Hey, do you guys know any client for PHP for dialogflow CX or I need to create my own? For ES version there is an official client but for CX there is only a few and PHP is not there ;/
For any type with methods, they're the same regardless of which file it's in. While I can see the flexibility, I don't think that overriding what the scalar methods of say an int or string on a per-file basis is going to be beneficial for the long run. If anything it would probably lead to intense fragmentation.
I think a fixed API is preferable is we can make it happen (both in terms of consistency and performance) but it's unrealistic to happen in a single RFC. I think if somebody could create an initial RFC that lays down the groundwork with a few uncontroversial functions that could be a good way to get started.
Trying to put writing systems in a computer was a mistake. Behold, the ambiguity of is_numeric.
> I remember a major outage at a past job where a Java frontend validated something like 10.đź’Ż.1.1 as a valid IP and commited it to the source of truth.
@MarkR Yeah everything with references won't work, but I don't think we even want such an API. The only exception would be sorting for arrays, but I can live with sort being a function.
@cmb array keys() and values() would come to mind, but yes honestly that's about it :P
@Danack And that đź’Ż supports my "Indo-Arabic numerals or GTFO" position. Whatever that IP is being passed to is expecting ASCII and nothing else, so that should be validated using ASCII and nothing else.
@cmb It's also very clearly stated in the channel description: """Nothing on this channel is real. Flagg is the fictional alter-ego of a liberal troll."""
tbh, I grabbed the first link that looked good....and although I remember the outrage of arabic numerals being taught, I couldn't be bothered to look for an authoritative link.
@Danack Someone keeps posting snippets of curl utility functions to various docs pages in the curl section. All identical. We delete them, they come back. There's no obvious security hole in them, but they're at best useless.
different topic, on https://www.php.net/get-involved, #3 says "Filing and resolving bug reports at bugs.php.net" ... Github doesn't have an organization-level issue repository, how should this link be revised?
Or just link to the organization, and let people figure out how to get to the appropriate issue link. If someone can't find how to submit an issue from the organization landing page, they wouldn't be able to submit a PR anyway.
eh, that's rather interesting, not being aware of who Lemaitre is I'd have probably answered a reflexive "no" to the verbiage of teaching priest's ideas
(warning: it is flawed, I didn't practice other than making the slides, and there are a few places I want to improve it... but it is my very first talk)
@Girgias isn't the extension doing the bad thing in that case ? unless I miss something and I feel like I am, "multiplication is assumed to be commutative" is what everyone expects, how much sense does it make to change that from an extension, does modifying the engine to allow otherwise even make sense ?
@Girgias it does, but it's not widely used or well developed, I would omit it from arguments ... that is what elicited that response from dmitry ... you're better to follow the line of argument that this is technically incorrect and leave out any mention of anything else ...
@LeviMorrison In the grand scheme of mathematical objects, multiplication is rarely commutative :)
@JoeWatkins It's not even OpCache (which would kinda make sense sometimes) but the actual VM, and I don't understand how it even gets to that reordering
the assumption that it's safe to swap them, is what I expect, at the instruction level the operation must be commutative, I think I understand the desire to avoid this assumption at the expression level, but I'm not sure it's so simple
we would need some higher level thing to allow a user to define how an expression works, operator overloading is not really the correct thing ... maybe ...
... huh this might be very basic; so I've started learning arabic on duolingo and like... how are right to left languages represented in strings? I guess bytes still start from the... "lower" (whatever that means) memory address then go up? how does it work with multibytes characters?
@LeviMorrison I covered that in my RFC a bit. Basically, the things that people here think of as "usually" and "always" being true about operators is really mostly just "properties of real numbers".
which is.... fine, if you can prevent operators from being used with anything except ints and floats
which of course you cant if PHP wants to continue supporting extensions
the one i still want to fix is the assumption that >, >= and <, <= are commutative
but that can't be fixed without updates to both opcache and JIT
the JIT part is the hard part of that tbh. comparisons get reduced to assembly for integers and such.
even magic interfaces like Stringable unfortunately... because that is the most requested change from userland for my operator overloads RFC, but it's impossible to do without introducing errors
@Girgias You could quote from wiki.php.net/rfc/operator_overloading_gmp; e.g. "The operator overloading is exemplarily implemented for the GMP extension", and "Vector and matrix calculations". The relevant point is third-party extensions, but why ignore third-party extensions (the only bundled extension which uses operator overloading is GMP).
@Andrea I think in general, with operations in a maths world you should be able to canonicalize representations internally so that == is trivially true without extra overloading.
@Andrea the issue isn't so much to make it so that A > B and B < A can produce different results (although there are some domains where they absolutely could). I ran into it when allowing for A and B to have different overloads of compare. The problem is then that the left-most overload is executed for everything in PHP except for >, in which case the right-most overload is executed.
This could actually come up in any extension which allows the compare handler to be delegated to a function which can be extended through class inheritance
though I don't think that is the case for any extension currently
for the record, when it comes to userspace comparison overloads, I'm in favor of exactly two functions: equals() and compareTo(). equals() would be optimistically checked first for ==, while compareTo() would be required to satisfy >, >=, ==, <, <=
still doesn't help if they have different code for those functions though. we don't want half of the comparison functions to execute a different implementation if those overloads ever made it into userspace, which extensions absolutely could do right now
btw, that also requires the ZEND_UNCOMPARABLE define to be updated. right now it's == 1, because the entire engine assumes that all comparisons are done as < or <=
at least 80% of my test PR for the operator overloads RFC was dealing with this > and < issue. the code for everything else was pretty light.
and i still wasn't able to fix it entirely for JIT and OpCache, because i simply don't have all the necessary skills and experience
@Andrea Locale is used in several places here. it'd need to be pretty clear what that word is meant to convey about the string interpretation to PHP devs in the documentation.
@Andrea The ASCII suffix is not completely accurate for trim(). It's not "ASCII", it's "Bytestring", i.e. it supports bytes > 0x7F which are not defined in ASCII.
perhaps.... we actually shouldn't alias existing implementations, and instead use it as a way to retcon the string functions without breaking things...
even in that case... i'd personally say duplicating the implementation instead of aliasing might still be better, just so that we know that all string methods can be changed without BC breaks all the way back to PHP 3, lol
so one of the problems is that if I add aliases/duplications for all the byte methods, someone will object with “but modern apps should use Unicode/UTF-8!”
oh, it could be the next minor, it's not a breaking change
I don't think we can ever get rid of the classic string APIs, they're too ubiquitous
problem: the mbstring functions are badly designed in general and also most string methods have no mbstring equivalent, for no particularly good reason
problem: the byte string functions are actually better than the mbstring for various tasks if you're dealing with UTF-8
problem: mbstring handles case conversion and case insensitivity wrong, which is one of the most important things people want “Unicode support” for
so you might say, ok let's do a clean UTF-8 string API for PHP, greenfield etc
"length" is missing, "pad" should likely also get padLeft/padRight for consistency; "join" is implode? I already find that confusing in Python.
Looking at that a little more, I'm not that sure I would make base64 (and by extension the hex encoding) a method on a (byte)string. That type of encoding should be standalone.
split (by any UTF-8 character) join (no change needed) trim(Right/Left) (by any UTF-8 character) contains, startsWith, endsWith (no change needed) replace (no change needed) pad(Left/Right) (??? not sure) repeat (no change needed) compare (uhh this can be easily utf-8'd but it's questionable what the benefit is) find(FromEnd) (no change needed) substr (controversial opinion: shouldn't be changed)
@TimWolla that's a popular opinion I think, but imo there's several ways to join an array depending on the kind of data in it, whereas there's only one meaning of “join” that makes sense for strings
also we could make ","->join($array) support an iterator for $array
@Andrea Is that still the case since Alex took over and it's now a fork of the unmainted upstream? A lot (and I mean a lot) of mbstring has changed and loads of bugs seems to have been fixed
@cmb Without output suppression, there's even a helpful error message. :P Fixed the 8.1 build in github.com/php/php-src/pull/9279. 8.0 build still fails.
Stance on libraries: minimal PHP needs to be compilable without any particular libs (sans libc etc.) So we would need to bundle ICU, which is unlikely to be a good idea.