean about architecture in particular. Like I think the average JavaScript developer is better than his counterpart 5 years ago in most parts except architecture and reading about it.
When I graduated something like 12 years ago, software architecture was a very small part of the course (despite being BEng Software Engineering), we did maybe half a semester on design patterns and that was about it
@NikiC About the RFC experiment on GitHub. I'm not sure if it's a good idea. There are no requirements on voting except for a GitHub, allowed the vote count to be easily manipulated.
For instance, I could use something like gimhub.com to buy enough votes to swing the RFC to a certain direction.
@Jasny-ArnoldDaniels nobody is suggesting to do rfc votes on github
votes need to stay limited to those with voting rights ^^
Or do you mean that the thumbs-up/thumbs-down reactions can give the author a wrong impression about popularity, even if they are not official/binding?
I wonder if I could make a living off of officially maintaining PHP 7 indefinitely. I mean that word literally; I have no idea how long I would actually maintain it for even if I got paid for it.
You'd probably have to wait 5+ years for it to become an option as otherwise you'd be competing with the "free" sources of the LTS package maintainers. 10+ years you could potentially bring in a tidy sum
I can't remember what the PHP license says about redistributing it without code
But if those fixes have to be returned back in open source, then anyone would use them, at which point why pay. But again, I've no idea how the license works