From what I gathered the new values for opcache.jit replaced the CRTO flags listed in the RFC; so I assume both function and tracing both represent a combination of those flags, though I'm not sure which
eg. `function` could mean both of these triggers:
0 - JIT all functions on first script load 1 - JIT function on first execution
@Girgias, when committing to lower branches than master, it is important to merge those commits upwards (even when the commit would not affect the higher branches); see wiki.php.net/vcs/… :)
Well, the difference is due to the ordering; return types are processed first, but have to be written at the end of the signature. Parameter types can be written right away.
There appear to be two commits: d5e2431884b2c13d39f698bcdeeb27c107443555 and 12a09183b369779fcf123cdd4fbacee373cc7d98. The latter had been merged upwards, but the former apparently not.
The enum-comparison repo also has discussion and analysis. The specific syntax it recommends is a bit out of date, but the logic behind it is still mostly valid.
The big question mark is how to handle primitive equivalence when enums are objects. That's a difficult question to sort out.
To get a good understanding of this, I can try to explain how I interpreted the RFC in relation to the issue you're describing. You can then correct me where I missed the mark, does that sound ok?
@cre
@Crell or is there already a place where this problem is illustrated that I can use to verify my understanding?
It's probably good for me to first dive into the prior art as much as I can, otherwise we'd need to go over everything you probably already spent brain power on.
@FrankdeJonge if you have the time/energy to write notes, then I think there's quite a few people on internals who would benefit from having it explained.
@Crell My guess is that having two separate docs would be better.....one to explain what enums are and how they behave in other languages, and an RFC to add them to PHP. Otherwise it's going to be one huge document, that would be hard to parse.
I'm also guessing that this conversation is going to be dominated by people who have very strong feelings about something they don't fully understand. aka a shitshow.
@Girgias imo, the short closure one was worse. The authors spent a large chunk of effort on explaining the downside to various possible syntaxes. The majority of the discussion was people pulling symbols out of their fundament and saying "hey what about this?".
@Crell from what I understand, the complicated cases around comparison and equality originate from the associable cases. Because they effectively turn an exhaustive list into a non-exhaustive set of possibilities where in the case of unit cases equality certain semantics make sense (such as having the same reference), where as in the case of associable cases this doesn't fit the normal object model of equality. Is that a correct interpretation?
Obviously, again I haven't thought about it extensively as you did, but I had imaginary cases for both and I was like, how the hell do you support both use cases D:
@FrankdeJonge It's more about how to conceptually have unit and associable cases at the same time, where units sometimes have a primitive equivalent and sometimes not.
And we need to be able to map the primitive to the enum as well as vice versa.
There have been people encouraging that. But Swift, Rust, and Kotlin all model them in the same structure, so it's definitely possible, at least in theory.
And most of the monad cases work better with explicit enum/ADTs rather than something cobbled together with sealed classes and such.
@Crell In TypeScript you have type declarations that allow you to represent (and re-use) a union. So a "type Distance = Miles | Kilometers;" would allow you to effectively hint against both while referring to it in as a singular concept. Would a construct like that be a viable alternative for associable values? I'm just brainstorming here to see if there are other language primitives that could be put in play to allow the same situations to be catered for while reducing the enum complexity.
@FrankdeJonge No, Associable values are something else. Think enum Maybe { case None; case Some($a_value); }
Oh, which reminds me of the other tricky part, which is how enums interact with match(). Which is the standard way to deal with enums, but we need to then teach it to do something other than a === check. Which could be full pattern matching, or something less aggressive, TBD.
Guys, do you know if there's a PHP extension that could throw a parse error for a PHP code that never runs? We have this dead code in our codebase that can't be reached in any way, but it's throwing a fatal for a couple customers, and I'm wondering how
it's not commented-out. The code that leads to it is commented-out, so it's dead code. But the dead code is valid PHP.
One of these customers is in GoDaddy with PHP 5.6 - the others I don't know - but I'm suspecting it's something at GoDaddy
logically speaking, besides being dead, that code should only run in AJAX requests - but it's throwing a 500 on the main request - so it doesn't make sense
Error: `Parse error: syntax error, unexpected '(' in /home/content/52/10758452/html/wp-content/plugins/foo/Framework/Filesystem/Filesystem.php on line 133`
Lexical typo on dead code: `if ($this->shouldStop && $this->getShouldStop()()) {`
for me, on PHP 7.3 web and 7.4 CLI the error only happens when the code is executed - not when the file is parsed... I'll try to spin up a 5.6 container and see what happens
@PeeHaa maybe you should update the Chat Guidelines my friend. Nowhere in here does it mention I can't ask a unrelated question 0.o room-11.github.io/#dont_6
I'm not a massive fan of bluetooth for wireless audio, obviously it works pretty well and interop is astonishingly good (in general) but it's quite inefficient if you have a specific narrow use case like that
I wouldn't mind betting there are some based on alternative tech (maybe DECT-esque things) which are more reliable, better range and lower power consumption
currently going round the country visiting every site that Cartwrights Fleet Services operate
one of which is on the north coast of scotland, and depsite my protests I think I am actually going to have to physically go there even though it's one bloke with a laptop in a shed
but whatever, it's their dime
and at least it's not actually winter yet
@PeeHaa yes I agree, you are an absolute Mast
@MarkR ftr I spent like 6hrs today wearing a mask, I'm not big on this whole thing :-P
mostly because of other people, I am like a walking transmission vector atm
but diligently wearing a mask every time I walk through a door + usual sanitisation etc, I feel morally OK in terms of best-effort :-P
I prefer a head-to-toe air-tight PVC bodysuit and a military gas mask. Covid protection and can get into some really fun clubs!... if they hadn't all shut down