Never thought I'd look forward to winter but knowing that my new neighbors are less likely to be outside making noise when I'm trying to sleep is something to look forward to...
@Wes C arrays are more a concept than an actual thing - they are just a pointer to some memory typically allocated as multiple of the base size of its underlying type
just calling it a pointer to some allocated memory is probably fine too :-P
@NikiC thanks for the link! I'm not a fan of implicit return type inheritance. At least not as a general feature. I could imagine though to make this happen in case of internal methods for 8.1, then we could emit a deprecation notice when a return type is omitted from overriding methods a few years later, and finally, return type declarations could be made required in 9.0, so implicit return type inheritance wouldn't be needed anymore. Or this idea still doesn't make much sense?
@MateKocsis I'm probably missing something but how would you do the implicit return type inheritance? You can't necessarely do all of that at compile time
E.g. a conditional class definition which is only known at Runtime
@Girgias OK, then I think we're talking about different things :) Return type inheritance is certainly a runtime stuff (and Nikita also wrote in the linked thread that it's not easy to implement), but signature validation happens at compile-time (otherwise I am horribly mistaken), so we could emit notices during this process without performance problems.
I'm not exactly sure how the parser works but would your stategy cope with: ` if ($someRuntimeCondition) { class Foo { /* ... */ } } else { class Foo { /* different semantics */ } } `
Where you imagine Foo to inherit an internal class
@Girgias Yes, it would. As soon as Foo with an incompatible method return type is compiled, a notice would be emitted. It's the same when other aspects (param types etc) are validated, only the error level is different.
I think the main problem is BC. I don't think it's a huge problem, but e.g. DateTime is quite frequently extended in user-land (e.g. Carbon), so there should be some grace period for people to update the signatures.
@Girgias Should be no problem, zend_compile.c will compile both classes, no matter which one ends up being selected at runtime. 3v4l.org/BGUYr/vld#output
@2dsharp I have questions. Is this some kind of a new feature in web browser/servers? Have you been blocked by the site that allows SQLi for using SQLi? What is that message supposed to tell you as a user?
I'm noticing that get_gc uses a plain int n. SplFixedArray stores its size as zend_long. Do you think get_gc should use a zend_long or should I convert SplFixedArray to use a plain int?
@Dharman this link still works, because this extension has not (yet) been removed. So far we removed only completely out-dated and most likely unimportant extensions. Anyhow, old docs can be downloaded from doc.php.net/archives for offline viewing.
I support => on all functions. I had it in my RFC for short closures at one point. I think it was Nikita that suggested I remove it, can't remember. Maybe it was ML feedback. Curse this memory.
There's some PR comments asking for using fn instead, which I'm unsure about. If it could be done 100% in the lexer I'd be OK with it if that's consensus, but overall I think I prefer sticking with function.
@StatikStasis I just have an easier time working with Google Sheets than Excel :p You can write your own script to transform data too, if you wanted. It's pretty convenient
Okay, so I can't push to git@git.php.net:/php-src.git ; I get a permission denied warning. If I push to https://git.php.net/push/php-src.git it works. O.o
I'm using an ssh-ed25519 key; wonders if it matters.
I have a job there in the morning, and I'm fresh out of Frankincense and Myrh, I think I have a spare Gold-plated HDMI lead knocking about somewhere though