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00:56
Does this require RFC? I asked on Reddit and people seem ok with dropping its support reddit.com/r/PHP/comments/rt6y87/…
I think the only way is to drop the support in 8.2 with no warning period
@Dharman probably....but it doesn't need to be a long one.
@Dharman well, as long as there are no major voices against it on ml, open a PR dropping it and announce that … if there's no-one objecting just go ahead
the rfc process is really for anything describing semantics and where consensus is not obvious
ok, thanks
beltalowda
@PatrickAllaert I probably can delete stuff - should I?
@Dharman FWIW, I think this does require a small RFC - removing things...
01:18
IMO, it should have an RFC, even if it's a boring one.
phpstorm complaining that "multifactor" is a typo, but if I change it to the suggested "multi-factor" ... "this word is normally spelled as one" ... -_-
01:47
I feel like I'm forgetting something really obvious. If I were using a language with templates/generics, I'd be trying to make a function like doSomething<SomeType>(), where SomeType implements SomeInterface. Is there a cleaner, slightly more typed design pattern for PHP other than doSomething(SomeType::class) and manually checking if the class in the argument implements the interface?
You can use psalm which will allow you to restrict it, but otherwise no there's not
/** @psalm-param class-string<SomeType> $foo */ function doSomething(string $foo) { ... }
natta
JRL
JRL
02:19
I think that's my last message on the ML for this topic
i'll get an answer or i won't
but i don't think anything else i say will be productive
@404NotFound You can type against the interface? function doSomething(SomeInterface $bar){ ...} - but possibly you're asking a different question.
Or are you just passing class names?
I'd want to create/fetch the instance of the class within doSomething so I can't type directly against the interface without the object yet.
Yeah, no. PHP sucks.
Lol, yeah there are plenty of ways I can solve this, so it's no problem. I thought I had seen a clever way to sort of achieve what I was imagining, but maybe not.
02:58
@404NotFound You can restrict to objects implementing an interface with psalm by using @template T as InterfaceName
@param class-string<T> $className Psalm will complain if you pass a class name for $className that does not implement InterfaceName.
It's what we've got :|
 
2 hours later…
05:08
https://twitter.com/KFC_ES/status/1460577590612312064
https://twitter.com/KFC_ES/status/1478037310075715588
https://twitter.com/KFC_ES/status/1472905792156311556
Was not expecting that
And I forgot how funny that video was
"nobody wants your homemade cranberry sauce" as a lyric is now stuck in my head
05:25
"I forgot how funny that video was" - well, here's something to balance that out.
> "'Come to Daddy' came about while I was just hanging around my house, getting pissed and doing this crappy death metal jingle. Then it got marketed and a video was made, and this little idea that I had, which was a joke, turned into something huge. It wasn't right at all."
Before clicking, is this existential horror
Or grimdark, or dystopian
yes.
It reminds me of Croyden.
Remind me in the morning then :P
05:40
Or remind after the pandemic... I'm not sure I'll be able to deal with grimdark/dystopian/existential horror until then
 
1 hour later…
07:02
@Dharman yes, partly because the consensus gathered from two individuals is not very strong, and partly because this is the kind of change we want to do slowly, and have a record of how it was done, why, and when ... the RFC is that record ...
07:44
@JoeWatkins out of curiosity, do you know how soon or what the timeline might look like for when the PHP foundation will start spending money?
08:39
Also if the answer is "read this article" or "listen to podcast," please do tell me. Articles are easier to read but podcasts require more focus which is why I've yet to listen to the voices of elephpants one. I plan to, but if it explains the timeline, more incentive to listen to it sooner.
Reason for asking: my employer is interested in donating but is waiting to see funds be spent before donating. No real inclination on what functionality they're spent on, but need to go towards internals devs
Basically need to see "yes, the money is being spent on what it's intended"
09:32
Ugh, Croydon. Even worse for walking than the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.
10:01
@cmb the fix is good! hoping for a ship :D should I make a new PR with the tests and so on?
@Tiffany we planed to write a few words on the current state in the few next days, I hope we can start asap in a few weeks.
cmb
cmb
@beberlei a new PR would be nice.
@cmb great, will prepare it now
Good morning
10:44
I'm getting lots of weird segfaults lately... in Firefox, but also in node, and apt-get :-/
distro ?
11:13
nothing changed.... but it's debian (unstable)
:D
Well there you go
Why not bullseye ?
Need that cutting edge ?
Continuous upgrades. Doing release to release has burned me too many times. And yes, for some things I really need latest.
I'm wondering (worrying) whether it's hardware issue...
dmesg will let you know in case of a disk fuck up
usually
yeah, it's not disk
it seems to happen on memory pressure... but no real data
Perhaps a BIOS memcheck ?
I think mine has that
11:24
Yes, but that is going to take hours and I have so much shit running :D
haha
yeah I know what you mean
laptop or desktop
it's too heavy for a desktop
It'd break my desk
It's a 24 core / 48 threads 192GB mem kinda machine
What you runing on? ENIAC ?
lol
threadripper
Wow very nice
yeah a memcheck on that will take about a year
mem pressure on a 192GB
Damn
11:27
lots of filecache though
Swap being touched ?
I have basically the whole cassini mission website in memory
Wait why
some swap, about 13G used
Why? Because I just grepped through it (by some mistake)
Try turning off swap ... push the memory see what happens
11:28
all ends up in the file cache...
sudo sync; sudo bash -c "echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches" #Drop them all
... I really don't want to mess with that :D
I have ran that in critical situations, it's just frees mem, you can experiment some degree of freeze but it will come back
in your case tho
Still curious why do you have the casini website in memory, were you related to the mission's website ?
Trying to rescue it.
The probe ?
11:32
No, the probe has burned up in Saturn
That's why I asked, so moving the site
@Derick Good stuff man, very happy for you that you are able to contribute to a cause like that
and Ramsey but I don't see him around, props to you both
currently implementing search on a static side
god I hate javascript
11:49
I'm neutral in regards to it
I guess you could hate any language, depends on who wrote the code and how he wrote it :D
IGP
IGP
12:33
@Derick Imagine being angry because a volunteer doesn't act like a slave
@IGP I'm of the opinion that if you say you're going to do it, you should. Or at least communicate well.
IGP
IGP
That's fine, but I'm more of the opinion you get what you paid for.
Of the same opinion here, why volunteer in the first place if you are not going to do it
Exactly why I don't commit to contribute to PHP, I know I want to but I also know I don't have that kind of time
I assume it was more work than the volunteer expected. But yeah either way, communication is key. If you're not gonna do it, let them know so they can look for somebody else instead of wasting time.
IGP
IGP
I also agree on that, but again, this person had an urgent task and just dumped it on twitter
It rubs me the wrong way 🤔
12:46
Morning!
`o/
^ Feather on head
13:01
@IGP Well yeah, they didn't set them up for success either
IGP
IGP
I liked all the titles given to Ben and Derrick
Master of PHP Programming
Expert in MySQL Databases
`scripter`

Might have to steal one of those for my resume.
You've heard of master of php programming, but id rather be a master exploder youtube.com/watch?v=80DtQD5BQ_A
13:17
https://www.hispasonic.com/index.php?controller=track&action=play&track_id=121735

Haven't checked this guy in a while, good compositions
IGP
IGP
@MarkR Thank you for reminding me this exists
 
1 hour later…
14:26
@Tiffany a reminder. basically, it's a music video that set out to take the piss out of heavy metal music videos....and accidentally made a really great music video.
youtube.com/watch?v=lOVs1w2nAg8 my favourite kind of death metal
Please pay special attention to his facial expressions
14:53
@JRL Thought. Would left operator +($other) be a more compelling argument for operator, like Andreas suggests? left or right would be nonsensical on function, but could potentially make sense on operator. And might allow for separate left and right methods, thus eliminating some intra-method clumsiness.
@Crell Swift has custom operators where you can specify the associativity, which a caveat. Every operator has the same associativity. How would a different associativity of the same operator even work? We couldn't fully parse binary expressions until runtime when we know the types of the nodes, which is impossible because we'd already need to run some to know what types they result in.
I think in terms of macro expansion, so I imagine it would logically be something like this:
I also don't think any of this could even be pulled off with Bison which would mean a major overhaul of the parser for a niche case of a niche case.
// $a + $b
if (method_exists(typeof($a), 'left+') {
  return typeof($a) . 'left+' ($b);
}
if (method_exists(typeof($b), 'right+') {
  return typeof($b) . right+' ($a);
}
else {
  // Error
}
Clarifying what I wrote above: In Swift, if I introduce a new operator, the operator will have the same associativity for all expressions, regardless of the types it operates on. Operators are also declared at the root of every file. I suspect Swift does a shallow parse to look for these operators and configure the parser before actually parsing the file.
15:04
I don't think what I'm describing is appreciably different from what the RFC does now, is it?
@Crell I don't understand this code. Maybe we're talking about different things. Left/right associativity usually determines how a chain of infix expression is parsed. E.g. left assoc => (1 + 2 + 3) = ((1 + 2) + 3), right assoc => (1 + 2 + 3) = (1 + (2 + 3))
I don't mean associativity the way you are, I think. I mean to replace the $left boolean parameter to the method.
Oh, ok
Well, we've just seen one case of confusion due to the left keyword in action :D
:-P
15:42
IMOSHO the idea of the RFC works just fine with magic methods, modulo the aesthetics of using magic methods, and would be very close to passing. To be clear, I don't think the RFC can be switched now......it needs to be left for some time to let people forget about their feelings, and then re-written to make a better case.
@beberlei cheers
16:15
@Danack using magic methods I'd vote no on the RFC. The last thing we need is even more magic
I'm in favor of keeping it simple and implementing interfaces
Sounds like we need a syntax RCV poll...
same case as \Traversable, etc
@ln-s The RFC already explains why interfaces are impossible.
@Crell no. Polls are shit for figuring out what is best. You just find what uninformed people think about about aesthetic choices.
@bwoebi other than the word 'magic' what's the problem with them?
16:18
Uninformed people voting based on their aesthetic choices is what an RFC vote is.
would only add the magic method with an interface, I don't think that's impossible, in fact I think any magic should be added only when you implement a certain interface
@ln-s no.
@ln-s Except the signature of the corresponding method is variable. The interface can only be a "marker interface" with no actual method attached.
@Danack generally specific names on classes having special meanings.
In addition to that, at least one current no voter has an objection to magic methods, based on the erroneous belief that generics would be useful here. But they're not.
16:22
If it were me constructors would be for example just the class name like in some other languages
They used to be.
@bwoebi Fair, and if it was me, they wouldn't exist.....but that's probably a tangent...
@Danack Static methods only?
yep. make(Foo::class) creates a blank object and everyone has to use static constructors to do initialisation........slightly cost in DX for a less insanity in the language.
I would likely quibble over details, but the broad strokes I could get on board with.
Though RO properties and CPP means that has a lot of interesting implications...
/me gets off the tangent and back to the sin.
16:26
@Crell Similar reasons to here using a poll turns the pressure around. At least when the RFC author has decided on a syntax, it's their responsibility to think through all the implications of choices. If you put it up to a poll, the RFC author is relieved of that pressure, and would have the attitude of "the poll chose the syntax, someone else can find problems with it".
@Danack I think I remember listening to this at some point during my life, probably on an industrial playlist somewhere
"it's their responsibility to think through all the implications of choices"

Same is the responsibility of adding two incompatible types, I'm not sold on the idea that interfaces can not be applied
Most of the time I'd agree. But when the need is to find consensus, not to find The Objectively Best(tm) (because no one can agree what that is), a poll is a useful tool. Not a legal ruling, but a useful data point.
@Tiffany as I said, it's just like Croyden.
When dealing with voting, subjective irrational preferences do matter. That's what most people vote on. So investigating that angle is useful.
16:29
@Danack I don't know what Croyden is
/me gets back to hating on generic XML deserialization as a problem space. Dear fliping gads.
@Danack that needs more thoughts when combined with inheritance if you want the parent initializer
@Crell still working on XML parsing?
But in general not opposed either
I've gone as far as concluding that methods intrinsic to an object are the wrong approach to begin with, and Go/Rust have the better idea, although I'd likely go a bit farther. :-) Product types that you can syntax-sugar a function on to.
16:31
@Tiffany It's a place in London...... that is full of grimdark and dystopian.
London suburb/neighborhood.
@Tiffany Yeah. Or more specifically XML support for my Serde library. Geesh.
@ln-s "I'm not sold on the idea that interfaces can not be applied" - well that's handy, because I'm not selling it.
@Crell That's not the pattern I've observed. What happens when you ask people their opinion on an aesthetic choice is they will make an uninformed decision, and then become committed to that decision, even when people point out problems with it. So it selects for choices that "look nice" on the surface, not for sound technical choices.
I'd hire them and world tour as "Uncle Freddy's freak show"
We don't even know what % of the electorate would vote for operators iff the syntax was X (for any definition of X). Simply guessing is not a useful strategy. And if people aren't listening to, or swayed by, the rational arguments, we've got basically no other options.

Really, I'm surprised by your opposition to "collecting some data to make an informed decision."
guy at 1:20 would be actually good for a deathcore band
16:39
@Crell iirc, Anthony had some protocols rfc
"then become committed to that decision," - @crell have you ever read Influence ?
I have not, though I am familiar with the idea of push polls. That's not what I'm describing here.
Polling for what FIG's mission should be turned out to be extremely useful for breaking deadlock there.
@Crell the difference might be when the choice is between reasonably similarly acceptable choices, then a poll is useful (e.g. the attribute syntax). When it's for completely difference choices, where the trade-offs are subtle and hard to think about, then not so much. e.g. multiple people still thinking that interfaces and interfaces with generics would be useful for the operator overload idea, even though that's partially covered in the RFC text.
That's when the RFC author / poll author only includes options that would actually be viable/implementable/he's wiling to do.
In this case, operator, magic methods, and attributes would all get the job done. All have tradeoffs, pros and cons. Which set of tradeoffs is optimal is much more subjective than "no, interfaces just don't actually work."
A good poll would include a summary of those tradeoffs for those who can only tldr.
cmb
cmb
16:57
Maybe just start with a PECL extension and see where that's going. Users can actually use it, and be better informed about where it works good, and where are issues. :)
Language-syntax-altering PECL extensions are useless. You're making a language fork at that point, which means your code is unusable by anyone else, so it won't get used. That gives you zero useful data over how it would play out in actual practice.
cmb
cmb
Yeah, you can't change the syntax, but at least give something to use. And maybe users actually see that the syntax change would be welcome (or not).
I mean as it's now, the RFC is likely to fail; and the former RFC failed as well. And the only alternative is PECL/op, which does no longer work AFAIK.
Curiously, I think the previous RFC did a bit better, although it was objectively worse IMO.
The "something to use" right now is... methods?
@Crell I do find it curious how close that RFC came to passing.
Pipes has a logical "something to use" in user space; it's objectively inferior, but it is kinda like it. Operators don't have that option.
@Danack Honestly, "who happens to be paying attention to vote" seems to be the primary factor in what passes and doesn't in some cases.
It's not that people's minds change, it's who votes changes.
Ugh. I don't know what to do with this code, but it would take hours to get someone up to speed enough to be able to offer a second opinion.
17:31
@Danack Croydon is not in London :-þ
It smells like it is.
I wouldn't know, I have no sense of smell.
17:48
Covid, paradoxically making London more inhabitable.
Hah, I've had no smell since I can remember.
@Derick How can I rebuild parse_date.c?
@IluTov github.com/derickr/timelib/blob/master/Makefile#L43 — but get the paths right (need to be from the root of the php-src tree), and also get the re2c version right (0.15.3).
@Derick Thanks!
@IluTov What are you changing? :-)
17:51
I thought it was a feature request but it's actually a bug. DateTime already supports milliseconds for unix timestamps, the - is lost for the milliseconds though.
Oh right, the fractional part is certainly a feature. But if you're fixing something in timelib -> github.com/derickr/timelib is where the PR belongs
@Derick Oh, sorry, I didn't realize that was managed somewhere else. So, do you just copy the changes back manually then?
I do for every "timelib" release. There are a few outstanding issues still, but I haven't had time yet for it.
issues with datetime and timelib - wrt to transitions I meant
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ is about how our PM is handling it too
18:02
but we have the data to prove it...
😂 ... 😭
18:15
... Aaaaand trying to update to 8.1 CLI on Ubuntu just broke and jammed Apt. Great. Just great.
eh?
how so?
dpkg: error processing archive /var/cache/apt/archives/libpcre2-posix2_10.39-2+ubuntu21.10.1+deb.sury.org+1_amd64.deb (--unpack):
trying to overwrite '/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpcre2-posix.so.3', which is also in package libpcre2-posix3:amd64 10.37-0ubuntu2
Seems to be a known packaging issue. There's forum posts about it.
Resolved.
18:29
... Seriously, Github, the confetti is excessive.
18:41
Don't mix packages from different repos
different ppas?
or something else... I'm curious if I've misspoke
JRL
JRL
19:17
@Crell I replied to it on the ML. It would require some cleverness on zend_class_entry, and would be less intutitive at first because its so different from the rest of PHP. But it's an interesting idea.
If you can convince enough people about operator in the first place, I think it's promising. May be a good argument in favor of operator.
But again, depends how many people are voting no to the concept vs implementation.
JRL
JRL
so far, nikita
I still don't get how this one is doing less well than the previous one, which was much sloppier.
JRL
JRL
in fact, joe, marco, and james all made a point to say that they thinki did an amazing job on the implementation on RFC, they just don't believe in the feature itself
@Crell that is quite puzzling, yes
it was way less thought through, it created far more problems in future scope, but... it was far more "PHP"
i am actually less convinced at this point to repropose with magic methods
the objection to tooling/static analysis strikes me as a red herring
enum required more changes to static analysis than this will
@JRL I'm pretty sure it would have passed. At least some of the people saying they wouldn't support that approach have some bad ideas about how it could work. An RFC that lays out why magic methods are a good approach wouldn't have that source of confusion.
JRL
JRL
19:28
i dunno
if we look at the votes from php-src contributors only
i think its actually passing
Enums are going to used by the majority of projects. Although really useful where they are appropriate, operator overloads are probably going to be used by less than 5% of projects in say 10 years time.
JRL
JRL
i haven't heard any feedback from someone with only doc karma though
who voted no
I will send you a joke via twitter.....that's not appropriate for here.
JRL
JRL
well actually, james has only doc karma and he provided feedback to me
not that it matters how someone has voting karma, i'm just unsure if implementation details are likely to be the driving factor there?
A tiny fraction of people vote based on the actual code implementation. Nikita may be the only one I know of. :-) Maybe Joe or Sara take that into account.
19:33
I'm like 80% idea, 20% implementation
JRL
JRL
right because outside of large things (like the syntax that nikita mentioned) implementation can be improved after vote
Another precinct heard from. :_)
For example, this user-defined operator overloads (which I still haven't looked at properly) has a massive RFC and that's a positive vote by default
And I abstain, generally.
Cause I don't want to make the language worse to maintain from lack of understanding what's going on
JRL
JRL
@Tiffany that's an admirable position considering how unrestrained in that regard others might be
19:48
@IluTov 3v4l.org/IIhNF - This seems like a bug to me, no?
20% feature, 50% pain, 30% rejection leading to never making an RFC again.
... this is showing how poor my knowledge of music lyrics is
JRL
JRL
"10% luck, 20% skill, 15% concentrated power of will... 5% pleasure, 50% pain, and 100% reason to remember the name"
^ original lyrics
that sounds more like it :D
IGP
IGP
Put me out of my misery, this meeting is killing me.
I thought it was linkin park for some reason
20:01
i tried so hard and i got so far but in the end it doesn't even matter
Hmm… that does sound like Linkin Park…
You know, it's a weird feeling struggling to maintain PHP 8.0 compatibility in a library... when a number of things get easier if I can require 8.1.
JRL
JRL
10% I'm stuck, 20% 'still!?', 15% these voters all need to chill... 5% feature, 50% pain, and 100% reason to never do it again
is the best i could come up with
@ln-s Well that I knew, I meant what @JRL said :-)
20:05
Oh
Now do 2pac
JRL
JRL
@Trowski it's Fort Minor which is Mike Shinoda's independent work name. Mike Shinoda is the person who does all the rapping on Linkin Park's songs.
Do they even play anymore ?
JRL
JRL
Linkin Park?
without chester
ye
JRL
JRL
Chester Bennington died
ah
20:06
I know he killed himself
JRL
JRL
i don't know. i think Mike said he wants to
@Crell Yeah
Can you create an issue on GitHub?
And assign it to me
Will do.
@JRL That's probably where I heard it. I'm quite familiar with Linkin Park. Definitely in my top 10.
@JRL Do you know who is the talent in the band ? I'm not a huge fan
20:11
@IluTov Hm, looks like I don't have assign permissions.
@IluTov github.com/php/php-src/issues/7887 - If you can edit it.
youtube.com/watch?v=hJf6jy6PMY4 this is what I think of when I hear Mike Shinoda
Huh. And ReflectionEnum::isInstantiable() returns true. I would expect false. Also a bug?
@Crell Thanks!
@Crell Yeah, same thing.
@IluTov github.com/php/php-src/issues/7888 - Gift for you.
Honest question: Are either of those trivial enough that I should bother looking into them myself?
20:28
@Crell Shit, we even reviewed it. We have the best memory it seems :D
/shrug
20:51
Hah, well, looks like someone beat us to it.
21:11
@IluTov OK, here's fun... If I call ReflectionEnum::getClassConstants(), there doesn't seem to be any way to filter that to just real constants, not cases.
cmb
cmb
21:54
@IluTov elephpants never forget :P
securer
22:13
@Crell I guess, can you think of a case where you'd need that?
What I'm doing right now; Trying to "audit" a class/enum to get a list of all of its pieces.
The only way to get a list of the constants is to get a list of the cases first, then the constants, then filter out the cases.

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