this whole readonly discussion is painful, because i would dearly love a feature that behaves in the way that nearly every single programmer appears to think readonly should behave at first glance
@bwoebi If you modify a property via reflection it actually modifies the original object in place? I've never tried to use reflection in that way before.
@JRL Is it actually that different though? The worst thing IMO is that properties don't need to be initialized after __construct. Interior mutability is allowed for most const-style concepts in other languages.
@bwoebi As long as it doesn't break assumptions in the VM, I agree.
@IluTov It kinda goes to the point at the end of my email. Something may be technically correct, but make the language worse/less usable. If almost every programmer has the same misconception, then something is probably wrong with the language design.
Interior mutability, same as you were talking about. It's just very concerning to me that almost everyone I've talked to has at first thought that readonly implied no interior mutability.
Some reference stuff is broken (3v4l.org/4PXG2e) but that's hard to fix and likely needs to be abused purposefully.
@JRL Well, what interior mutability? Value types (arrays, to be specific) are protected against mutability. Just objects aren't, which makes sense to me.
Immutability for reference types from one specific property doesn't really make sense since the referenced instance might be mutated from other places anyway, which would make it potentially more confusing.
right, that's why my initial assumption when i read the initial RFC was that an object assigned to a readonly property must be an instance of a readonly class.
true, it would mean that those classes would have to be more carefully designed most likely
PHP objects/classes have too much responsibility, I'm becoming more and more convinced. they try to cover to many disparate programming paradigms, and it results in awkward things.
there should be pointer-like objects in PHP, like we have. but PHP would benefit from something very similar to classes that is set-like instead, IMO.
@JRL Agreed, but I was pushing back replying for a while as I didn't have the time. But now that aspect seem to be getting traction I justed needed to make it clear that it is in fact theoretically LSP compliant
@JRL LSP is about correctness, we're talking more about an expectation. It doesn't invalidate the argument, and it doesn't really matter at all. It's annoying that this is what the mailing list is discussing.
@Derick I've had another look at your ext/date Exception doc. I believe it would make sure to tackle this from a more abstract perspective first: "If we wouldn't be constrained by backwards compatibility, how would we design the Exception hierarchy" and then look at how to apply that.
Hey, @MateKocsis; I am currently extremely busy with my studies, however, I will have some free time somewhere in between Christmas and the New Year's Eve, so I'll take a look then, if that's okay. Thank you so much for your work!
@Trowski Are you able to list the contents of SMB mounted directories on the command line? I have a SMB share mounted and it works fine for Finder and apps....just can't do ls -l on a command line.