I was wondering if inner classes/interfaces for PHP could solve the issue with namespace private class visibility discussed on ML.
If PHP could have inner classes and interfaces which can be declared inside normal classes and interfaces as protected or private then it would allow to avoid declaring @internal classes at all
Currently this package has few @internal classes like PostgreSqlConnection and Connection
Which are used only as an adaptor used in factory to pass over to DoctrineTransport new instance, this way creation of protected/private classes is allowed only in declaring class and for protected in it's descendants
but their public interface can freerly satisfy the DoctrineTransport needs
I looked through a bunch of classes and found some @internal uses in PhpParser as well
There is a TokenStream which basically is used only in PrettyPrinterAbstract and it could be a protected class instead, meaning it won't be allowed to instantiate TokenStream outside if it's declared protected
Huh nvm there is too much to think about, for eg. whether ctors should be public protected or private and how does that work etc.
Could someone link me the image about the email frequency on internals that was uploaded here not long ago? I just can't find it. :/ I'm currently compiling an in-house presentation about PHP 8.0 :)
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
#[Attribute]
class MyAttribute {
public function __construct(
public string $a,
public $b = 'b',
) {}
}
#[MyAttribute(3)]
class Test1 {}
var_dump((new ReflectionClass('Test1'))->getAttributes()[0]->newInstance());
@beberlei ^-- This currently ignores strict_types
I believe it should be using the strict_types from the place that uses #[MyAttribute(3)]
i believe we used the same infrastructure in refleciton.c to do this, so that would be the culprit. I usppose we can store the strict status on the zend_attribute and apply that when newInstance() is called
I am trying to check if excution time of my foreach take longer than 9 minutes, in case of true then break. I there a better way to do this than I have right now:
> Hi. This is the qmail-send program at lists.php.net. I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following addresses. This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.
<php-notes@lists.php.net>: ezmlm-reject: fatal: Sorry, I don't accept commands in the subject line. Please send a message to the -help address shown in the the ``Mailing-List:'' header for command info (#5.7.0)
(subject line was "subscribe")
but also
> Hi. This is the qmail-send program at lists.php.net. I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following addresses. This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.
<php-notes@lists.php.net>: ezmlm-reject: fatal: Sorry, I don't accept message with empty Subject (#5.7.0)
@LeviMorrison Checked again, I think this should be fine to land. Impact should be limited, and it fixes a real bug (can't do nested iteration of SplFixedArray). Let's check with @Sara though, are you okay with landing github.com/php/php-src/pull/5384, which makes SplFixedArray implement IteratorAggregate instead of Iterator?
I need help. I am fixing this bug: bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=79375 and I fixed the part that was reported but the same problem is also present in php_mysqli_fetch_into_hash and in the mysqli_result iterator. However, I have no access to MySQL object in these functions and I can't throw an exception. How can I fix this problem?
hummm how do you call some piece of code that is ran alongside the current domain's code but it is unrelated to the current domain's code. however it serves some purpose like improving performance, logging data, profiling, etc? i've read it somewhere, i think it's called meta-code or meta-tasks..... something like that.... do you know what am i referring to? :B
@Dharman I don't mean to confuse anyone ;) But while #79914 has some side-effects, it does fix #77163. If you get your fix completed we can probably close all 3 issues
The fix in 77163 seems to be fixing a deadlock error message in PDO but it doesn't affect mysqli. mysqlnd doesn't set the error message properly nor does it inform mysqli/pdo about an error in mysqlnd_stmt::store_result/mysqlnd_stmt::use_result
my bugfix is addressing this
however these functions get called from mysqli in mysqli_result::fetch_* functions as well as in the iterator
Interestingly, when running #79914 test case against my bugfix I get the expected result, which would mean that I fixed this PDO bug as a side effect accidently
Wasn't my intention becasue I didn't find #79914 before you mentioned it. Sorry, but that would mean that that #79914 is a duplicate of #79375 not the other way around :D
if your fix is ready and working we could test the other two and close all three. It's unfortunately quite difficult to create a multi-threaded unittest but a manual confirmation should be enough
@Girgias @Girgias Yeah, it's variadic param which is validated somewhere deep. I wanted to refactor this into so that we can add the type declaration, but there was a conceptual problem with it: there are quite a few returns before argument validation, and it can't be postponed
Hi there, what are your thoughts about literal types? In the last few weeks I've played a bit with php-src and managed to have a basic implementation for something like this:```<?php
To be honest, I haven't thought that much about enums; for me, at least, not having the possibility to typehint something like $status to a union of literals is a pita. :D
And I really wanted to try a new side project/challenge just for fun
@BogdanUngureanu Hi hi! Iliya and I are working on robust native enums/ADTs. It's still in the design phase. We're hoping to get it into 8.1 but time will tell.
When tests fail due to specific setup - in this case, running inside a docker container on a bind mount from mac os (apfs) host - is that worth a bugreport or not?
@makadev I'd say report it, but also probably the right thing to do would be to check to see if the tests are running in that environment and maybe skip them.
Doubtful. Literal types would get complicated fast, unless we also add typedefs (which I also want, but are beyond my skillset). At which point you may as well just implement enums as they'd look almost the same.
If you want to see the Github repo above and help us flush out more corner cases in the design, that would probably be the best path forward.
I have a mental checklist of things I'd love to see happen in 8.1, only a few of which I have any ability to help with. The rest I just hope to inspire/cajole/bribe/trick someone else into doing. :-)
Enums clearly is a more powerful feature, but a lot more complex to design and implement. There would be a lot of debate over it's behavior, which in turn it might cause the RFC to fail
If there is a public method getPerformanceData() and it uses several private methods which each execute a complex (more or less complex) SQL statement to get a data point, and I want to test this method by seeding the database and making sure the data it pulls is accurate, would that be considered a unit or a feature test?
I would say that it is a unit test because it is testing 1 public method, but since the database needs to be seeded and legitimately queried (using sqlite) would that make it a feature test?
@Danack True, but it's convenient when everyone agrees that names mean the same thing :p
I will call it a unit test though
I have unexpectedly taken somewhat of a leadership type of position where I am now. Which would be a lot harder but since I'm working from home I can google something before I respond to someone so I pretend I know what I'm talking about :p
I want to tell someone they need to write a test but I don't wanna call it the wrong thing lol
how to politely tell someone "no shit, that's why I posted this reddit thread, to get more people to help with the docs..." reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/ixm4zs/… -_-
user1804599
Cool, you can do fastcgi_param X[1] a; fastcgi_param X[2] b; and you get $_SERVER['X'] to be [ 2 => 'a', 1 => 'b' ].
user1804599
Sad it ends up in the wrong order but ksort can fix that.
@LeviMorrison If they're singletons will there be a meaningful difference? Maybe from reference counting?
The problem is that we'd either have to make them just scalars, which means Weekday::Monday === Month::January (assuming they're 0 based ints) OR we have to introduce a new zval type which would probably be a gigantic change, internally and for extensions.
@LeviMorrison I think what we get at it if we want them to not be scalar aliases (C style fancy constants), then objects-with-a-clear-scalar-stepdown is the better way of doing that. Then it's just a question of what syntactic mechanism defines that stepdown. (And stepup, potentially.)
Even if there's a syntactic "Spade = 'S'" option, that still necessitates figuring out what that maps to in terms of "something other than an fancy constant." And that doesn't require a Maybe monad.
@LeviMorrison Swift lets you do: let card = Suit(rawValue: "B")
Where "B" has not been defined as one of the legal raw values. So card is a Maybe<Suit>, not a Suit, and needs to be unwrapped. Swift has a native syntax for that.
But, per yesterday's discussion, there are ways of doing raw-value-ish behavior other than an equals sign; and if it is an equals sign, we still need to figure out what those semantics mean.
@rightfold Wash your mouth out.
Like, is case Hearts = 'H' semantically equivalent to
case Hearts { public function __toString() { return 'H'; } }
Or something else? What's the step-up/deserialize equivalent?
(For that matter, are __serialize() and __deserialize() supported, and what do they even mean?)
enum Barcode {
case Upc(int $part1, int $part2, int $part3, int $part4);
case qrCode(string $bits);
}
$u = Barcode::Upc(4, 5, 6, 7);
print $u->part1; // Prints 4
@LeviMorrison ...I was also about to ask that, in the context of wiki.php.net/rfc/is_literal . Anyone have any clue if it would be possible to add an IS_LITERAL flag and store that for values that are generated from source code?
@LeviMorrison Not completely clear yet. Bob has suggested making the class name "Barcode::Upc" (literally with the ::) so it will be impossible to instantiate. If you do new ('Barcode::Upc'), well...
@Crell Thanks for the review comments! Do you have any preferences in case of the hash PR? Especially the $raw_output parameter of hash(). Nikita doesn't like my suggestion, and I am not fond of his ^^ :D
@MarkR Haha :D Although there was a tight competition among you, George, Tyson (2), and Michał (3), as far as I saw. ^^
@Girgias Do you have any suggestions where I should look at? ext/dom is huge!
@MateKocsis Well that's a good question, I had a couple of now void things in Element which I hoped to have squashed so I think only the Node/Document probably needs to be checked
@GabrielCaruso I found that you have a few nice PRs which are not far from being finished :) Do you want to finish them? I'm mainly looking forward to see the voidifier PR get merged :D
@Girgias So far so good... Except that it seems that DomDocument::_construct() can return false according to this piece of code: if (php_libxml_increment_doc_ref((php_libxml_node_object *)intern, docp) == -1) { RETURN_FALSE; } Or I'm missing something? @beberlei
@MateKocsis The world just isn't ready for the truth I bring :P
Backticks shouldn't be a thing, namespaces help keep large codebases tidy and compartmentalised, and Joe Watkins in a pink skirt should definitely be the 8.0 mascot.
@MateKocsis php_libxml_increment_doc_ref() always returns != 1, if the second argument is not null. In this case docp is apparently never to be null, so maybe make that an assertion (and don't add false as return type)?
@Danack you're on a mac, right? could you screenshot me how you locate phpstorm inspections from Preferences? I've got a colleague on a mac who cannot find it at all :-\
it doesn't show up under Preferences | Editor, which seems... odd