Hello everyone. I've recently answered a question where a user had misused some constants as parameters in the NumberFormatter class, the question can be found here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66280517/php-numberformatter-format-shows-strange-output/
But I'm curious to find out exactly why this strange behaviour occurs and if it is maybe worthy of a bug report. My web searches yielded no similar results or bug reports. So I was wondering if any of you folks who are more afflicted with PHP than myself could shed some light on this. Thank you in advance.
@El_Vanja the $stlye parameter maps to one of the UNumberFormatStyle values, and 8 is UNUM_NUMBERING_SYSTEM, which for whatever reason, gives that result.
While I'm ok with extensions using ExtensionName\XXX ... I do think that it's needlessly restrictive to limit them to a single level, that seems rather arbitrary and doesn't reflect how namespaces are used in practice (your own PHP parser for example uses 3 or 4 layers of child NS).
although IMHO for things like arrays, if scalar methods ever appear in core they'll immediately become preferred vs the array_xx functions for all code targetting newer versions
@NikiC One of the big pushbacks in the past was "we aren't using namespaces now, so if anything uses namespaces, even new stuff, that's confusing and we shouldn't do it, so we should never use namespaces ever, because we didn't start with them." - What's your approach to handling that feedback? "Only new symbols" still results in some extensions being namespaced and some not.
And without a PHP\ or similar prefix, is there any concern about bumping into user-land? It's been operating on the assumption that anything other than \ and \PHP was "safe" for over a decade now.
> Because these extensions combine a lot of unrelated or only tangentially related functionality, symbols should not be namespaced under the Core, Standard or Spl namespaces.
Can't say I'm particularly fond of the idea of putting a bunch of things like Password\hash into the root. I think we've got a great opportunity to make a decent hierarchical arrangement e.g. Security\Passwords\ Security\Hashing Security\Crypto etc
@MarkR That would make more sense to me with a monolithic standard library. I wouldn't like the idea of having Security\Password always available, while Security\Crypto is only there if you have OpenSSL -- or worse, half of Security\Crypto depends on libcrypto and the other on libsodium.
@Sara Well ... PSR-4 calls any top-level namespace a vendor namespace :)
hello, I have just discovered the chat room !! if anyone has any idea how to solve this mystery. thank you in advance . https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66321602/custom-trim-my-post-title-item-combine-two-if
@LeviMorrison Trying to get my head around this UFCS idea; are you saying the call would be despatched based on its type signature somehow? If so, I agree with Crell: you'd need to pre-compile, not just use (which is a source transform, not an include). If not, it doesn't matter what type is in the signature, because 'hello'->map('foo'); can just fail with the same error as map('hello', 'foo');
function reverse(string|array $input) {
if ( is_array($input) { return array_reverse($input); }
if ( is_string($input) { return strrev($input); }
}
[1,2,3]->reverse(); // [3,2,1]
'hello'->reverse(); // 'olleh'
@IMSoP We have the use list at compile time -- no reason it couldn't be saved in a way that it gets looked at during runtime when there isn't an exact match.
well, the only extra boilerplate is the "for type" part; it just feels more natural to have that explicit rather than looked up from the function signature
the other alternative is just run the function and see if it fails, so (new class)->reverse(); would throw "function reverse expects parameter 1 to be ..." rather than "undefined method reverse"
explicit types would also allow the extension function to have higher priority than a real method, so you could do:
function foo_but_with_args_swapped(SomeClass $self, $a, $b) { return $self->foo($b, $a); }
extension function foo_but_with_args_swapped as foo for SomeClass;
(new SomeClass)->foo(42, 'hello');
maybe
hm, another use case though: defining extension functions with the same name for different types
that wouldn't work with plain use, because you can't have two functions in scope with the same name
but extension function \array_reverse as reverse for array; extension function \strrev as reverse for string; would
syntax could be shorter: extend array with \array_reverse as reverse; extend string with \strrev as reverse;
otherwise, you'd end up with [1,2,3]->array_reverse(); which would be fugly
@Dharman I really like some of the suggestions and sometimes it makes things a lot easier, but it's a little bit frustrating sometimes because it's always suggesting something and its suggestions are based on AI not on reality. So, while it should just autocomplete something with an existing function or property, it will autocomplete with a non-existing one often.