@Tiffany I dumped extra money into my dev computer to put 64GB of ram in it, and i definitely notice. it's let me run multiple dev environments in VMs simultaneously, but I also use my computer for things like video production.
the place i notice it most is definitely in video rendering. doing a 1080p render in davinci while running a video game as i wait for it to finish is... very nice.
I think holding out a few years for AM5 and DDR5 to gain maturity, and i'll probably leapfrog over to 128GB although I'm considering going fully virtualized next time.
we did not win though. but we did drink until it didn't matter
also y'all are awesome
Tonight, I was told that maybe I was a player that was a bit tiresome to play against
which, honestly, sounds like a compliment, but it's also a way to get penalties
Upon the empty spray of my shots on net, There appeared some player, wanting to get sure they'd block, My very best shots on net, Where sadly, the puck didn't get
hmmm, one thing that i need to implement but im not really sure how, is throwing an exception/error if the operator method results in a call to the same operator method, as that would result in an infinite callback loop
since it comes through as an opcode first instead, without the function handler context, i'm not exactly sure how i would check that inside the do_operation handler
notably, it should only throw the error if the call is made on the same object
to allow things like calling the parent
i don't think the do_operation handler call is added to the vm stack because of how it goes through the vm, so i don't think i could inspect that.
@JRL it is (each zend_call_function creates a VM frame, but additionally leaves a remnant on the stack) - but don't even think about it. The true way to resolve that would be "simply" sending it back to VM…
Around 15-30 reading RFC and producing questions, 15 mins inviting and audio setup, 30-45 minutes recording, 60-90 minutes editing, and then 30-45 minutes doing the transcript, and 15 minutes doing the web stuff.
so between 3 and 3½ hours then. But that's without breaks.
@Danack apparently i lied. I forgot to add the condition to check for the ZEND_ACC_CLOSURE to the VM. I just pushed a commit that fixed this, so now it will work like my email said, and you can directly call the operator implementation via a closure.
the polymorphic handler future scope would handle that if BigNumber extended Number
but yeah, there's some edge cases there. basically, i wanted operator overloads to make as few assumptions about the program as possible. to remove as much magic as possible. you should get errors instead of unexpected calculations, basically.
I was mainly concerned with the performance impact. Devs expect lines such as $c = $a + $b; to be lightning fast, and I was unsure of how I could efficiently handle that. Which is more a limitation of me as an implementer than something which can't be done.
i was writing some rust code a bit earlier, and i hope PHP static analyzers would eventually support some of the stuff in there ( specifically around async/multi-threading ).
Well, that, and the fact that one of the big reasons the last operator overload RFC was rejected was for doing exactly this by suppressing the type error.