@RemiCollet We used to have a collection of examples that touched all opcodes (like I just did for github.com/derickr/vld/commit/…), but I can't find that anymore...
Because I truly believe when people attempt to explain them they go for the most "simplest" example, which sadly completely misses the point as to why you would even care about them in the first place
that another thing that has confused me is people who seem to think that using a "monadic type" or a type wrapper for a return value, is somehow inseperable from monadic functional programming
like, having a Maybe type is useful regardless of whether you use functional or OOP programming
Sure, but a monad is not just a type wrapper, it also has a "bind" function (terrible naming IMHO) which allows to pipe different monads together which handles the unwrapping of the inner value(s) or bailing out for you
The main premise is to move the possible error states into the type system in a way that you are forced to acknowledge it. Which is easier to do in a language which provides this out of the box
But I do agree I don't think it's fundamentally tied to functional programming
right... i dunno if there's a term for it, but having types that contain logic, something like "rich types", is definitely possible in lots of languages
The problem with monads is the same as moving from procedural to OOP IMHO, you don't get it until you do, and then it becomes really hard to explain it to other people
well, i was mostly just contemplating casting magic methods for objects, not rewriting the entire PHP type system, so it caught me a bit off guard, lol
@TimWolla My thoughts are...the current behaviour is rubbish, in particular not being able to know why unserialization failed is terrible. Adding a way to get the reason why unserialization failed in a structured was would clearly be an improvement.
btw that doesn't necessarily need to be an exception. If PHP had used tuple-ish returns earlier, a lot of functions (including the file opening) would look more like:
[$data, $error] = unserialize($input);
So I think for the current proposal, only changing the error reporting severity doesn't bring much value, but changing it to throw an exception is too big a BC break for people to find acceptable, unless a very cunning way can be thought of to make the change not be an 'only detectable in production' BC change.
Introducing a new function (e.g. something like unserialize_or_throw()) allows people to have saner unserization behaviour in the next version of PHP, and kicks the problem of what to do about the current version of unserialize down the road...
Then definitely both, but more on "E_WARNING to Exception" than "wrap exception".
To be clear, some of the objections are possibly not really relevant and are grasping for straws to objects to the RFC....but a BC break in something that has been stable for many years is really likely to generate significant drama.
The E_WARNING to Exception I understand that – that's why there is a separate vote to decide whether it just unifies to E_WARNING (there are some E_NOTICE) or all the way up to Exception.
I don't particularly care about that one, it doesn't affect me in any way, because I use a throwing error handler.
For the "wrap Exception" one, I'd argue that the behavior is in fact not stable at all, because __unserialize() decides on its own what to throw and that includes arbitrary userland libraries.
"because I use a throwing error handler." - same, and I consider anyone who doesn't to be quite foolish.
"because __unserialize() decides on its own what to throw and that includes arbitrary userland libraries." - but for anyone who is unserializing stuff, they can already know what exceptions their unserialize call can throw, as they understand their own code, and so currently be specifically catching the 'only' exceptions it could throw.
Is that actually a real thing? So far you are the only one who was able to demonstrate a case where unserialize() gets broken input, but broken in a somewhat well-defined way: Additional backslash insertion because of broken DB storage that completely breaks the serialization format – and that one is a E_NOTICE one.
If their code is already working reasonably well, people won't care about technicalities.
As I said, I can't currently see a cunning way to improve the behaviour of the current unserialize without causing a lot of drama. And I'm not sure it would or should pass as an RFC. But introducing a new functions gives everyone who wants it the more sane behaviour.
does anyone here have advice on adding a set of coding standards so they're specified in composer.json? We've an amalgam of PSR-12 and custom ones for work and installing them via composer instead of hammering them in at /usr/share/pear/PHP/CodeSniffer/src/Standards is the better way to go.
@kguest why would they be in /usr/share/pear/PHP/CodeSniffer/src/Standards ? If you're using composer they should be in their own directory in your project. Or as a separate library that can be installed.
I have a method, buildIfAvailable() which returns an instance of the member class if requisite state can be found (from an external source) and set internally. Is there a pattern for this kind of behavior?
if there is a pattern, what is it called?
(I want to have a better high-level understanding of the code I'm working with)
And returning null in case of error conditions is one of many ways of handing the unhappy path. (I have written on this extensively in the recent past... :-) )
It's still a factory. Just one using null as a sentinel value. Whether that's a good design or not is a separate question, but it's still definitely a factory method.
They sometimes get called "Static constructors", too, especially if the actual constructor is private.
That would allow you to return an intelligent error message object (of whatever type), and still say "I don't care, use ?? et al to just discard and use a default."
But you could also introspect the error object (via match, if, instanceof, method calls, or whatever you feel like) to do something more contextually useful.
well, such an interface would probably have two methods on it. something like hasValue() and something like extendedInfo() to allow the class to describe why it's refusing to construct
it does bring some of the features people would want form monads to PHP, but making it a lot more possible to use the type system in place of exceptions
ah, this wouldn't control casting exactly, though i also want to try and tackle that
although... i guess there's not a way to "cast" a value to "null"
"Treat this object as this other type" is an area that has a lot of pusback generally. Some of it valid, but much of it just stubbornness. Like, I get why __toInt() is potentially concerning, unless we had a lot of other machinery around it. But Truthiness and Null-equivalence have huge upside potential, if one is willing to accept that objects are, for better or worse, a type system, not a code organization system.
yeah. though i think that passing something like this would make getting actual monads harder in the future
if that's a goal of yours
since this sort of accomplishes the same thing without a bind or unit type, and would probably end up being cited as precedent for the "PHP way" to do that sort of thing
If we wanted error monads in the language, we should do it in such a way that the monad-ness is not directly user-exposed.
Like, what midori does is have returns and "exceptions", which are really just an alternate return channel, and then there's syntax to check which return channel was used. Which... is basically an Either monad by a different name.
That's kind of the direction I'm leaning for PHP, because it sidesteps the generics question.
If we can get the ADT RFC completed, that gives us user-space monads in a decent enough syntax, minus generics.
(Really, I've not had any new thoughts on this since my blog post linked above, so that's where I still stand, more or less.)