To quote a dear departed old friend, "It's like the Necronomicon, you peer in thinking you'll unlock secrets of the universe, but come out a babbling idiot."
She was speaking of the sendmail config, but that was also m4 based...
IIRC the chapter on m4 files in my book is basically: "Look... You really wanna know? Go buy a book on M4, in the mean time use these handful of lines which cover 90% of your needs."
Generics won't happen soon, but I'm not convinced they'll never happen. The CLR that runs Microsoft languages is pretty amazing, and has reified generics in the IR (it's not erased). I think there are techniques we can learn from them.
Guys one info but the static clousure return from a class instance in the same always? or alloc new memory ? where I find the portion of code in php-src ...
@cmb I can't really import that version of timelib, as it changes/adds some features, so the quick fix seems like a good idea? I don't expect to pull in further versions of timelib into 7.4.
@muniya ok, you're pretty clearly not getting the support you need from your colleagues....being left to figure out how to install stuff yourself, when it's apparently out of your depth is a crappy situation to be in.
You should have a chat with who you work for, to get the support you need.
Can anyone suggest any links to guide/tutorial for implementing PSR 7/17/18 in a PHP app? Am struggling to understand how this concept is utilised
The interfaces versus the counterpart factory interfaces don't seem to match up. Like RequestFactoryInterface method createRequest() receives $method and $uri, but the RequestInterface has much more data
@PeeHaa when the build is successfully updated , the 'released on' date (when you hover over the version) is updated as well. In this case - you seem to have found an issue because master hasn't been updated for a while - I'll look into that
@Exception I think a bit, but count() doesn't actually need to count the elements of the array, since this number is already stored in the HashTable. Usual advice: write for readability, and optimize when necessary.
@Sara so, I'm trying to move stream contexts from resource to an opaque object, and I think I'm mostly there (somehow) but I've got a memleak and I can't track it down, any advice ideas? (for reference the branch is github.com/Girgias/php-src/tree/stream-context)
Not having a process to on-board new team members, leaving them struggling to get a working development environment is a really bad thing for a company to fail at. You should talk to your boss about this....
Syntax for using traits is really weird. For example: `use A, B { foo as bar; }`
1) Why is the semicolon inside and not after `}`? 2) Why I can't write `use A, B { foo as bar; }, C`, and only the last trait is allowed to have modifications?
I create a DTO that implements PSR ServerRequestInterface, and a factory class that implements PSR ServerRequestFactoryInterface to create the DTO. The properties that the factory method takes in is not enough to satisfy the methods/data in the DTO as defined by ServerRequestInterface. What am I doing wrong?
@NikiC the semicolon could be used as separator instead of terminator, though (like in for clauses), couldn't it (and I think it could be a comma instead, but that ship has sailed)
so that the class that sends the request expects that object. My understanding is that is the point of psr 7 etc, to create and use the same objects so no matter what http client is used the same objs/interfaces are expected?
Ok so if I told that the: Closure like $a = static function() {}, allocates new memory (Internally it's just another class type with custom handlers) And this memory it's deallocated after that script is finished it's correct? Or this memory it's deallocated with the same rules of the normal variable?
@DaveRandom Ok, so the static keyword it's only to bind or not bind the $this (scope), not the same semantics of the static member of the class or static var inside a function... it's correct?
note that you can still have a use() clause in a static closure, it doesn't stop you binding things from the outer scope, it only stops the implicit bind of $this
@Crell hey, just to let you know, I should have the patch for the sorting enum finished sometime in mid-October.
I'm spending this month moving, and work has also been rather busy, and I'm having to break up my mental load a bit so I'm spending some time working on an event-loop simulation framework for PHP
the garbage collector had literally just been added
to PHP that is
it's the only reason we even attempted it
it was a micro-services websocket application for a mobile application, the idea being that we could create concurrency and performance while created a push oriented UI for both mobile and desktop
as for why, in 2013, we decided to do that in PHP instead of Node? well, devs are more expensive than servers early on, and our team had more PHP experience. plus, we were using react to basically attach instances of our application to logical CPU cores to do what was basically on-chip load distribution.
the application was designed so that each server had one core dedicated to network. it then used sockets to connect to other application instances on the other cores that would actually process the request/event, and would thus get to decide which core to distribute the task to.
we were able to get better performance than allowing the OS to schedule because the app could predict (since it was aware of the app structure) which kinds of events would require more resources
so it didn't distribute based on number of tasks, but on predicted execution time
but it was only marginally better
definitely not worth the cost of developing it
it might have been if the application was handling like 50 million users
@DaveRandom no worries. I only got tickets on the assumptions it will be safe by then, as currently the numbers are dropping nicely according to coronavirus.data.gov.uk
Because I ran the entire department and hired every dev that worked for me myself, so I know all of their salaries and what they were working on at what times.
In regards to Amp's socket connector: A DNS query returns a number of hosts and config has a number of connection tries before failing. Do I try each host that given number of times or do I only try that many times, even if I do not exhaust the list?
hmmm … Is there any particular reason why we don't allow static someclass::somemethod(...) access of non-static methods? I.e. make someclass::somemethod(...)->call(new someclass) work
@bwoebi I would like to have Closure::fromCallable(classname::instance_method) generate a closure which can be bound, and if it isn't bound then it errors.
But honestly, I want to try implementing value witness tables to allow for generic and specialized Vector like people are suggesting on list ^_^ So I don't think I'll be working on Closure::fromCallable anytime soon.
@LeviMorrison looks like a time waste to me, I think we should rather push towards a $intArray = <int>[1, 2, 3]; if we want something in that regard … and regarding memory usage, we're about to get github.com/php/php-src/pull/7491
> AddressSanitizer:DEADLYSIGNAL ================================================================= ==1337662==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: SEGV on unknown address 0x603000001d80 (pc 0x603000001d80 bp 0x7ffd8d05edc0 sp 0x7ffd8d05eda8 T0) ==1337662==The signal is caused by a READ memory access. ==1337662==Hint: PC is at a non-executable region. Maybe a wild jump? #0 0x603000001d80 (<unknown module>)
AddressSanitizer can not provide additional info. SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: SEGV (<unknown module>)