not that it's really related at all... we've recently upgraded to php 8 and we've got this... 'pattern' of eww code going on with ctors that have all params nullable and null by default, combined with named args usage that's only used to work around that
imagine the initial application site is nowhere near declaration of function - which is normal ... named parameter placeholders appear to provide value, function(param: ?, next: ?, named : 10) appears to be a whole bunch clearer than function(?, ?, 10)
using named parameters doesn't allow you to redeclare a function, just like it doesn't today ...
now imagine the final call site is far away from the initial application site, you get benefit of using named parameters if you use them ...
@Levi I fixed the strange direct application of __construct ... it seems like we don't need to forbid any magic in that case, although we could it, might seem arbitrary ... so I leave it for now ...
@Trowski you intuitively think you re-declared the function, you didn't ... your intuition just seems wrong to me ...
but why you should expect different behaviour is what I don't understand ... named parameters are applied in the same way everywhere, but can only be applied as named parameters if you actually are using named parameters ...
not using them, and saying "this doesn't work like named parameters" is bizarre ...
I think you're missing my main point. I understand that not using them at the call site is wrong. My point is that $partial = foo(baz: 'baz', bar: ?); should error.
@Trowski It seems like you haven't internalized this yet:
All these `$partial`s are the same, and here I do
not mean equivalent but literally the same:
function f($x, $y) {}
$partial = f(?);
$partial = f(?, ?);
$partial = f(?, ?, ?);
$partial = f(?, ?, ?, ?);
$partial = f(?, ?, ?, ?, ?);
I'm not trying to be arrogant here -- I genuinely still think you haven't grasped that it's about the concrete things, not the holes. (bar: ?) is a hole -- it doesn't have any affect at all except that it marks the thing as a partial call instead of regular.
To be honest... all these complains would be legitimate if ? did create a 1:1 translation to an argument in the resulting closure. At one point I did design the RFC that way, and ... translated to the rest of them.
How strongly do you feel about this? Because if you think that should be an error, then I think the current design is wrong -- it's not just that it's missing an error in this case.
@Trowski If you have say a large list of routes in an array, you don't want to instantiate a partial for every single one every time, instead you'd keep them in an array or whatever and then call fromCallable on the one you wanted.
@Trowski Heh, good call, I didn't even look at the error. : 3v4l.org/tTGVc
@LeviMorrison Hrmm, indeed.
Okay, and var_dump() ignoring named args... makes sense.
Don't love the specific error message, but... okay
If var_dump() were userspace, we'd get a message about an unknown arg name. Instead, we get "not enough positional args" (essentially)
'cause yay! consistency! looks around awkwardly
Here's my final argument that using named args with partial holes should be an error: Because then we can NEVER support PFA and named args being used together. Doing so would potentially change how a positional arg gets applied, which would be a BC break.
Hi guys, not exactly related to PHP here, but has anyone dealt with generate google calendar links ? I have some odd question: why is the hour 8 am represented as 13 ? Look at the bottom text example here: w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime
I remember protesting that unknown names made it into the variadic pack, but I didn't remember that unknown named parameters without a variadic was a fatal error: 3v4l.org/Ui7k5. That's actually progressive! Figured legacy variadics would have prevented it...
Colbert asked Hugh Laurie "do you know what England's greatest gift to the world is?", Hugh said nothing, Colbert says "America". Before that Hugh said "Jazz is America's greatest gift to the world".
I'm kinda curious about my medical history, given that my mom had Von Hippel-Lindau disease, it's autosomal dominant, but I don't have it... I'm curious what I do have
I have lymphedema and osteoarthritis in my right leg and hip (respectively). I'm 34. I'm too young for the osteoarthritis. Lymphedema I've had since I was 13-14ish.
Was having a random conversation with the wife about the probability of siblings being identical twins (as in having the same chromosomes -- ignoring small mutations), despite being born from separate gametes.
Decided that 2^46 was a sufficiently big number to make it.... improbable at best.
Oh and I guess I have cataracts. I got lucky without getting Von Hippel-Lindau, but it's like my genes said "yeah, but that ain't much..." granted, I am very glad I don't have VHL. Shit's horrible.
Related, if you've been watching "Mythic Quest"... The lady who plays Poppy also played Sif in the play-in-a-play at the start of Thor: Ragnarok. Her only line is "Somebody! Help!" but I reckon that's a cool actor credit anyway.
@Trowski If you're a wow player, it's pretty funny. That said, they definitely took a few stumbles story-wise. Threads that got spun up in one episode and never touched again. Yeah... they're working on finding their feet.
Kinda diggin' Bratak as a slightly pervy sci-fi author has-been though.
@Levi @Crell whatever the solution to this named parameter thing is, it should not include changing the order of arguments ... so bare that in mind while deciding ...
ie. it's not practical to think about changing the application site into a declaration site ... at the application site the function being called may not be known, all we can do is generate code complicit with calling convention and valid for a function with a compatible prototype ... even when the function is known, we cannot reasonably change the epilogue of the function, the arguments must come in the order they are prototyped ...
and I still don't think you should expect the benefits of named parameters where you are not using them, this whole "this thing that uses positional arguments doesn't behave like you are using named parameters" makes no sense at all ...
<?php
function realFunc($a = 1, $b = 2) {
echo "a = $a | b = $b\n";
}
$partial = realFunc(b: ?);
$partial(5); // Outputs "a=5 | b=2"
this behaves strangely, because the code is wrong
<?php
function realFunc($a = 1, $b = 2) {
echo "a = $a | b = $b\n";
}
$partial = realFunc(b: ?);
$partial(b: 5); // Outputs "a = 1 | b = 5"
I get that some people may think it should error, but don't see how we're practically meant to tell what your intentions are, given the very real restrictions we're working under ... trying to reason about the intention of code that is incorrect doesn't seem like a good use of time, that time would probably be better spent documenting how things actually work ...
@JoeWatkins maybe 5 should be passed as b? so arguments that have placeholders take priority when not using named arguments, then the rest. makes more sense, but not sure 🤷♂️
they're both valid calls, even if one looks strange, there's no way to tell which one you meant to make ... the one that looks strange is simply wrong ...
it's wrong, given knowledge of the intention that you wanted it to be b:5, but we can't determine either way what your intention is, and they're both valid calls ...
well, that best way to prevent these mistakes would be to forbid partial functions with named arguments, but that can be done in userland using a static analyzer, since there might be a valid use case for them.
@NikiC is there some known thing that would cause macos to fault where nothing else seems too (in CI), that you know of ?
moin @Tiffany
I mean I don't see it, but maybe something particular about the build, I tried every combination of compiler, sanitizer and valgrind and can't reproduce the fault here ...
Waking up without a migraine is like waking up a whole new person. I can read code without my head pounding.
@JoeWatkins should the docs explain the intention of partials? Like it's there something I can read that explains to me why the first one is strange so that I could explain it in the docs? (I dunno if that makes sense, I probably need caffeine)
(I'm using "I" but I should probably use the royal "we" since I dunno if it'll be me documenting it, but my life will soon get back in order and I'm hoping to come back to docs within this month)
you can only consider it strange if you know that the intention was something other than what was written, and the thing you intended to write has correct syntax ... the point is we can only assume that you intended to execute the code you wrote, and the first one looks like an intentional call that doesn't use named parameters, and the second one looks like an intentional call that uses named parameters, both are valid calls and there doesn't seem to be anything we can do to resolve that
it's not really that we need to document, because it's only strange depending on your knowledge of it's intention, it's specifically the interactions with named parameters and positional arguments that need to be documented
it's not entirely irrelevant to understand what "polymorphism" means in plain English, as well; Wiktionary offers "The ability to assume different forms or shapes."
The difficulty with polymorphism is it gets misused as code reuse through a child class extending off a parent class, when there are usually better options. But it's challenging to figure out what those better options are while inexperienced
If I can suggest, Head First Design Patterns may also help you.
Composition over inheritance (or composite reuse principle) in object-oriented programming (OOP) is the principle that classes should achieve polymorphic behavior and code reuse by their composition (by containing instances of other classes that implement the desired functionality) rather than inheritance from a base or parent class. This is an often-stated principle of OOP, such as in the influential book Design Patterns (1994).
== Basics ==
An implementation of composition over inheritance typically begins with the creation of various interfaces representing the behaviors that the system must...
but yes, that's the idea: an Employee and a Client are the "different but related objects", and the two definitions of "foo" are the "different but related behaviour"
the problem is that all examples in google is related to real-world examples. And that why I cant understand how can I apply this knowlenges to my applications
simplified real-world example: you need to process a payment, so you have a "PaymentHandler" interface with a function "pay"; you then have two implementations of that interface, one for Paypal and one for ApplePay; both have their own implementation of "pay"; the calling code just calls "pay" on an object and it "polymorphically" calls the appropriate implementation
@Girgias I don't think Appveyor is slow (modulo queuing); actual build takes < 10min, and that builds almost everything; tests take > 20min, and they could be way faster, if not all exts would be loaded all the time.
LOLOL! This is about 3 months old but hilarious. Texas lawyer had a cat filter on during a Zoom call and did not know how to turn it off. He claims a child had turned it on. youtube.com/watch?v=j3M_Ki5U3TE
Well it still needs to do a conversion afterwards, I'll look into the opache #if usage, and if I don't know how to fix that or it is ugly I'll just use u suffix
I enabled -Wsign-conversion with the CFLAGS on GCC just to see, and the main culprit is that one
Which generates around 100 000 lines of compiler logs
Not sure it is super worth to try to fix all of them, but I'm back in the mood for compiler warnings for some reason lol
@cmb @NikiC does php have any speical plan with appveyor? they can theoretically add more parallel jobs for money. its sometihng Tideways could sponsor to some degree if that'd help
@beberlei thanks for the offer! I'm not sure if that would be reasonable for now. GH actions might be the better alternative in the long run, and we really should improve test execution speed. I have that on my TODO list.