I'm looking at that rfc for code cleanup, and I'm thinking to myself... is this individual change going to make a huge difference? But voting against feels like a proxy vote for never doing any cleanup or inline-documentation, and that's a really bad idea
Haven't caught up with the mailing list yet (as that's work time) but the only reason why typed constant even make any sense is that class (and since 8.1 interface) constant aren't actually constants lol as you can overwrite them in a subclass, and thus change their type
For global constants tho it doesn't really matter
Which fun fact you can use this trick to force a child class to define the constant
For example, an interface could be:
interface DbTable
{
public const string TABLE_NAME;
}
Which would then be implemented as:
class UserTable implements DbTable
{
public const string TABLE_NAME = 'user';
}
I think for 9.0 we need to do again an engine warning RFC, but I feel there is still 2y+ before 9.0 and I've got other semantic changes I want to tackle
To some degree yes, one thing is that resources should "behave" like object in emiting TypeErrors so that the conversion from one to the other is less of an issue
I'm not sure what you mean in that given that we can't specify resource types as far as I know? I'd have though eliminating the last of the resources in core would have been the fuller solution
Using resources as array offsets doesn't throw for example (well it is a warning) but yes converting all resources would be best but we can't really force all extenal extensions to do this (well we could remove support for resources within the engine but that feels like a 10.0 thing :|)
I want to tackle comparisons first with the intent of adding some warnings that should get promoted, but having a list of all current warnings might be useful lol
There was one thing I thought would be beneficial for all warnings / notices / error messages in general which would be giving them an ID code. Psalm's labels, typescripts error ids etc are rather handy for lookups, might be useful long term for docs
Meh, maybe? But sounds like a lot of effort for messages that should be clear to convey the information. And I'm not sure having an error code would make user ask less questions
I know I'm repeating what others have said, but going to reiterate it. I sometimes wish PHP had some kind of variation for structs: a data structure that defines class properties with names and types, optionally with assigned values, that can be consistently used elsewhere. A class suffices, but I find it lackluster in terms of trying to understand what a class is supposed to be...
That is, we use classes for multiple purposes.... and yes, a class will do what I want a struct for... but it may be harder to recognize that I'm intending a class to be a struct
So I asked ChatGPT about my code and it recommended using exceptions etc, i.e. when a value can’t be retrieved from a file, it wants to throw an exception. It also wants to implement the singleton design pattern, but I already make sure that my file only gets called once and doing it here would mean I have to do it in all my other files too, so it all sounds tedious. What do you guys think?
(I mean I already ensure that only one instance exists. I initialize it once in my main class and then pass the instance around to other classes)
I think ChatGPT is quite shite. I mean it can produce sentences that sound sensible, but then they aren't always sane, or cohesive with other things it says.
@Jerm. for the singleton stuff, no. Just creating something once is clearer code than implementing that.
Though it can also be done through a function, not just through the classic "singleton as part of a class" code:
function getAurynInjector()
{
static $injector = null;
if ($injector == null) {
$injector = new \Auryn\Injector();
// Do initialisation here
}
return $injector;
}
Sorry, so I should not do stuff like that all all the time? if (!file_exists($filePath)) { throw new Exception(sprintf('File "%s" not found.', $filePath)); }
@Jerm. to be clear, it's good at offering suggestions on how to improve your code in ways that seem reasonable to you. It's effectively filling the role of a code reviewer, in this scenario. Whether or not it's actually good as a code reviewer, is to be determined.
In the code base I worked in last, exceptions were used as error messages to the client/frontend
Sometimes the error messages were rendered with their message contents to the end-user, other times, the front-end read the exception and turned it into something else...
They crashed execution though
Also if you want to keep track of an error without notifying the user... use a logger and log messages
Exceptions should generally be domain specific, and code higher up the stack should only ever catch exceptions it expects, except for in the case of finally or releasing resources.
You can 'chain' exceptions by catching one type and re-throwing it as another type for a different domain, for example let's say your database throws a duplicate key exception when you try to create a user that has the same email, you would catch that exception and re-throw it as a Http exception with a meaningful error message. Using \Exception is almost always a bad idea Jerm.
There's one exception to catching things you don't know and not rethrowing, and that's your top level exception handler, i.e. the bit which catches things that nothing else catches.
I'm actually giving this talk on Monday for my trainees lol