i think it's similar to COBOL, in the sense that it's so well adapted to what it's used for that it's simply better than anything else at that. but what it's used for is so practical, that the depth of business logic that makes its way into the application leads to a lot of the icky things programmers don't like but that are super necessary for what a lot of corporations want to do with software.
PHP still has plenty of problems (that we're gradually eliminating) but the main problem PHP has is a complete lack of engineering knowledge among a lot of its users
I have heard that functions, predefined constants, keywords, etc. are case insensitive because HTML tags are case insensitive, so this part of PHP is designed to fit any coding style.
On the other hand, variables are case sensitive, perhaps because register_globals was enabled by default at that time? I have never heard the actual reason for variables.
I do wonder what they were thinking back then... I've heard Rasmus talk about using the function name length for the hash bucket etc... but many things just leave me scratching my head
So having function names be normalised to a particular case before hashing, could maybe have been a thing?
i dunno. more flexibility i guess. just seems... interesting that this particular keyword wasn't reserved when others in the past have been. i guess there was a motivation to do so with this since enum was a more commonly used class name.
hey @Danack. do you think that including polymorphic operator resolution is worth doing in the next iteration? or do you think just shifting to magic methods is the better option?
basically, when determining which handler to execute if their are competing handlers with two classes, instead of always using the left hand operator, if one of the classes is a subclass of the other, its handler is used regardless of position
this is how it is done in most other languages that have structures like classes
i think it doesn't make it harder or easier to reason about. without it, it's hard to reason about how to use classes that have an inheritance structure (like Number and Fraction). your calling code has to use them in a particular order, or your parent class has to have code that is aware of all child classes.
so previously it was hard to reason about subclasses
now it would be harder to reason about subclasses that don't actually have anything to do with each other
though im struggling to think of a situation where a class and subclass would BOTH have implementations for an overload that are NOT identical where you WOULD NOT want polymorphic handler resolution to happen
Alright. I'll take a look at some point on how to do that, since I'm not sure off the top. I'm sure there's some helper function somewhere that works on the class entry to check if its a subclass.