@Girgias Nope, I didn't have as much time as I had hoped. I'll try tomorrow. I mean, if you really want to I'm not going to stop you :P Just remember that I wanted to rebase for PHP 8.1.
I know I criticise other people for doing this...but......for the "Introduce the abiltiy to use the first-call-callable syntax on non-static methods" thread.
class Foo {
function bar(string $name): string {
echo "Hello $name";
}
}
$fn = Foo::bar(...);
// $fn is equivalent to:
$fn = fn (Foo $foo, string $name): string => $foo->bar($name);
Other than aesthetics, is there a technical reason why that's not a good idea?
My main objection is that Foo::bar(...) is also/already the syntax for creating a closure on a static method.
class Foo {
function dyn(string $name): string { echo $name; }
static function stat(string $name): string { echo $name; )
}
$dyn = Foo::dyn(...);
$stat = Foo::stat(...);
Both of those are useful things to do, but they should not use the same syntax. I don't know about the engine complexity, but it from a user POV, it's a recipe for confusion.
Yeah....that's the aesthetic reaction I have also. But it would be fully static analysable. i.e. any code inspection tool could know that creating a closure from an instance method has any extra parameter of the instance at the front before the other parameters.
Other than "it's not something you're used to" what's the exact problem? They both generate closures of class methods, both for static and instance methods. It would be possible to argue it's consistent...
And I am totally here for adding lenses to the language in some way! I already have a user-space version, which is the best you can do for now: github.com/Crell/fp/blob/master/src/object.php#L28 But I'd much rather see first class support that is therefore also recycleable.
Foo::dyn(...) generates a callable with a signature that matches dyn(). Foo::stat(...) generates a signature that has one additional parameter at the start of type Foo. Visually, I cannot tell how many parameters the resulting closure will have without going to look at the other source file to see if it's static.
Which... may be hard for the engine to do as well. I'm not sure there.
"Visually, I cannot tell how many parameters the resulting closure will have" - that's true for static methods also. You need to go look at the function signature to tell what the parameters are. At which point you can also look to see if it's static or not.
Okay, let me know if you see any technical reasons then. I mean I get your not used to it....but after using it for a few hours it would seem fine, probably.
In this case, I don't think so. It's not just "new" (I'm hardly one to avoid new syntax), it's the exact same syntax meaning 2 different things depending on the context of some other file., which may not even be known at dev time That's my issue.
That may also cause a technical issue there; not sure.
I think the $$->dyn(...) syntax (Or similar, there's lots of variants to consider) is much more promising.
my assumption that a beginner's book would get you started and build a foundation... but it's unknown how advanced it gets... and that may be one of your requirements
Learning Event-Driven PHP with ReactPHP may require that you already have an understanding of ReactPHP which could be problematic, too
That's my fear. It gets me (the beginner book) kinda where I am now. I have a little, but not a lot and many detailed questions. But maybe the other book doesn't answer some of my questions.
@Dharman guessing, as it's a few years since I used it, but takes a proper copy of an array, so that changes to any reference stored entries in the original one, don't get copied across?
Can we deprecate request (GET/POST) based sessions? i.e. can we make the use_only_cookies = 1 mandatory? I can add this to the deprecations for 8.3 unless someone has objections.
thats quite a huge change, I am in favour of it but that almost certainly needs an RFC
Maybe huge is overstating it, but for some reason I seem to remember there's some major forum software that uses it by default, I could very well be wrong about that though.