9200+ file uploads later (DB query used duplicate key to decide if a file could be uploaded... was meant to exit the first time it didnt get the exception)
Maybe you consider compiling of each concrete generic type into separate class name? Then it should be easier to implement...
So, hierarchy will be Foo->Foo<int>->Bar and instanceof check will happily accept both test(new Bar) and test(new Foo<int>).
Separate class will help to reflect classes later: `(new ReflectionClass(Foo<int>::class))->getMethod('templateMethod')->getReturnType()' => 'int' or `(new ReflectionFunction('test'))->getParameter(0)->getClass()` => reflection class instance for `Foo<int>`
@lisachenko It's not possible to construct such a hierarchy if there are variant type parameters
@bwoebi I've been wondering what the type resolution semantics are supposed to be. Say you have abstract class Foo<T> {} with an unused type parameter and then you do Foo<DoesntExist>. Is that an error or not?
That is, is the type DoesntExist immediately loaded?
I would guess that, going by the existing behavior we have regarding type loading, the answer is "no" and that's valid code
Otherwise one wouldn't even be able to construct types like Foo<DateTimeZone|IntlDateTimeZone>, where the latter is only used if the extension is available
@lisachenko To clarify, say you have class Traversable<out T>, then Traversable<A> subtype Traversable<B> iff A subtype B. You can't model that with simple class entry inheritance
And per what I was saying above, even without type parameter variance you might have Foo<A> equals Foo<B> where A equals B in a non-trivial way (assuming types are not fully pre-resolved)
@bwoebi ^-- would this code pass (or some variant with more classes in between)? I.e. type equality holds even if classes cannot be loaded, based on string comparison?
@MarkR The problem is that this does not match how type checks currently work
E.g. you can write class Foo { public function test(Bar $bar) {} } and this is not going to try to load Bar. You will not get an error if the class is not definde
And really, the more interesting case is the Collection<DateTimeZone|IntlDateTimeZone> mentioned above. That seems like a conceivable type to have even if you don't have a hard dependency on the intl extension
My prediction is that 95% of developers will use Generics for typed collections only. And the remaining 5% will use it for weird things. Too much effort for such little use.
Id personally prefer not to have the nuance in it. If you're extending something, that something should exist, and in the case of generics that would mean fully loading the type.
If class extends generic, this generic should be resoved at compile-time. As well as used generic type. And restrict usage of generic functions/methods. A method can be generic only if current class is declared generic as well.
It would also leave the door open for changing the internal mechanics of generics at a later date, such as baking concrete implementations of certain things, without changing external behaviour
If generics do land, I'm immediately re-writing my data access layer, no more code generation..... class Query<T> { public function query(): ResultSet<T> } ... which I guess is still typed collections, but more than an array
For PHP8 (and generics), I would like to see general Object class in PHP which will be default base class for all classes in PHP. To define collection of objects like this Collection<T extends Object>
@lisachenko well, we have the object type - so we could just allow the special ? extends object without object being an actual type (just like we will allow ? extends (int|string) I suppose ??)
@bwoebi I think it would better to introduce it, even from the PHP's core point of view (eg. copying default functions and object handlers from parent to child class). Also it would be nice to have a real type for that, and not a virtual one.
@bwoebi and what can I pass to Generic<? extends (int|string)> ??
It looks weird...
Actually, generic with union types - is really bad idea. Single type or class in generic - OK, inheritance/parent class check - OK, union types - NO...
@lisachenko The more you learn the more you want to improve. Then comes a point where the more you learn the more you realize you can't improve anything :P
@NikiC Suggestion: for generic parameters, always resolve at compile time (similar to inheritance). Rationale: when you eventually add bounded type parameters, it's not the usage that's invalid, it's the declaration that is. So rather than cause a weirdness of "this sometimes loads, sometimes not, based on these weird chain of rules", just make it always load
@NikiC Oh, I'm aware that it's already there. But it's already there because the behavior was there before variance was added. This is something new (rather than a new behavior on existing functionality), so I'd suggest breaking the pattern at this point
I think it would be a good idea. The weak point would be that I need an application account to create and remove temporary roles, but that could be done using a security definer function
It is a bit specific, but implementing SessionHandlerInterface is also specific.
each literal character can hold 8 bits of entropy (except for 0x00)
so that would be roughly equivalent to a SID of 480 bits...
@Code4R7 That sounds a bit like using a hydraulic press to drive a nail into a board. It will do the job, but if you just want to drive a nail, a hammer will do nicely.
@Trowski Rather think of it as throwing the big clumsy old hammer out of the (opened) window and go buy a new one that is easier to use and shines and stuff.
All a session has to do is maintain state through a temporary random ID. Why couldn't I do that without PHP's built-in and not very transparant session functions?
@Code4R7 You can. I just wouldn't use postgres roles for it.
@NikiC With 7.4 on macOS, fwrite is returning false when it used to return 0 on a non-blocking stream. Checking the value of errno with FFI, it is EAGAIN.
Specifically is happening on an IPC socket. Any ideas?