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04:18
Are you smart folks aware of this change? 3v4l.org/AOqjB Presented by stackoverflow.com/q/72002036/2943403 There is no answer if anyone wishes to explain the new behavior.
 
2 hours later…
Wes
Wes
06:12
am i the first to notice the "add true type fonts" rfc?
:B
 
2 hours later…
08:08
@Wes No, somebody else made the joke already here.
Wes
Wes
danack did :D i was referring to that :B
@cmb ext\standard\tests\mail\bug72964.phpt seems to be failing on master due to $info = imap_headerinfo($imap_stream, $i); failing (line 34)
morns
cmb
cmb
@Girgias oh! Looks like that's a parallel test run issue. I'll add conflict clauses.
 
1 hour later…
09:33
 
2 hours later…
MGE
MGE
11:32
Hello, when I add a boolean condition in WHERE (boolean field is an index) the query turn slow. How can be it possible? WHERE business_id = '131adasdasdsa' <- return fast. WHERE business_id = '131adasdasdsa' and active = 1 <- return slow. business_id and active are index
11:49
Morning
"Implement short functions with auto capture" github.com/php/php-src/pull/8330
 
2 hours later…
Wes
Wes
14:05
can we have nonlocal $var; as an alias to use(&$var) as well?
the reason is that nonlocal $var; is more easily collapsible, no odd parenthesis to indent, etc.
15:05
@cmb Who can create pecl releases: only the package authors or us as well? I rely on github.com/DomBlack/php-scrypt which is not really maintained, and I'd like to have a release with PHP 8 support.
Normally it's just package maintainers, but one can be added as a maintainer, but usually that requires asking the maintainer before we just ignore it
cmb
cmb
:54669110, official release can only be done by lead developer. I suggest you try to contact the maintainer; if they don't respond, write to the pecl-dev ML.
thanks for the responses! Yes, I have already filed an issue (github.com/DomBlack/php-scrypt/issues/62) but I doubt that I will get a positive answer
 
1 hour later…
16:24
Well fuck, I just found a buffer overflow bug in PECL/csv
It quasi impossible to hit, but still :|
Okay update, ot's not hard to hit, but its unusual
30x `Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property PhpParser\Node\Stmt\Class_::$namespacedName is deprecated in /home/sgolemon/dev/php/8.1/build/PHP-Parser-4.13.0/lib/PhpParser/NodeVisitor/NameResolver.php on line 245` while building a test run in php-src.

BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA That's actually, properly funny.
16:39
I think Nikita was about to make a new release that fixes that.
cmb
cmb
@Sara see github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser/releases/tag/v4.13.2; TL;DR: update to 4.13.2 (remove the installed files; new version is fetched automatically)
released 2021-11-30
Version is pinned in gen_stubs.php, and 8.1 has 4.13.0 pinned, which is a problem since it relies on installed PHP's lexer, so when I use an 8.2 lexer to build 8.1...

Anyway, yeah, quick fix is up the pinned version.
I just thought it was hilarious that (relatively recent version of) PHP-Parser (written by @NikiC) is impacted by the kill-dynamic-props RFC (written by @NikiC).
cmb
cmb
@Sara TIL that the version is pinned
 
2 hours later…
19:05
@Tpojka LOL! That is so true. I always think of Einstein's spooky action at a distance when this happens... just observing the fire changes the direction of the smoke.
@NikiC Just a reminder about re-reviewing this PR on atomics: github.com/php/php-src/pull/8327.
19:26
@Danack Nope nope nope. It's magic... believe in magic you muggle!
In all seriousness, that makes a lot of sense. I've never looked it up and just thought it was a coincidence.
@StatikStasis there's also an effect where the infrared from the fire hits your skin and makes you give off warm air, that rises directly above where you are.
I'm not going to draw a 3d diagram, but that creates a low pressure arc between you and the fire.
Helping to create a path for warm air to follow as it rises I assume.
Next time I am around a fire I will bust out this nerd fact and watch everyone's eyes glaze over (from my explanation, not from the smoke) as I explain all of this to them.
Maybe build a huge merry-go-round to sit on, with a large hollow in the middle that has the fire in it, so people can sit by the fire, but never stay in one spot.
19:42
I just need to sit further back than the closest person. =P
Or wear sunglasses to keep the smoke out of your eyes, and look extra cool.
@StatikStasis That's similar to runaway from a lion: you don't need to be the fastest, just faster than slowest one.
20:44
@ArnaudLeBlanc Late response re auto-capture: yes, capture-by-value means much less confusion than capture-by-reference, but that's been the position of every RFC proposing this back to 2015: wiki.php.net/rfc/short_closures
the first reason it's not a silver bullet is that PHP "values" are not actually immutable values; they include mutable objects, and abstract state like file handles, which have to be reasoned about when crossing scopes "by value"
The second reason is that even importing a value unexpectedly can be confusing; what appears to be an undefined variable, which ought to have given an error, is actually initialised somewhere off in the distance, in what appears to be a different scope
I think I'd be more likely to support auto-capture if either:
- the syntax was a clear opt-in, so users would know when they were choosing it, rather than picking it by default because it was shorter
- or, it was accompanied by a new scoping keyword akin to JS's `let`, so that you could unambiguously declare a local variable (essentially the inverse of the current `global` and `use`, which make variables non-local)
21:23
"the syntax was a clear opt-in, so users would know when they were choosing it, rather than picking it by default because it was shorter" I have the same opinion.
21:47
let / const would be welcome additions to PHP
We have const. Do you mean var and let in local variable form?
We only have global const which is mapped to define if I remember right, we can't do local const.
Yeah, that's let. If you want mutable bindings, then spell that var which we already have reserved.
At least, that's one way to approach it.
I think that'd cause confusion vs the other language almost every other PHP dev uses which is JS / TS
22:04
local and local const? although that seems like it would suit function scope, and block scope would be more powerful
let and let const maybe?
Imo they're only really useful in combination with block scoping. maybeeee even typing
but block scoping for sure
I bet let foo: sometypeconstraint = $expr; would be useful, block scope or not ^_^
Not recommend for every variable, just selectively.
99% of my TS code is let / const $something: $type = value.
Oh brilliant, you're here @LeviMorrison I found some more place to add const modifiers, but I hit an unexpected usage: github.com/php/php-src/pull/8671
Especially if it could be combined with fake generics, that'd get rid of the need for a significant chunk of docblock comments
22:17
foreach ( $list as let &$item ) (to make $item block-scoped) would save a lot of accidents from the reference leaking out of the loop
Possibly yes, but i'd rather just poison the item afterwards or remove it completely e.g. implicit block scope
well, that too
just thinking of places where block scope >> function scope
@Girgias Hmm. I'll have to think about it. Obviously these macros are horrid but useful so... not sure.
The fact del is only part of the "bottom" of the loop is icky design >.<
You tell me about that .-.
Internally, they are only paired with ZEND_HASH_MAP_REVERSE_FOREACH_STR_KEY_VAL and ZEND_HASH_MAP_REVERSE_FOREACH_VAL, so not too many.
Ugh, maybe we just can't convert these. I can't think of any palatable alternatives that work with the features C gives us, aside from forking macros into const and mut versions, and I'm not sure that's better...
22:33
Yeah that's basically what I thought initially, but making a mutable version for these 8 cases seems crap too
It seems like ZEND_HASH_MAP_FOREACH_END_DEL doesn't exist in PHP 8.1? So this is new?
Ah, no, known as ZEND_HASH_FOREACH_END_DEL in previous versions, back to 7.2.

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