They're these tiny pies at Walmart and I'm a sucker for them
@LeviMorrison I think I'm going to make more of an effort to shift my diet to vegetables. I'm not sure I'll be able to completely stop eating meat, but I can certainly eat less.
I am trying out various delivery services (which are more expensive) because my local grocery store has a limited selection, though I buy some stuff there.
Healthy Choice's Mango Edamame is almost vegan (has a dash of honey) but I bet it's available nationwide.
@LeviMorrison I need to avoid delivery services until I have a stable income (that is, a job), but I'll check for Healthy Choice next time I'm at the store. Thanks.
I will look out for tinny cherry and apple pies next time I'm at Walmart.
I been cooking since I been working from home. It's fun trying/ learning new recipes. Don't like the prepping and cleaning up part. Also been eating way too much.
@LeviMorrison regarding the Stack Frame I was thinking of adding limit and offset to getTrace but now I think I can also add getFrame($index) would it be useful?
It'd get too much params if I add $options like debug_backtrace() have :/
Is there a better way of saying to a usergroup "I don't like using zoom, and I'm not going to attend any more online meetups while you're still using it."
Given that private attempts to get them to use whereby have failed.
The really annoying thing is I told them that using zoom was not going to be good enough before we had our first online meetup due to the rona. But yeah...now they've got it setup they don't want to change.
For the record, I had and still have strong feelings that the 'local user social' bit of a meetup needs to be split from the 'professional presentation' of a meetup: gist.github.com/Danack/ca96342c174a6ff232a3537263ba1ffe
@MarkR, ugh, there are issues with the GD resource to object migration: github.com/Jan-E/php7-ffmpeg/commit/…. It seems we need to export these functions.
@cmb gd structure should be okay to export, given how simple it is
@cmb Actually, it would be better to not export the structure and just add a function that returns the internal gd image pointer from the object. That's all that's needed, right?
@Derick (or anyone) is there any particular benefit to specifying the Etc/UTC vs just plain UTC? Is there anything using timezones that doesn't accept the shorter version as a valid timezone name?
@Danack sorry, totally forgotten about that. Not quite sure what's exactly the problem; if it's not Windows related, Remi Collet might be the better contact. :)
@NikiC Thanks for all the reviews, hopefully my next contributions will be less tiring for you ^^ I'll look at the last comments tonight and hopefully then it will be ready to be merged.
@cmb It's the pecl account request that presumably needs a yes/no button pressing somewhere. news-web.php.net/php.pecl.dev/16815 . Does Remi has the power to approve/deny those accounts?
@Derick Is the reason why add, modify and sub aren't listed in the DateTimeInterface due to them being slightly different (i.e. one modifies the called object), even though they have the same signature?
@Stephen I think possibly, you might want to make it more obvious that you're talking about belly-buttons, because you're currently kind of living dangerously....
The context is I have some code that has a parameter that could be typed as DateTimeInterface, but I want to call add() on it. So it needs to be typed as DateTime|DateTimeImmutable.
the safer approach would be to force it to an immutable with something like if ( ! $foo instanceOf DateTimeImmutable ) { $foo = DateTimeImmutable::createFromMutabale($foo); }
They aren't part of the interface, because add() on DateTime is not behaving like add() on DateTimeImmutable(). If you want to pick a specific behaviour, type on that (DateTime or DateTimeImmutable), and convert before you pass in with DateTimeImmutable::createFromMutable or DateTime::createFromImmutable
Hello :) How to work with excess memory limit in production? Best for me is dump memory profile in case of OOM, but that means to enable php-memprof all time in production?
@DmitryMiksIr I think it depends on what libraries you're using, and what could be causing the OOM. If you're using mysqli or pdo and it's that, you could just put some code in that warns when too many rows are being returned by a query....
@DmitryMiksIr also, something like tideways.com would probably be more appropriate for you than just memprof.
@Derick no, also new features and functions (there are separate sections for those); UPGRADING serves as guideline for the migration guide in the PHP manual. What's not in UPGRADING, is likely overlooked then.
to destroy whatever was set as the previous property
it dtors what is currently in the property slot before copying the string to it ... it's true that it should be null, however since nothing enforces that it should be null, it might a good idea to dtor the slot before using it ...
@NikiC in PhpToken creation you call zval_ptr_dtor before each ZVAL_STR_COPY what is it needed for?
I mean the places where string is populated into PhpToken property
@DmitryMiksIr for memory profiling, the approach is to start collecting some data and see from the list of transactions/endpoints what their actual memory requirements are, then you can go deeper into those transactions and either already see from the timeline based traces what is responsible, or trigger the callgraph profiler to get memory consumption on a function level (support.tideways.com/category/84-generating-traces)
Would providing a WeakRef instead of object reference in Exception stack trace and in debug_backtrace() alternative at least partially solve bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=45351 ?
Then it would be consistent between StackFrame::getTrace() and Exception::getTrace() which for debug_backtrace() compatibility can be resolved on dimension read.
Well if first can change stack trace population in Exceptions.
@JoeWatkins twitter.com/krakjoe/status/1274521570426437633 can't can be won't or doesn't know how. Why is it wrong to teach someone how to use debugger regardless of the professional level? (or it's not wrong)
> If you don't have your development environment setup to debug the collaborative environment, or the requisite knowledge to do so, knowing that this is a thing you might have to do, you would seem unprepared to do your job properly.
OK, I think I get it @JoeWatkins @Derick ... I don't know how to use debugger but I don't doubt it's the correct-er way than var_dump, so I would do my best to learn/set it up, in the end if everyone is using it in the team, who am I to argue.
It's funny in the comments, people asking question but nevertheless jumping to conclusions based on the assumption :D
At least the RFC does not provide any arguments in that direction apart from "we documented it as such"
If anything, the RFC is lacking substance in what would justify the change. If in doubt, one should fix docs, not code, unless there is a compelling reason to do so.
@bwoebi I've seen a couple of questons on stack overflow
Mostly people inheriting existing code that returns from a ctor, and not knowing what that is supposed to do
With speculation along the lines of what you're saying, maybe a direct call uses it somewhere ... while the truth is most likely that it's just dead code (someone write return false instead of return)
I'm wondering if it would make sense to just drop namespace\x names completely in PHP 8
Some think constructors are supposed to be only void, some think it shouldnt have a return type at all, others think it should be able to have any kind of return type
@NikiC you can add it, I'll probably abstain as I'm quite unsure whether it's a good or bad idea - but it shouldn't be a secondary vote, rather a second primary vote
@beberlei I don't see why a constructor would be allowed to declare any type, while we've just voted for adding the possibility to declare only the correct type for other magic methods?
@Ekin It's okay that you don't want to, but others might. Again, a typehint is optional. As for the people voting no, some think that it should be allowed to return from a ctor since "there is valid information" that can be returned.
I don't really see that myself since a constructor shouldn't have side effects i. e. should do its only duty - initialize an object.
In both cases it's used to make it clear that it's a symbol from the current namespace instead of a global function/constant. Dropping the namespace\ prefix would have the same behavior
@Tiffany If the point of the whole object is to manage a connection and nothing works without said connection, it is absolutely fine to initialize that connection in ctor
@MarkR ofc and I know that it is invalid the same hoes to halt compiler its also invalid syntax but looks the same cause it has name parentheses and you put an argument in it by default
There is a difference between lc which by design return value or can be used in conjunction with or operator and with those which cannot and don't return anything
It'd be a BC break if void forced cause all returns from ctor would cause an exception/error and call dtor immediately while currently have no effect but allow to create an object and operate on it.
That's something we have discussed on the internals mailing list. It would be good 5 years (PHP 9.0) until an error would be thrown since a deprecation warning is done in the first place.
yes, that was always the API of __toString, wheras the API of ctor was always to not care about the return value, so essentially you would have to say that ctors return value is mixed
Now going off topic a bit, prejudice against PHP is just insane. Had to present my extended essay to practice for IB, one of CS tutors tried to tell me how slow PHP is and
Like, okay I'm not a CS tutor but I am pretty god damn sure that no one is going to throw their PHP codebases and switch to something else in <5 years ://
PHP could probably speed up more with wsgi approach. I had plan to implement an http sapi which runs PHP script and expect a closure in return at the end of script in return statement