@LeviMorrison That's funny. This person was an account manager so I doubt it was related to the application. I would have loved to have a job working on open source projects but I ended up landing a job I think I'm really going to enjoy so I'm pretty happy how things turned out
Can closures be bad from a memory leak standpoint? Specifically closures passed by references, so I can call the closure itself from within the closure, or call a closure that's defined later.
I have an example where a simple change in such closure leads to -100 MB in memory consumption.
context is different, that's just a string and it's separated from $thisval, i was thinking about closures preventing $this from being garbage collected
i mean i suppose people could call non-static methods without $this
for example MyParentClass::method() will carry $this as well as parent::method()
so that's probably not a thing
php is strange
class A{
public function foo(){
var_dump($this);
}
}
class B extends A{
public function x(){
return function(){
A::foo();
};
}
}
you probably meant this @OndřejMirtes
that looks static but it is not, $this is carried to A::foo even if A::foo is called with the "static" syntax
i mean it probably could make closures static sometimes. when no static method calls appear and when there's no $this around. for example fn($x, $y) => $x + $y; is certainly static
@bwoebi Hey! Question for you. I added SPEC(OBSERVER) to return handlers and it seems to work well: github.com/php/php-src/pull/5857/commits/… But when I add the spec to DO_FCALL which already has a RETVAL spec, it becomes: SPEC(RETVAL,OBSERVER) and zend_vm_gen.php does not generate the following handlers: ZEND_DO_FCALL_SPEC_RETVAL_UNUSED_OBSERVER_HANDLER and ZEND_DO_FCALL_SPEC_RETVAL_USED_OBSERVER_HANDLER. What am I missing?
@bwoebi Wait - nevermind. I think it's user error. :facepalm:
So what would be a good tool for finding memory leaks? Ideally I'd like to see how much memory is taken by various arrays in classes etc. For example Blackfire has only a timeline view where I can see the memory rises the whole time but it's not that useful.
@SammyK @LeviMorrison Datadog still doesn't have a developer advocate I can 'give honest feedback to' does it? I am mildly disappointed at being billed months after trying to get my account deleted.
I'm not so familiar with Doctrine but watching a tutorial and then reading code is making me wonder if the code is doing things correctly. The goal of the code is to get a list of entities from an API and sync it in it's database. Sometimes no changes would be needed because the list is the same, but if one is deleted or removed then it would make those changes.
@LeviMorrison your support pretty much refused to delete my account, and just 'disabled' it instead. I'm pretty tired of emailing them so I said 'fine'. And today I got another 'we tried to bill you' but it failed as I deliberately have no money in that account to prevent the datadog billing from occuring.
The code is here. Am I right to think that if they were to only flush once at the end of the code that it would remove only the ones that are necessary and add only the ones that are necessary in a single (or in two) SQL calls?
@Danack Can you email me at one of my public email addresses? I'll send you to Priyanshi, who isn't the right person but has agreed to help me get you to the right person.
but if you're a gecko and try to cross a floor in a house with two young cats. well stupid is as stupid does.
can't wait for my - I dunno what to call it. tool shed I guess - to be finished and have some shelves up on the walls, so we can let them in there. I can't even begin to imagine the acrobatics we're gonna see with two cats chasing tiny geckos in 4m of vertical space.
@Tiffany why so many people think yaml makes any sense for a human edited format, when even the various parsers and serialisers for it can't agree, is beyond me.
to be clear, I'm not suggesting it makes any sense as a computer generated format either.
hey. do you know some resources to improve in array manipulation and anonymous functions?
Sometimes I see this kind of magic and I'd like to understand it faster lol https://github.com/Roave/BetterReflection/blob/master/src/Reflection/ReflectionClass.php#L950
(I think intersect uses $arrays; I know the use of $rest isn't consistent.)
I had proposed $source, $exclude and $source, $include. Others suggested $input. Others said just $array. I don't feel that strongly about the first one as long as it's more self-documenting than $array1/$array2, which is useless.
(As for timing, erm, I'd been told we still had a bit of time to clean those up.)
Hm. I was hoping to minimize the bikeshedding by getting you to define a standard before I start working. Saves time for everyone, since you get more veto than anyone else. :-)
@LeviMorrison Did you have a look? I'm still ready to pick the RFC back up. I'm also open to suggestions if you have a better idea on how to handle use.
@Derick The most common right now is $rest, for when it's variadic. And in practice I highly doubt the named param approach and variadic approach would be used in the same call.
array_diff($array, $exclude, ...$excludes) should be pretty self-documenting, though.
The name for the first parameter is what people were bikeshedding and I wanted to short circuit. I'm mostly comfortable with whatever gets past the RMs.
Is there any way to get Composer to ignore some dependencies? Specifically PHP extensions
I need PHP extensions I can't get to work on Windows, but I need to look through some vendor code. I can't get the packages installed though because of the extension
Oh wait I am stupid I found it. --ignore-platform-reqs
I'm in favor of changing array_diff all the way to variadics, no required parameters at all, though would also support just one parameter.
The reason for 0-arg is simple; the values in the empty set that do not exist in any other set is just the empty set again. Accepting 0-arg is sometimes useful for highly generic code.
user12640521
7:44 PM
@IluTov You're authoring the Better string interpolation? I just discovered this is a valid assignment ${0x0} = 1; How come?
@JellyLegend I see. Why that is? No clue, maybe by accident. Has been this way since at least PHP 4, you'd have to go ask someone a bit older than me to get a more accurate answer ^^
I went once on a school ski trip and once in the summer
It was nice, though I was 10 so most places are nice when you're 10
@StatikStasis I srsly need to find an Australian, I cannot believe how much difficulty I have had finding one, I swear they accounted for about 90% of the English speaking world about 6 months ago
Maybe they were really badly hit by corona or something
I need someone to take delivery of something and forward it on to me, after (not even joking) ~10 years of search for this thing I have finally found it, but the site only ships to Aus
I'm not so bad for that kind of thing (although I am now having a sudden attack of beer fear), I'm more prone to ranting about stuff with no one even reading it
I had some friends that went to college there- but they moved. I don't know any one of their friends well enough to trust having something shipped to them. Sorry. =/
@DaveRandom Now that I know what it is- it is sorta funny. The two individuals I know went to Hillsong college down there (Christian college.) I can just imagine them asking one of the music directors for help with buying a bong and shipping it to the UK.
@Stephen also, kittens are basically like small children... except they're fuzzy and cute and have daggers for nails in which they don't know how to use them correctly. After about two or three years, they're less destructive but still playful
I would say a year, but I can't remember cause my cats are old, mellow and don't destroy my stuff
Pop quiz: For array functions that take a variadic number of arrays, sometimes the parameter is called $arrays, sometimes $rest. We should pick one. Which should we pick?
Currently it's about 14 $arrays, 22 $rest, according to my ctrl-F command...
Can I be really controversial and suggest $_ or $args? I don't like $rest because it doesn't always make sense if there wasnt sonething before it (e.g. array_push()) and we should be consistent across everything, not just array related things
That message took sooooo long to write on a mobile keyboard :-P
It is at least coherent though, which makes a change
I tend to use $args in userland and I think $_ is a borderline-acceptable general placeholder for unnamed things which seems to be fairly common parlance
Well, the type signature doesn't enforce it, but it looks like a case of "one or more arrays, followed by a callable", which we can't really capture in the current type system.
@Crell yeh I get that, but at the same time you have a related, fundamentally unsolvable problem which is firmly inside your scope... maybe the scope is a little leaky :-P
@Crell in the least politically correct sense of the word.
Examples like this are partly why I think there is room for another stdlib that has been designed with all of PHP's features in mind. Stuff like this would be represented differently.
But also, that's a huge undertaking and the chance for errors and such is very high. Would have to be seriously dedicated...
@LeviMorrison Issue is that array_diff* is the complement of the intersection of array1 and the union of all the remaining arrays, so I'm not even sure array_diff with 1 arg makes any sense
@Girgias I am trying to get a random Key from the array on-top, based on weight of each key. The last two weights (values) are float. These are getting ignored for some reason..
Yes, I need the keys to be like that. This is the returned numbers. The weight is in the value position of the array.
I don't know if changing it is bad, because then $array could be an object, or leaving it as is would be worse, because then they're the only array functions that use $input instead of $array.
@CDoc yes; I've seen that you've did x10, but I think not enforcing float calculations throughout was the original problem. Having no floats at all is even better, though. :)