I'm just concerned about too many "if X, then not Y" feature implications, as that's where it gets complex to implement, argue for, and document/explain.
@Danack Sure, all non-magic methods will be allowed. The question is, do we need implicit conversion from an int-backed enum to int, for example. If so, what about manual casts ((int) $foo). This is already valid code (although it does warn). The two should probably likely result in the same value but object to int casts right now always evaluate to 1.
If it were me I'd just avoid implicit conversion altogether but that does remove some convenience.
enum Suit { case Hearts { public function __toString: string { return 'H'; } } }
Which then means if you have both, the explicit method wins you moron. But then we are implicitly saying that we have to implement __toInt() and__toFloat(), at least for enum cases.
I think overall, the more we can fall back on "this is syntactic sugar for this other thing that already has all the edge cases worked out", the better off for everyone.
The use case here is wanting to work with an enum as far as the type system is concerned, but still having easy round-tripping to a database.
@IluTov Possibly, but then we need to define all the various casting and strict/weak behavior. "The same as __toString, right or wrong" at least gives us something to not bikeshed.
Unless you can implement "all the same behavior as __toString but not using __toString", and copy that for int and float. If you feel those can be made parallel I'm OK with that implementation detail.
@BogdanUngureanu But in that case, we should have implicit coercion nowhere. Nowhere/everywhere is better than only some of the time because then you have to remember when it'll work.
@BogdanUngureanu We have to give them enough things to implement from. So far, everything we've described is already in enums in some other language. They pack a lot of functionality, especially in Swift/Rust/Kotlin.
I think we can do without direct binary enums, though. That's easy enough to emulate with primitive literals.
@BogdanUngureanu In our RFC enums are object based, same with primitive-backed enums. Whether we coerce the primitives into objects and vice versa is not clear yet. If it were just me I would not.
@BogdanUngureanu That's the question. Usually PHP does implicit coercion unless you enable strict types.
@Crell Another issue with __toString in string-backed enums. You're saying __toString has precedence when converting an enum into a primitive. But what about the other way around? We can't use __toString when converting primitives into objects.
@BogdanUngureanu If we want enums to have method support, they have to be objects. The question on the table at the moment is how to handle enum cases that have a natural and necessary primitive equivalent. How/when should they be translated back to that primitive? Upcasting is easier. Suit::from($one_of_the_literal_values_or_error).
@BogdanUngureanu from/to would be synthesized automatically in primitive-backed enums.
@Crell Another thing: Normal enums implement __toString and just return the name of the case, this would make __toString of non-string-backed enums and string-backed enums different.
The only reason to auto-generate __toString would be to ensure cases always have a primitive version. If we don't care about that, then it's not needed.
The alternative would be to auto-generate one that is the enum's stringified name, but... then we need to not do that for enums that have any associable cases.
In my mind, we can have 2 "modes" or 3 "modes". 2 mode: Always generate a __tostring, which defaults to the case name, so all enums are always string-backed unless they're associable. 3 modes, there's no primitive-backed equivalent unless you explicitly say so.
But since from() only makes sense if all cases have a primitive equivalent, that pushes me toward 3 modes instead of 2. And saying that, I realize that's dumb because Suit::from('Spades') would still totally work. :-)
Thanks, tbh still do think there's some added value to literal types (especially for people that are into structural typing). Some could use enums for nominal typing while others would like a more structural approach :)
Is there any way to have phpstorm windows "sleep" when not being used for a while? I always keep windows open for all the projects I work on throughout the week but there are a lot, and some I don't touch for a couple days. I don't wanna close them but I also don't want them taking up resources
@Alesana Doubt that, that would need some kind of per project hibernation (storage/persisting and obviously reload time and coherency checks when reactivating) which is hard to justify in complexity and all.
There is a Powersave mode tho.. but it's probably all or none
@makadev As far as storage/persisting if you're in the middle of an action or need our terminal history or something I could see that being required, but I would even be fine with it closing it altogether since it does auto save anyways
But keeping that window as a marker
Then when the window is opened back up it would open the project back up. I guess in reality that seems pretty pointless though
When I can just close it and reopen it with a few extra steps
@Alesana At least it sounds pretty special, you want to use your OS Task-switcher to handle Project switching or a visual reference or is it more like a Bookmark for fast switching to the most recently used stuff?
More like a bookmark, not necessarily for most recently used but just for projects that I know I will be using regularly. There doesn't seem to be a way to bookmark projects with it
Mine is 33. I suppose that it would work but I would prefer to have them all organized and in the same spot, without other test or open source projects mixed in. Like I said in reality it seems pretty pointless and arbitrary when I can just do that :P
@Alesana maybe there is a plugin for you liking, having some shortlinks/bookmarks for project doesn't see tooo unreasonable. Worst case you just need to make a directory with shortlinks.
In the pure sense, I'd probably agree. As a practical matter, it's common enough that I don't think forcing people into a 6 method chain of fugly just to build that list is a good idea.
well it's presumably dependent on the symbol as well, to say "reflection is slow" is very simplistic because differnt reflection task require different expense (obviously), so just creating an instance and then copying a hashtable to an array can be fairly free-ish
I think the issue with reflection is (was) that it used to collect a load of data on construct instead of on access
the actual process of retrieving data from the class table or whatever isn't particularly expensive
The list function doesn't have one the other way? or did I miss something? Well, can a scalar backed value be duplicated or is it exclusive. I'm assuming exclusive? But ive only skimmed