@NikiC I've also been thinking if maybe there's a ways to elide parameter type checks. That would require flagging the send opcodes and passing that information to the recv call. However, since most param type checks are probably relatively cheap I'm not sure that's worth it as it would make all other param type checks slightly slower.
@NikiC I think introducing new functions and then deprecating $http_response_header is a better approach, I didn't know it was that complicated to achieve the behaviour it was providing, so looks good on my end
Want me to PR the PGSQL deprecation implementation?
2001-2004: Founded PHP Extension and Application Repository (PEAR) and built the initial infrastructure - later retired and handed off the project to The PEAR Group
@NikiC Thanks! My only question is how I can proceed with the proposed factory methods for ReflectionMethod and DatePeriod? github.com/php/php-src/pull/6754 Is it not ok to vote about their inclusion in this RFC?
Guys, would you mind checking out my code? I can't figure out whats wrong with it. Im calling a parent:: method inside a child but it says that Non-static method should not be called statically. I know that i can't call non-static methods statically but shouldn't i be able to call it with parent::??
Here's a link to my fiddle, i made it easily understandable. Is there something wrong with this logic?
@drpzz parent refers to either the parent instance, or the parent class, depending on whether it's called from an instance or static method. It doesn't magically make an instance appear.
@MateKocsis Hm, this doesn't seem like a great fit for the deprecation rfc
It already combines many changes, I think that including feature additions (even if they are kind of deprecation-related) may be stretching things too far
@Danack Okay, thank you! But is there then a way i could call this non-static parent method inside a child's static method? Without actually making the parent's method static?
@NikiC Alright, I'll try to write a separate RFC for them. In case @Derick agrees with the DatePeriod changes. I'll also search for other possible candidates to get rid of overridden signatures.
I think there is actually no reason for my methods to be static. That would solve my problem right? Because all i'm trying to do is call a parent's method inside a child, this is not considered a bad practice or is it?
Also i have multiple parents is that a bad practice or not? Like idk great granparents :D
> Some of our hosts use cPanel and unfortunately cPanel gets a bit excessive with how many copies of php.ini files they have all over the file system. In fact the file system is a mess!
@nikic @MateKocsis @Girgias with the 8.1 deprecation RFC, have you guys also considered nl_langinfo() given the other deprecations on the list like strftime()?
@Girgias in the wild and even at work, I have seen the tendency to use array dereferencing on localeconv() rather than nl_langinfo() to get an individual category. I assume part of that is the cross platform availability of localeconv() as well
for once I actually do have some direct relevant knowledge and I agree with all ^^ I would rather get rid of most locale/encoding stuff that lives outside of intl, but nl_langinfo() is particularly superfluous
and also very badly named
well, a very thin wrapper with an unfriendly passthru name
@NikiC in your namespaces in bundled extensions, what would your approach be in developing an API for each type of "extension"? Is this something you are thinking to bring up for an RFC to flesh out each API if you are considering to change naming (like the in_array to \Array\contains example proposal)?
@Nikic I see, I just find it a good opportunity to consider this if an effort is being made in the first place. Benjamin Morel's point about the usefulness of varadic array_map() is an interesting one but the downside is that just switching from say array_map to \Array\map() is no longer 1-to-1 is a minor inconvinence considering the potential to cleanup some APIs to reflect more common practices (personally I have never seen a varadic array_map in the wild, but I am sure it does exist)
from php.net "When you create a subfolder structure matching the namespaces of the containing classes, you will never even have to define an autoloader.
`<?php spl_autoload_extensions(".php"); // comma-separated list spl_autoload_register(); ?>` "
So my question is, is this enough? "spl_autoload_extensions(".php"); // comma-separated list spl_autoload_register(); "
Hmm, okay then, thanks. But if I would do it without composer, is this correct in php.net or I'm getting confused? If I namespace I just need this: spl_autoload_extensions(".php"); // comma-separated list spl_autoload_register(); ?
@PeeHaa sure, as opposed to Symfony, which tricks you into stabbing yourself in an organ you didn't know you had, but you found yourself examining while 10 layers deep in a callstack :P
I've never used anything for autoloading other than a) a custom autoload function which was loading classes from an application that was originally written for PHP 4; and b) Composer
I do wonder if in the long run autoloading is a dead-end, and we should be pre-compiling code a package at a time
to go back to hating on frameworks, the number of classes loaded in the average Symfony request certainly exceeds the number of include statements in the first professional PHP application I worked with
@IMSoP I saw something like that in an article about composer. With composer it seems you end up writting all the relative paths to your files, or am I wrong? So what's the difference between that and using spl_autoload_register?
the difference is basically compile-time vs run-time
spl_autoload_register() you have to write and maintain all the run-time autoloading code yourself, composer you just write compile-time decls and if they don't make sense your project won't even build
tho it depends what your objective is, if you wanna get stuff done use composer, if you are trying to learn how autoloading works then by all means write an autoloader
once you get your head round Composer, you'll get a lot of value from pulling in other people's code, even if you're deliberately keeping things simple to learn with
for instance, if you want to play with calling APIs or scraping websites, you're much better off learning to use Guzzle than PHP's frankly terrible curl functions
Btw, is anyone aware of any plugin like this (send files from host to virtual machine): packagecontrol.io/packages/FTPSync that would work on any text editor?
Colors are so meaningless though. This game is very hard because you have to train your brain to notice colors. For me as a developer, the colors are only to make a distinction between different parts of the syntax
The harder part is training yourself not to yell out "<killer> you absolute bastard" on discord when they stab you in the face when you're 5 seconds into your first ever game :|
I don't know for the life of me how some people can narrate every single step you have taken during the game. I play in the French lobby and some guys will tell you where everyone was, came from, went to ... with a timestamp