@Wes sounds like the child was launched detached from console, what did you actually do?
you can manually attach a console from within the child process, possibly also from the parent, there's no way in the stdlib but should be fairly trivial with ffi
It's not strictly our problem, but psalm complains about it. In TS if you say something is void, it means don't use this value. So things, often callbacks, use it as their return type to indicate it doesn't matter what they return, or nothing at all.
I dunno, I'd almost turn psalm off for those situations, at least for complaining about the return type, instead of trying to make PHP fit something else
Well you say such things make no sense, but there's a reason they're widely used in the languages that support them. Someone, I forget whom, actually found a solution to it for PHP which was to define a single case enum.
It's unrelated, Girgias was having a little dig at my other want which was for another unit type that could be initialized in properties etc to signify that data was omitted even in the presence of a value which could be null (e.g. any nullable foreign key in a database)
That's pretty much it, but doing that properly would need good ol generics and that seems unlikely. For now using a single-cased enum will get the job done, basically define my own undefined.
Consider, for example, a DTO that will insert a row into the database, the column is a nullable int, if you defined the parameter as null|int that's fine, as long as you wanted to definitely assign it. But let's say I wanted the choice to not pass a value to it, I could do null|int|Undefined and default it to Undefined::Undefined (ugly but yeah). It would act as the equivilent of a missing key in an array.
I'm not sure what you mean by that, but using a value to indicate the absence of a value is common, it's usually null, but in some cases null itself is a valid value, hence the need for another.
Box it in a custom Either type by creating an Enum which has left which returns the actual type, and right which returns null and then you can have ?Either as you're type, where null represents absence of value
(or vice versa I don't remember what the convention is for right and left)
@MarkR Okay I forgot that we don't have tagged enums yet, but you can write it as such (and yes proper generics would help, but you can still box it and use mixed and getters in general): 3v4l.org/q5hJ5
You can actually double match and use the return value by doing an instanceof check in the first thing now that I think about it
I get where you're coming from, although needing to make one for each isn't appealing. I was thinking along the lines of 3v4l.org/L1p0t#v8.1.3 the first two could be ?string and ?int but for the sake of consistency treating everything as an Unknown would allow more consistent reflection. It's not pretty though
A bit more of a hassle to map between PHP <-> JSON which is what we're going to be using it for. We need to create objects that can be hydrated for POST / PATCH etc and then be manipulated, while detecting only those fields which were passed, ideally in a consistent way
The problem here, is that the only thing what it tells me is the reason you want something like undefined is to handle JSON which is due to (IMO) JS's stupid decision. And you'd have this issue with any other language which is not JS
Because in other instances I don't see why you'd need anything else, where boxing it (or using a custom domain type) isn't the, IMHO, better/"proper" solution
undefined isn't part of JSON, it comes from how javascript exposes a missing object key within an object. { "abc": "1", "def": "2" } itself doesn't have an undefined, unless you were also expecting a "ghi" key that was not sent as part of the datastructure
If it was stdClass you could use property_exists, but naturally that doesn't have any typing or defined properties associated with it
if $foo['missingkey'] returned 'undefined' rather than 'null' you'd effectively have the same as how JS handles it.
Right, but as I mentioned, null can mean multiple things. It's the difference between an array with a key that has a value of null, and an array that doesn't have that key at all.
Which is why I'm wanting to use objects, for the typing, but I need a way to differentiate between something which has a value of null, and something which isn't known (e.g. wasn't sent in the payload for example).
If they're dealing with the same domain, typically no. You would have one PHP class which would have all 3 properties, all of which would be unioned with Undefined. You would be able to tell that the ghi key had not been sent by comparing it against Undefined
HTTP PATCH is the main one, you only define the keys that you want to change
In TS you would have your full interface / structural type e.g. MyData with all its properties defined, and then the patch handler would be Partial<MyData> which automatically makes a new interface with all of the properties able to be undefined.
Which is quite handy because you can do const fullObject: MyData = { ...myDefaults, ...postedData }; and the undefined methods from the postedData don't overwrite the properties in myDefaults with undefined
If the properties were set by injecting them all into prompted constructor, they would all need to be set or have default values, so they'd all be initialized.
I've been contaminated by the monad virus (after finally grasping them by using a different motivation), so I just wanna tell you to use one and box it (which cleary isn't practical given the use case)
But yeah you enum thing is pretty solid, but then you're adding this into the "higher" domain because you specifically need this for an aspect to handle the PATCH request
I mean the uninitialised state is über weird
And from my understanding it's just to not have the default null value which is written to properties
I mean in some sense you could say it's just a nice error instead of throwing a TypeError that you're trying to read null from something which is not of type null (but that breaks down when you consider nullable types also have this nice behaviour)