I'm so behind T_T I need to catch up on what's going on
I was looking at something in the manual for work this past week and saw mention of PHP 5, though I'm not sure if the removal changes are being applied yet
not sure if the statement should be completely removed, or if it should be modified... I'm swinging towards completely removed though since it doesn't matter anymore
I have an object that is allocated here that is sometimes dereferenced to 0 before the end of the method call. In that case, the dtor is called, but the memory allocated here leaks. Any ideas?
If the method returns and the refcount drops to 0 at a later time it works as expected.
I have a very simple failing test. If a fiber does not await, it leaks.
I am just thinking out loud. I haven't read all related issues though. I am even not sure could it be desirable (and after all possible, since I am not into that deep of specs) to have alias for same city/country. Usually alias is where some country went apart and newly constituted main cities are alias to first being main city.
Huh, TIL we have a page which generates a big changelog document from all the changelog sections: php.net/manual/en/doc.changelog.php, might be of interest @cmb, @Tiffany to check which pages probably still have mentions of PHP 5 without going through each page
I'll probably still do what I did for PHP 4 removal, read/have a cursory glance at every page in the manual by using the "next page" feature of the doc
@Tpojka Diverging from standards is generally a bad idea, but also in this case aliasing it in PHP core would means potential for future work and arguments over how to spell things.
If they don't like the spelling, they can take that argument upstream.
@Sara For whenever you're next around: I tried switching statement_list to expr as you suggested, and it caused a compile error around shift/reduce conflicts(?). I don't quite know what to do with that. However, I did test and you're right that the change is needed. With statement_list, a foreach body results in a segfault, which is not desireable. :-) Suggestions?