@Danack "A void return type cannot be changed during inheritance. You can see this as either because return types are invariant, or because they are covariant and nothing is a subclass of void." (wiki.php.net/rfc/void_return_type#proposal)
@cmb I understand those words. But I fail to see why. aka where is the LSP breakage? Or where is the problem if this code was valid.
class A {
public function bar() : void {}
}
class B extends A {
public function bar() : int {}
}
function foo(A $bar) {
...
}
if (rand(0, 1)){
$object = new A();
}
else {
$object = new B();
}
foo($object);
@Danack From a theoretical PoV, void is the bottom type, which doesn't have any subtypes at all. Of course, in PHP the waters are muddied, because a void function actually returns null (which is the unit type).
What's the difference between theory and practice?
Disclaimer - I did chemistry and physics at university, so apart from being able to set fire to more things than the average person, I mostly learned that getting stuff done is preferable to having a nice theory..
In this case, it's not obvious to me that obeying a theory of types is the useful thing to do here, even if it is the correct thing.
@LeviMorrison yes so two points: 1.) we have the optional callgraph profiling mode that runs on every function, if its disabled zend_execute_ex just delegates to the original. I would do the same with instruments. 2.) dynamically registered: User calls \Tideways\Profiler::watch("foo"); then foo(); that this works.
Ping @salathe: Can we have a chat sometime regarding the next steps for the docs-migration? docs.php.net should be modified to fetch the docs from git instead of svn to see whether everything works as expected. Feel free to ping me ;-)
It's fascinating to watch the vote on operator overloading go back and forth every few days. It was failing, then passing, now I think failing again but just barely.
Fewer if some people flip positions, as a few have done already.
My gut feeling is that if it had more robust type and error handling that it would pass; there seems to be much more pushback on the implementation than the concept.
@NikiC I have a proposal to update var_export() to use the new [] array syntax for PHP 8. Do I really need to write an RFC for this? It literally only changes 2 lines of code.
It is also forwards compatible so there's no fear that var_export() -> valid php will break.
If someone has tests examining var_export() syntax as a string, that may break. I don't know why anyone would, but they might. :-) It's probably a fairly easy RFC.
@Sherif this is not the actual scenario. I tried loading https://github.com/krakjoe/apcu/blob/master/apc.php from a framework, but its breaking because of the globals being null.
Only global and local. Anything inside of a function is local. Everything else is global.
The way you want to think about it is if you replaced require_once inside that closure with a literal copy-and-paste of the file the variable would never be in the global scope, right?
It would make it more obvious, at least, what scope it's defined in.
When the file is included, the variable is available to the local function scope. By the time the class's constructor is called, however, you are no longer in the local function scope.
I'm getting packages have unmet dependencies when I try to install phpmyadmin on ubuntu 18.04. Have looked around, tried a few things, nothing has worked.
@Danack It was an intentional design choice in the void RFC. One of the reasons is so that if you say void in your interface, implementing classes can't sneakily return bonus info (I guess that's good in case you want to add a return value in future or something)
I left it with my parents, so that I could be productive during uni time in the UK, wasn't the clearest of sentences so the misunderstanding is ... understandable
"Therefore a temporary INI setting debug_local_sensitive_float_casts which emits a warning each time a float" - that sentence needs some work. It's implying the ini setting does thewarning.....when it's a flag to change the behaviour of the engine.
How about this one? "Therefore a temporary INI setting ''debug_local_sensitive_float_casts'' is introduced which could control if a warning should be emitted each time a ''float'' to ''string'' conversion would have been locale-sensitive in PHP 7, but not anymore."
I think when the patch is ready, update the RFC to describe what it does exactly then. Including what the ini settings are, and what they will do.
As currently I don't think I can understand exactly what is being proposed.
oh, people will also complain that this might fill their logs up....I think for another RFC, a similar thing was imlemented in a way that it only gave the deprecation notice once.......though this is possibly 'over-egging' the idea.
I don't usually agree with Stas, but that Switch expression thread where the author is literally just being stubborn for no good reason when changing the keyword would make all the complaints go away, baffles me