@cmb github.com/marketplace/actions/send-email Knowing nothing about PHPs infra, could we not simply configure the SMTP we already have to send mails directly via Github actions?
And maintain a list of people wanting to get notified somewhere on Github. Not a great solution but could do the job.
@FlávioHeleno if you're having fun.....crack on mate. But I still think either adding new examples, or updating old ones, or adding descriptive words to the examples Mr ThW has already made might be a more productive thing to do.
Cannot vote to delete answer to a different question that has been upvoted too many times. stackoverflow.com/a/22100877/2943403 With just four more votes, I can pass it to SOCVR as a del-pls request.
i wasn't so much talking about it being unsafe, although it can be sometimes... more that it's pretty easy to put together a regex that looks like it's capturing how you want it to on all your test strings, and then goes bonkers on actual data
would it make sense to propose introduction of #[Transient] attribute for properties?
currently I use a trait with __serialize(): array method which filters properties including #[Trannsient] attribute but I feel like it should be a general language feature
@JRL There are probably several thousand questions that are marked as duplicate of that one.....at some point, taking the piss is more effective than trying to teach people to 'unask' the question.
@Crell Yes, it's helpful if you wanna store serialized object in persistent storage but wanna filter out services/resources which you can only inject after unserialize
the same feature exists in Java world since like ever
@MarkR if adding an attribute and built-in support makes it easier to maintain a feature like this then yes, this is one of the features which reflect use cases from other languages nothing not-generic what would deserve being built-in feature I think
I'd consider the #[Transient] attribute on any serialization mechanism, despite of current or future ones
@brzuchal Hm. If you implement __serialize(), though, that would be ignored as you're doing your own logic anyway. So it's more of automating a common case of __serialize, but in a way that third party serializers (like the one I just wrote) could also look for and respect as well, if they were so inclined.
Though in practice I'd expect derived values to be a more common use case than services, unless people are doing something stupid. (Which they often do.)
hey @JoeWatkins, what was your thoughts on adding the internal separation between == and <=> in the VM so that objects could intercept with do_operation handlers if they wanted to?
i know nikic said that might be worthwhile on its own
Nothing has been merged into the PHP-8.1.2 branch since the RC was tagged two weeks ago. I'm about to tag the 8.1.2 release, so I'm double-checking whether that sounds correct.
@cmb Yeah, exactly. I mean, I don't mind sending it with my gmail address either but a PHP address might be less surprising for other people ^^ Thanks for the contact!