@bwoebi if I'd add for eg data! macro without parents in front of class declaration then I'd be able to to transform whole class ast to feet my needs right? And an end for parsing would be eof if there's nothing more in that file would it be legal then?
@moliata it would probably be better to wait for feature freeze. There's going to be a reasonable amount of drama, which could cause the conversation to be lost, and very little to gain.
@Danack thanks for bringing this up again (re twitter). he dm'ed me with a draft of his revised blog showing 20-30% incresae in throughput with JIT (entirely what I'd expect), i.e. when you drop the load by 20% on his arbitrary numbers, then both are similar in performance about
I should move to a place that has a lawn, so that I can yell at the kids to get off the lawn.
2
Derick's example is the only one I've seen where the Jit provides an actually useful speed boost, and even there it's not a 'paradigm' change. i.e. it doesn't change a response time that needs to be pre-processed for users into a response time that can be generated on the fly......
and only barely affects the answer to "should we rewrite this in C?".
nikic pointed out the trigger=5, i tested lage hydration (2000 entities) with complex object graph with doctrine with it, getting 5.10% improvement. howver if i run the script with less entities its slower than baseline. so result is performance becomes unpredictable
not sure what happens once you run many different scripts that execute different code paths
@bwoebi I would guess that avoiding bounds checking on each loop would have a simpler way of solving it that the relatively large complexity of the JIT.
@ArnoldDaniels i am a skeptical about the edge cases on what and what not works with comparisons, it is already complex, now the declare increases that even more
@LeviMorrison yes. I uploaded some pictures to a onedrive folder and shared the folder with her, but email attachments would've worked too.
she has a form to fill out and she contacted me to accept the work, I explained in the form that I didn't have any pictures publicly available, but I could provide them privately. Before invoicing me, she sent me a sketch of what it would look like, and I loved it, she invoiced me, I paid, and it was finished a day or two later.
she offered to draw me wearing something, so I said PHP logo or the elephpant, so she went with the elephpant :D
@LeviMorrison I also said I wanted to use it on different platforms as my avatar, so she sent me a couple cropped versions. I went with the half-body, fully shaded, she included the avatars in addition to the half-body image.
@moliata I am just reading your comment here and spinning the brain with abstraction. If you force something be of same type (to keep positive execution) it is trivial whether is == or === used.
@ArnoldDaniels Anyways, I'll send a reply to the original internals thread based on my comment (regarding strings, bools and ==/!= operators) since that is a better place for discussing these implementation details.
@Tpojka '1' == '1' is the same as '1' === '1', but `'990000' == '9900e2' is not the same as '990000' === '9900e2'
strict_operators could change the behavior of==, so it doesn't compare numeric strings as numbers. But that means the directive changes the outcome of an operation, instead of only throwing TypeErrors. And there is little benefit above using ===
Argh, trying to edit a message on mobile is a pain... and can't sit at my desk because of pain -_-
@ArnoldDaniels this may be a very naive or uninformed opinion, so apologies. In my opinion, the additional complexity is because there's a new declare. Currently, PHP operators are... sub-par, yes, but the majority of their behavior is documented already, and with practice and experience can be understood.
I think one of the few benefits of having a new declare is for developers from strictly-typed languages having to write PHP, they can use the declare and hopefully operators will function the same as they could expect in their language-of-choice.
@Girgias on a slightly less troll note, are the deficiencies regarding using FFI with 'things' documented anywhere? I looked in bugs, but couldn't see anything.
I used to be in the "there are better ways to check for stuff other than null" camp but @Danack convinced me there are very relevant use-cases for using null, thus have changed my mind
You can already implement monads, they're just not as nice without underlying sum type support. (Via enum or otherwise.)
But yes, PHP's ability to play in many different paradigms is one of its big advantages. I'd still like to see a lot of improvements on the functional side, though.