Someone refresh my memory: On docs, if I want to put a see-also list into a sect1, what's the right wrapping element for that? In a refentry it's refsect1, but I don't think that's correct in a sect1, is it?
Ignoring all the deprecation errors, it renders something but [16:36:39 - Indexing ] Indexing done [16:36:39 - E_USER_ERROR ] /home/girgias/Dev/php-docs/phd/phpdotnet/phd/Format/Factory.php:52 This format is not supported by this package
[16:43:26 - E_DEPRECATED ] /home/girgias/Dev/php-docs/phd/phpdotnet/phd/Package/PHP/Web.php:43 fwrite(): Passing null to parameter #2 ($data) of type string is deprecated [16:43:26 - E_DEPRECATED ] /home/girgias/Dev/php-docs/phd/phpdotnet/phd/Package/PHP/Web.php:43 fwrite(): Passing null to parameter #2 ($data) of type string is deprecated
Here's the maze: You open php.net, you click "add note" and it's submitted to main.php.net. The note is stored in the DB. The CRON job dumps database table into separate files for each page and stores them back on php.net.
This is why when I was editing a note, it wasn't updating the page
the manual pages are actually baked with the notes and cached in the browser
@cmb Where would the changelogs be that the phd code is processing? I think you're right, but I'm not sure where the source data is. The problematic item is "bundledexternal", "ref.oci8", "PECL OCI8 3.2" (That's the 3 existing keys.)
@Dharman On the rsync box, a cronjob every 10 minutes (except during the hour of 11pm) runs update-everything which calls update-phpweb-backend which ...
PHP has return only one value model and I have to say that I was thinking about returning multiple values similar to Go a year ago, and AFAIR PHP syntax could handle it. Another thing is checking these errors so the ignore flag was nice thing in the description.
What Midori ended up with is very close to what Rust does, just with different syntax.
I've been pondering what it would be like for a language to have an arbitrary number of return channels, and realized that it's basically still isomorphic to an n-sized Either.
The pre and post conditions are also amazing as I agree that most of exception checks could simply be solved by describing pre and post condition rules. Static analysis can tell you right away you cannot expect misuse
Yeah, a syntax for something that just compiles into assertion commands at runtime but is then statically analyzeable would be... really cool, and probably a pretty good ROI. At least it doesn't sound like the implementation would be all that painful, compared to some of what we've done to ourselves recently. :-)
Hmmmm, yes opening multi-value returns may open a can of worms if people start using them as a form of type hinted tuple instead, then there could be dragons.
Yes. I have only needed multi-value returns for non-error cases once (it was for recursion), and honestly for that edge case a documented array was sufficient. Though it did warm me up to tuple types. Go-style multi-returns are probably unwise, but multi-channel returns have potential use.
What's the right way to document "returns false on PHP < 8, but throws on PHP 8"? I'm sure we have that pattern somewhere now...
@Crell I suggest to remove them all; besides not being particularly useful, they may not properly work (I think that even mb_str_split() doesn't deal properly with combined characters).
@Crell If it throws TypeError as of PHP 8.0.0, the right way is not to document it all (there's a note on internal functions about that being undefined behavior).
php.net/manual/en/function.str-split.php - The return values section says false right now. As of 8, it's a ValueError. That needs to change to whatever we're doing now for those.
@Crell For ValueError, a paragraph in the error/exception section makes sense; and then a changelog entry, that "previously, the function returned false instead".
@cmb Ah yes, I've been stuck in a time loop repeating the same day over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over again
i have to admit, ive never really understood the point of the short closure/auto-capture syntax as it seems to be a function without scope, which always seemed... dangerous to me. but i think i finally understand reading through the latest thread @Crell
it's very useful for repeated sections of code within a scope that are tied to that scope directly, supporting code resuse without forcing additional scoping overhead for the programmer to juggle in their brain
which i have run into before, but just sort of... dealt with the code duplication since it's usually only 2-3 uses
@Crell Typos in the Short Closures 2.0 RFC: "The value of these variables are the ones that was bound to them at function declaration." I assume value should be values and was should be were. But this whole paragraph seems unnecessary since it's just restating the paragraph above it with slightly different wording.
Typo 2: "the same set of variables an Anonymous Functions" - an should be as.
Typo 3: "looking at which variables was automatically captured" - was should be were.
Typos 4 and 5: "as they not have an effect on the behavior of the program, apart from the marginal cases listed bellow." - not should be do not and bellow should be below.
@Dharman We could dynamically fetch github.com/php/php-src/blob/master/run-tests.php (probably a specific commit instead of master), and use it. We could also add a copy to the repo (and update from time to time).
I think that requires more time than I have at the moment. I'll try to find some time in the coming days, but if anyone wants to help get it started, please help me.