@Derick found the issue curl was created with extension .bak under /usr/bin/curl.bak renamed it to /usr/bin/curl and it sorted it.I dont understand how or why it saved itself as .bak though.
I usually get the altitude and I am trying to get the speed and end up over shooting the altitude range before the speed is there. My trajectory has to be more flat- I'm climbing too fast.
Sometimes I feel like I even try to rocket down and I still climb.
I have this $aCategoryNames[] = $this->lookupCategory((int)$sID) ?: ''; where lookupCategory can return false if a category name doesn't exist for a corresponding ID, but I don't want to assign '' to the array... I'd rather just...ignore it, but doing an array_filter on the array after feels sloppy, but I'm not sure of a better way. The lookupCategory method does return array_key_exists($nID, $kCategories) ? $kCategories[$nID] : false;
I have to map a bunch of values to an associative array, using one-liners is convenient in that process, but I'm not sure of the cleanliness of my code...
@FaizanAkramDar Interestingly, none of these are what I find GraphQL to be useful for. Queries and mutations are select and update statements with other names. What I find it really useful for is wrapping disparate data sources, different data acquisition strategies, and data storage, in one robust interface.
Some of these data sources use SQL, others might not, others may be 3rd party apis
Naming Things question: I want to look on an object property for a given attribute. If that attribute is not found, and the property is typed to be a given class, I want to scan that class for the same attribute. What would you call a thing where that is viable and desired?
Transitive is all I'm coming up with, but that feels wrong.
Could it be doing too much? Like maybe should the part that detects if the attribute isn't found should be in another method or a level up in the callstack?
@Kacper'Kadet'Donat zend_check_type is closest, the most important thing is not how you check types (you might want to write a function rather than re-use for that, I'm not sure), the most important thing to get right is when you check types ...
@JoeWatkins Yeah, that's basically what I've found in the code and I will probably write my own function based on that. And when, well, I should note that this is really slow and therefore be really careful with typechecks?
As I'm basically implementing type checking for array entries - yes, every typed entry is checked every time type check occurs and I don't really see way around it. But type check occurs only when it's needed i.e. when calling functions, value return etc. so it should be quite rare.
@Danack Oh that's good to know, and performance-wise now it'd be even harder hit because of union types and intersection types. And even harder to implement because of typed properties.
The only even potentially performant way to do that would be to check the type of a value when it's added. Then you can assume after that it is an acceptable type.
@Danack I meant that If we performed type check of a value when it's added this would basically be a class with typed properties, not type check for arrays.
In user space, it would be a class wrapping an array and providing type checks on insert. That's easy to write. An in-C implementation would likely be faster, but do the same basic thing.
And I suppose that the main problem with arrayof performance is that it'd be hard to distinguish between array typehint that could be checked in O(1) and, for example, string[] which requires O(n)?
Also, if anyone want to take a look at the early draft of RFC for idea that I'm trying to implement here is a link: hackmd.io/@kadet/php-rfc-shapes. I know that this is not really likely to pass but implementing thing that I'd want to see in the language seems like a good way to learn something about internals.
@PeeHaa Every possible argument would have to be defined in place, resulting in potentially very long function definition inside of class, and still it'd not be possible to define more complex structure.
And it would also allow to make more complex structures with nested arrays, that are properly checked and IDEs would have metadata to provide us sweet completions.
@MarkR Nah, it's almost exactly like interfaces in typescript. Basically - arrays will still be plain arrays, that can be modified freerly (except for typed properties...) but there will be in-language way to check if array has correct keys and types via typehint.
But the performance difference would be enormous. An expression creating a particular shape could determine that shape at build time, assigning it a generated ID, other shapes could compare against IDs rather than every property, and cache the result
>An expression creating a particular shape could determine that shape at build time, assigning it a generated ID, other shapes could compare against IDs rather than every property, and cache the result
It would be defined by a ce, but would not have class behaviour. class A and class B are not interchangable even if they have the exact same properties, but shape A and shape B would be
Copied by values and easy to create, no separate file for example. Without array shapes they are completely useless except for maintaining internal state
shape FooShape {
"str": string; // value associated with "str" key must be a string
"num"?: int; // value associated with optional "num" key must be integer
}
@PeeHaa For now in my implementation uses custom zend_shape structure, which contains name, flags and entries (and later probably more stuff, but for PoC it's enough), which are stored in custom shape_table (yeah, yet another symbol table...)
But the basic concept is to introduce named_type_table, which would contain all information about named types - in this case shapes and classes, and potentially in the future more things like aliases
@Kacper'Kadet'Donat Honestly, I think you're barking up the wrong tree. DBC functionality shouldn't be limited to arrays; it makes even more sense on object properties and function parameters. Implementing that is basically pattern matching, which has an RFC and partial implementation already.
And at that point, a shape offers no advantage over an object, which already exists and works and is used all over the place.
If you really wanted to implement a new datatype in PHP, there are way more useful ones to add than shapes. :-)
@Crell Well, shapes are type that I'd personally want to see and that's why I'm implementing them. They are also quite complex so I could learn much about internals that could be later used for potentially better use.
And also, could you maybe name one of that "more useful types"?
Well, don't let me stop you from learning. :-) But your odds of getting it passed are low, precisely because of what I mentioned: everything you can do with shapes you can already do with objects today.
A true vector/list type and a true-dict type. Basically splitting arrays apart into what in every other language are two different types. (List and Dictionary in Python, slice and map in Go, etc.)
Both have been discussed, but not implemented on the grounds that "a whole new type like that is a lot of work." But if you're up for doing that level of work anyway, I'd love to steer you toward something that would be more useful and more likely to pass.
Yeah, but this would need to not be based on the current HashTable, this is hard on another level and unfortunately I don't think that I have enough knowledge about data structures to do that :/
And also, which is quite funny, I don't think that this would have benefit for me as PHP developer, where being able to create quick, easy to use types that are type safe and well defined would in fact be nice to have.
I see the point, but this is really low-level feature I think?
@Crell I was looking at a tutorial on mysqli oop and I seen some use $user->name in one part of the html and $user['name'] on a foreach so I didnt understand why
@Din if you don't understand what your code is doing, you should probably be stepping it through a debugger (i.e. xdebug) to figure out what is actually happening.
objects use the arrow operator -> for accessing things within the object like properties or methods (for context, JS uses . for method/property/what-have-you access)
there may be an underlying issue where there's a multidimensional array... which a debugger would help with... or if you're like me and can't use a debugger on your workstation, use a bunch of foreach loops and var_dumps to figure out wtf is going on
@Derick various reasons, but main reason is I'm too low on the beanpole to push it as a change. The code I work with now, I may actually be able to get a debugger working, but the other code base is too legacy, infrastructure doesn't really allow for a debugger to be useful. Also, I can't install PHP on it.