Guys, which one is correct? (English perspective) - Having two files inside the root - Having two files on the root - Having two files in the root - Having two files at the root
Either two files inside the root / two files in the root. Having something 'on' root suggests that it's attached to it, having two files at the root suggests proximity but not necessarily within.
Most people would understand them all given sufficient context
@Tiffany The magic method doesn't actually exist. I assume the intension was to document how Generators cannot be serialized. Maybe remove that page and add a note to the generator intro page?
Well, the method page should probably be removed now. Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined method Generator::__wakeup()
You could add a warning about not being able to serialize to the warning box on the Generator front page about not being able to instantiate Generator.
I think thorough is better, at least to state that something will not work to reduce confusion of "but this method exists in PHP 7.0, where is it documented?"
Annoying, sure. Probably annoying for translators, also sure. :/
going by doc.php.net/tutorial/structure.php, the version list near the top of a manual page is generated by a versions.xml file, I'm guessing, but that's mainly for extensions... is there a similar file for non-extension manual pages?
I saw print-version-for but that gets built in phd... I don't see how phd would assign the value
i had a variable that wasn't being gc'd correctly, so i added a zend_ptr_dtor() to zend_vm_def in the appropriate handlers if the zval was an object
but apparently it was being gc'd correctly for certain objects, because i destroyed the pointer while it was still used for other functions and now segfaulted like 30 tests
i should document the things i've been discovering/learning in doing this RFC
only thing is that i'm apparently learning them wrong since i keep encountering these subtle bugs
It saves the opline so that when you throw an exception in it, it is possible to go to the correct catch block
IIRC that's only why you need it
> As such, before performing any operation that might possibly throw, the local opline must be written back into the execute data (SAVE_OPLINE operation). Similarly, after any potentially throwing operation the local opline must be populated from execute data (mostly a CHECK_EXCEPTION operation).
im "fixing" this memory issue by manually checking the ce for function handler defs depending on opcode inside the vm handler prior to dtor-ing the pointer, because i don't see another way to do it
i had my brute force solution nearly finished, so im going to at least see if that resolves the test failures, but this is pretty far outside my skillset and may need to wait until the RFC is accepted for someone else to actually spend time on it
i just don't want to dump something that is half finished on the RMs for 8.2 if it did get accepted
@cmb Okay great, wasn't sure if there are permissions issues
I guess in this case it probably makes more sense to open a new issue that says what needs to be documented, so one doesn't have to filter through that guys life story and opinions ;)
what's the opinion of using "like" to give an example in the manual? For example, "As of PHP 8.0, instanceof can now be used with arbitrary expressions, like $obj instanceof (expression)."
I think it should be different, but I can't think of what phrasing to use instead
"As of PHP 8.0, instanceof can now be used with arbitrary expressions, i.e. $obj instanceof (expression)."
"As of PHP 8.0, instanceof can now be used with arbitrary expressions, e.g. $obj instanceof $foo."