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11:44
@Girgias I would tell that to whoever implemented ArrayAccess/ArrayObject :)
From my perspective, either consider being strict about object not behaving like arrays (no ArrayAccess), or not strict (ArrayAccess/Arrayable in all contexts requiring array).
@Christian It is part of SPL, rule number 1, SPL is garbage and don't use it
Especially considering such a thing already exists with __toString..
@Christian What you are saying makes absolutely no sense
@Christian Which most of us would consider a mistake but that's by the by
Because when you pass an object to a string param, it is converted to a string
And converting objects to arrays is not the same as an Object implementing ArrayAccess
quite frankly, there wouldn't be a need for Arrayable if ArrayAccess was used universally..
????
Objects and arrays are not the same thing
11:52
*used=>supported
They are fundamentally different
PHP is not Python
well yes, my concern is not the feature
it's half-baked features
You do know that ArrayAccess is only one part of what an array is?
Also wanting to convert objects to arrays is IMHO utterly pointless
from a userland perspective, ArrayAccess+iterable makes an object behave very much like an array (minus is_array and array type declarations)
Nope it doesn't
You're missing Countable
11:55
well then :)
on a semantical level, it's also quite lacking.. in_array(.., new ArrayObject(..))
Again, why on earth would you use ArrayObject
SPL was a mistake on so many levels
And I suppose I can add "Introducing ArrayObject and confusing people" to the list
there are some specific use-cases, but that's not my point... if it's a mistake, then remove it
if there's a legitimate use but it's not ideal, then let's come up with an implementation that sucks less
@Christian You do know removing something from PHP is not easy?
Already the tiniest of removal creates massive outcry
at the very least, marking it as a deprecated... doesn't matter if it is removed in php 9 or 20 :D
... Depracting it is the hard part
IDK why I'm spending my time with someone who has no knowledge of how stuff within the projet works who tells me that the project should do X
12:07
seriously..
so I'm asking why something isn't behaving as expected and then I'm told because I'm using some class that is a huge mistake.
Then I'm asking why this huge mistake is not mentioned anywhere/deprecated and I'm told because deprecating is very complex.
So basically if I'm writing some library or anything using ArrayObject thinking it's a convenient addition, I get people like you bashing said library because they think ArrayObject is a bad idea.
And yet they don't seem to be doing anything about educating said people about ArrayObject/SPL.
As to my specific use-case, it's thanks to symfony's half-baked and inflexible expression-language component..
You were not asking why something was behaving like expected, you were asking why the class Array*Object* can't be used with array functions. it seems pretty clear to me that an *object* cannot be used as an *array* regardless of its name.
I *never* bashed your library, I just said ArrayObject is shit, because it is pointless and inferior in every single way compared to an array.
If you are asking why the *official* docs do not inform about this, it's because they are official docs that need to be factual.
12:32
It's clear to me only by way of experience... looking at the interfaces it implements, the naming of the class..and literally, the documentation:

> This class allows objects to work as arrays.

it gives a different idea.

As to using it, if I extend it or make something new based on those interfaces, I'm either extending crap or reinventing the wheel of crap. :)
But anyway, at this point there's nothing else to dicusss.
Morngins
13:08
Yahallo
 
1 hour later…
14:15
@Christian yeah....I need to do a talk about this. Symfony has made a whole load of choices that make it easy for beginners to get started, which end up being really annoyingly difficult when stuff gets complex.
@Danack I thought Laravel had the market on that cornered.
@Christian actually people are reacting to you turning up and using emotional language (probably because you're annoyed at PHP being shite) when its not anyone here's fault.
@Crell I haven't looked (because I don't want to know) but apparently Symfony configuration attempts to do complicated stuff that is 'obviously' going to fail but it tries to do stuff 'properly'. My understanding is that Laravel instead went for massive hacks which are 'bad code', but don't go into the complexity trap that Symfony opted into.
See also a senior Symfony person complaining about lazy proxy objects being difficult to work with, when that person has been an utter cunt to the person who was previously maintaining the library that Symfony is dependent upon. Symfony could have chosen to sponsor the previous maintainer, instead they were abusive to him, so now they have a problem using that library.
UUID or something else?
/me has to run off, actually, just curious.
@Crell proxymanager. And also doctrine.
14:53
Anyone else watching the Russian army collapse in north-east Ukraine and wearing out their refresh button?
user image
3
It appears that after an unexpected Ukrainian attack on Balakliya, which then pushed towards Kupyansk, the Russian army has lost all cohesion on the green line in this map and the Ukrainians are chasing them to the border. This place was 100km behind the front line a few days ago.
 
2 hours later…
16:29
@Derick huh, fascinatingly, that also seem to trigger debug sessions when running composer! (:
 
3 hours later…
19:09
@FĂ©lixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier yes, composer is a php script :-D
19:55
no, that's not it. What I meant is this: https://github.com/symfony/symfony/issues/47192

and the myriad of issues/discussions asking symfony e/l devs to make parts of the code protected instead of private and dependency-injected instead of in-place, hard-coded construction of dependencies.
as to this, I wasn't the one calling PHP crap. I was simply asking people's opinion on why ArrayObject doesn't behave like an array despite the documentation and naming.

The first answer was "PRs are welcome", the second answer was that I'm an idiot that doesn't understand the difference between arrays and objects. And the third answer was that SPL being shit is a public secret that apparently never made it up to the official docs.
To be fair, I should have expected this...some things never change, and this chat room is no different.
20:26
Dude.
> I wasn't the one calling PHP crap.
We know PHP is crap. There's a reason why the room description starts with "Support group for those afflicted with PHP."
> It's 2022, almost 2023... why hasn't this been 'fixed'?
Trying to get your problem resolved by making other feel like shite is a choice, but not a good one.
20:41
Come on, you're just trying to pass the blame.

That comment was not aimed at anyone and it was more of a joke than anything else (convenient of you to leave that out though..). It's not my fault if people can't take it with a grain of salt.
"pass the blame" - what blame? Why are you talking about blame?
JRL
JRL
@Christian the thrust of your discussion seems to be something like "if ArrayObject doesn't behave the way I would use it, then PHP should remove it and cause a backward compatibility break"
"It's not my fault if people can't take it with a grain of salt." - i'll say this really clearly. You seem to have a habit of using passive aggressive phrasing and it's unpleasant. This is almost certainly a career limiting problem for you. I'd recommend getting some mentoring about it.
JRL
JRL
that's an honestly great way to run an open source project for a small library you control, but not a great way to run a language that powers something like 60% of all websites on the internet
@JRL well I was asking why its still there if it's considered crap/bad practice/whatever
JRL
JRL
20:45
because of backwards compatibility breaks
which i thought someone mentioned?
let me look
ok, let me rephrase that
The PHP project doesn't have an infinite amount of resources. There are many things to be worked on that have been terrible for years.
why is it still there and poorly documented
@JRL Rather "because no one seriously proposed it, yet." for which the why then probably is "because of BC breaks" :-)
@Christian Because so few users contribute to the documentation.
and there's no trivial fix for it being shite.
20:47
well, that's a very valid answer that could have come up sooner
> well, that's a very valid answer that could have come up sooner
JRL
JRL
@Christian im pretty sure it did, but maybe it wasn't phrased in an obvious way
instead of "I can't believe I'm wasting my time with clueless people that don't know a thing from arrays to objects"
ffs. Stop blaming other people for not being good enough for you.
JRL
JRL
still, that's why people were telling you to contribute in response. :) we need more help all the time.
20:49
@JRL I have no problem with that at all.
JRL
JRL
@Christian to be clear, gigiras didn't say he was frustrated with spending time because of your knowledge about arrays and objects, he said he was frustrated by your opinions about the project when you don't know how the project works
which is totally valid
In retrospect, I could have phrased my statements better. When I said "php should do x", I meant it more of a question, as "if x is the better practice, why isn't it done so yet".
JRL
JRL
yeah, i think that would have gone more smoothly overall. :)
it's hard to think about all the impacts that working on a project that handles literally trillions of webpages served per year might have
a bug that is a "1 in a million" bug would affect literally a million pages for such a project
"at scale" really changes how some things must be approached. it affects companies like facebook and google as well with their web properties.
Maybe I'm oversimplifying things, but (1) major versions are expected to have bc breaks (2) adding a "deprecated" notice to the documentation should be trivial, right? and (3) in this specific case recreating ArrayObject (as a legacy composer package) in user-land doesn't sound too complicated.
I was particularly surprised at girgias' reply that deprecation is the hardest part.
Deprecations are painful for library maintainers, because users expect the libraries to the deprecation clean from day minus 100 from the release of a new PHP version.
JRL
JRL
21:02
deprecations are also hard for libraries because they have to support older version of the language at the same time also
In this specific case of ArrayObject I also don't see what a deprecation would do. My understanding is (I've never used ArrayObject) that it more or less does what it's supposed to do, but it's not particularly useful.
So its existence is not actively harmful (apart from maybe luring in developers).
JRL
JRL
the only reason to deprecate it would be to eventually remove it to prevent developers from using it at all
imo
well yes, that's why I originally suggested something like "this will be deprecated some time in the future" kind of thing
in the short term it should be painless
 
1 hour later…
22:19
Any valid alternative to clone "moo" string copying?
Else I'll just wrap it in a StringBuffer class.

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