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00:42
@IGP The same as the old drama.
01:08
@ramsey Don't worry, the next good take is gonna be to competitive fork of PHP called UntypedScript where these damn types are removed once and for all, for performance! naturally
5
IGP
IGP
@Crell So I gathered after reading yesterday's logs.
 
6 hours later…
06:44
@Kalle with addition of full operator overloading and class/functions/constants redefinition
I'm a little sad that they forgot about MariaDB :(
IGP
IGP
What happened with MariaDB?
I mean, they mentioned MySQL but not MariaDB, where te later is imo better.
IGP
IGP
Ah.
I mean, MariaDB is kind of the free bootleg version. If it works for MySQL, it should work on MariaDB (as long as the MariaDB devs aren't being selective with their feature parity).
07:10
MariaDB initially was focused on performance, so it's lagging behind with some of the newer features, but also has some original stuff. From what I understand, when MySQL was bought, some of its maintainers have moved to MariaDB.
My projects would not run anymore on MySQL due to incompatibilities.
IGP
IGP
07:48
It works just fine for basic sql stuff
It's rare to see projects that actually use the rdbms's features past that
Sequences, Table value constructors, INET6, intersect/except, differences in JSON support. Not the end of the world to migrate though..
@IMSoP Yeah, I would've expanded the pair to further elements if they would've responded :-)
 
2 hours later…
10:08
I was thinking about updating arrayof RFC, but to make any sense it would need to cache tested list type, and what is more problematic invalidate it when data changes. Is there anything in current HashTable/zval what would help with detecting changes in data?
10:30
@Danack @Girgias two feedback pieces on your RFC. 1. since you name the callbacks _loader, why not have the functions called autoload_register_class_loader and autoload_register_function_loader, because if you look at autoload_register_class/function, it could also be misunderstood as register a class as loader and register a function as loader.

2. the paragraph about explaining how the global function callback works is not precise. first i believe it says the order is a.) check in namespace b.) call function loader c.) check global namespace. then the next paragraph seems to suggest its a
10:42
@Danack TBF. I think it largely should stay that. With the additions of general purpose and optional stricter typing.
Is there such a thing as optional stricter typing though at any project beyond a single file? History has shown that if stricter typing is available, industry will move towards it pretty rapidly.
I'd argue that PHP is de-facto strictly typed now on everything that supports it, if it supported it on variables + generics give it 5 years and it'd be strictly typed on that too
I don't mean as in strict_types=1, I mean as in types are expected as a matter of course
 
2 hours later…
12:26
This doc comment just came in. I don't quite know what to do with it. It seems like a whine, which means delete on sight, but it's also kind of a feature request, and also kind of informative about the difference between mod and rem. So, I dunno what to do with it: php.net/manual/en/language.operators.arithmetic.php
@MarkR Among good code, yes. But there's a lot of really sloppy code out there. I inherited a suite of Laravel apps that are all kinds of untyped. They just... have no culture of adding types. (I am fixing that.)
@beberlei For 1. I think we might wait until near the end of the discussion to change names as that will swamp technical discussion. I'd probably prefer autoload_register_function_callback as that might be clearer from autoload_register_function_classmap or whatever the options are for optimised loaders, as they are all loaders.
@beberlei For 2. , to avoid further confusion, please can you do a screenshot and mark in red or similar the bits that are confusing.
> Nicolas Grekas: Then comes my second main question: what does this solve?
12:48
@Danack I very much want to reply "what does class autoloading solve" as a troll comment :D
@Girgias I am already drafting.......and yoink.
I mean I just got on the computer, haven't read anything yet
13:08
@MarkR Generally a lot of code where the class or function is just a helper for a specific file or some private method, I tend to not specify types. If code is meant to be reusable, then sure. Library code definitely. It depends on the boundaries. And yeah, single-file projects are still a thing and an important thing at it. Every beginner and small projects often start with a single file.
14:02
@Crell I find the comment generally helpful, see also messages starting here: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/11?m=55771240#55771240
14:12
@bwoebi yes. If the statement was the other way round (PHP should remain a useful language for web-focused development and with useful type juggling), the statement wouldn't be a troll. But as it is, it's trying to prevent people from using PHP for 'wrong' things.
14:38
Moving PHP internals to GitHub would be a good idea, but I don't think voters would be willing to break their own workflow - which is somewhat ironic when looking at "update broke my code".
Would it be a good idea tho?
It's not like GitHub has that great UI nor UX
It's way easier to follow github discussions than externals thread, not to mention that mail formatting is all over the place.
[citation needed]
citation needed for what part? :P
@Krzysiek as I said on-list, don't get distracted by the new shiny - evaluate the alternatives
14:43
“easier to follow” part.
I'm sure there are things that Github Discussions is good at; there will also be things it's terrible at
add the cost of migration, and is the net benefit actually worth it?
or is there some third option with even more advantages?
that's my complaint every time this comes up - the starting point is never "I've looked around, and I think this is the best tool for the job", it's "hey, this looks pretty, let's jump on it"
I mean, I can see value in a different communication channel, but GitHub Discussions certainly isn't the right choice. I'm likely biased, but $dayjob product would certainly be much more suitable than GitHub Discussions. Whether it is more suitable than the mailing list is hard to say, I am able to use the mailing list just fine.
Though my coworkers reactions to the list is “feels like 199x” even when I encouraged them to participate.
One big issue with GitHub is search. I already never find issues I'm searching for and fall back to my email archives of GitHub notifications for that. I can't imagine that this is better with GitHub Discussions.
(I wonder if GitHub even indexes issue responses)
externals.io/message/119834 this is mess, no way to edit, down/up vote for visibility, default quoting takes half of the conversation
again, I've already answered this on list: reactions are a social media feature, I've never seen them used for anything meaningful in a technical discussion
and externals searching is also a mess
14:49
the nice thing about e-mail is you can have lots of different UIs, even for archives
reactions or marking as spam / offtopic
@IMSoP With a limited selection they can be useful to gauge agreement with a specific message, without the noise. It requires the message to be sufficiently small in scope, though.
In the simplest case "Agree", "Disagree"
And barier of entry for mailing list is that you have to expose email to the whole world or create second email or deal with aliases - not ideal
14:51
@Krzysiek spam / off-topic is more relevant; although that implies moderator access, which then becomes a social can of worms
@Krzysiek ditto github
the "everyone has a github account" argument only works if you're happy to use that same github account for everything
@IMSoP You can have autogenerated gh mail
I meant the github account itself
@IMSoP to report issue or make pull request you have to have gh account anyway..
@IMSoP Yes, but it's not public
depends what you mean by "it"
email
14:53
if you're worried about spam, then sure; although good luck not getting onto any spam list anyway
if you're worried about identity, then knowing your github username, and every public contribution you've ever made, is a pretty big surface
spam, security
anyhow, you're still not taking the point - I'm not that interested in a long list of things that are imperfect about e-mail
I'm interested in an honest comparison of what tool would best suit the project's needs
Even gh can leak all data someday, but why making this easier?
13 mins ago, by IMSoP
I'm sure there are things that Github Discussions is good at; there will also be things it's terrible at
I'm not going to defend e-mail as the perfect solution; I'm well aware that it's not
I have very low expectations that mailing list will be replaced with anything, sunk cost is enormous.
14:58
well, you're not helping things by having inane discussions like this
if you think there's a case to be made in favour of a particular tool, make that case
@TimWolla I think inline polls probably do that better - specifically being able to ask "Does this sound reasonable? Yes / No" or "Which do people prefer? Foo / Bar"
otherwise, as you say, the focus of the message can make the meaning ambiguous - do you think I made a good case, but disagree on balance? do you think I've gone off-track? did I miss something important? did you just not like my tone? etc
@IMSoP In fact $dayjob software would support that as well. But such polls would require the message author to include the poll. Reactions can still be used as a (weak) signal with regard to general agreement with an open-ended discussion.
In the simplest case a response to an RFC that says: "This would break my use case X" with number of reactions indicating whether this is a rare use case or something more common.
meh; externals.io has that on the thread level, but I've never figured out how to interpret it
who are the "voting" pool? are they all voting on the same thing? etc
but sure, maybe it's a small nice to have occasionally
During RFC discussion reactions can also be useful with regard to setting votes in context. If I react on specific messages during discussion phase, it likely indicates why I'm against a specific RFC (because I agree with someone else's disagreement).
15:06
@IMSoP Case is made on the mailing list thread, I'm just not optimistic about that. And please don't take this as slamming the door. Hopefully translation is not suggesting something I didn't mean.
@Krzysiek but making the case, I mean making a full comparison of two alternatives, not cherry-picking your favourite features of one, and your least-favourite of the other
which is all I've ever seen anyone do any time this has come up
you called it "sunk cost", I called it "cost of migration"; either way, it has to be overcome by an overall improvement, not trading one set of features for another
We'll see what will be suggested in ML.
until someone is willing to say "the mailing list is great because ... but ..." rather than "the mailing list sucks, so ...", they will continue to get reactions like Derick's
GH discussions all the way.
I've honestly never used them; I'm willing to be persuaded; I'm just fed up of meaningless words like "modern"
there are also plenty of bits of GH's UX that I hate, so I'm not holding my breath to love this one
15:35
I have the following issue(not strictly PHP...more of a business logic I would say): A user makes a phone call to book an appointment and someone(in the hair salon for example) keeps his/her phone/name...these are stored in the DB.Imagine the same client calling in one month...how can I check that he is not already stored in the DB IF his name is (mis)typed ...are you getting where I am going with this?
I do not want two entries in the DB referring to the same person
any ideas?
Check if the number already exists before saving an entry? And display the saved name to the person taking the call?
You could also put a sql unique on the normalised phone number column.
@Danack hmmm...I think your answer is the solution...it did crossed my mind...I was not sure though...
thx
There's a bazillion different ways of solving it....I'd suggest talking to someone who is going to be taking the calls to see what works for them, and working from there.
nonetheless....what you propose is a very good start...either way
@bwoebi I make a fair few of them. I still type them. Because those few extra words give me autocomplete, basic IDE static analysis, and sometimes a runtime error if I feed it junk. I find a extra minute or two typing can save hours in debugging.
16:15
@still_dreaming_1 If you were to take one piece of advice I could give, it would be "ask more questions". Wading into a chat room, declaring what is best in programming, and then picking a fight, is not quite as conducive to learning as you might imagine. In particular, you might want to ask questions about:
2 days ago, by Danack
@still_dreaming_1 Or you could create really specific types that can have whatever custom validation rules you'd like.
As your style of programming might be quite different and subject to difficulties not encountered by other people. aka it sounds like you are using basic arrays, when you should be using more specific types.

If you were to take a second piece of advice, it would be 'stop confusing your own gut instincts with universally true statements':
> Your explanation comparing null to void and unit type is overly technical.
Yeah, I keep telling Girgias to explain type theory through dance (link is SFW, site....not so much) as it's a far more emotive medium. But telling someone you don't accept their opinion because it is "overly technical" is hilarious.
@StatikStasis I probably would also. But the response "Why are you asking such a dumb question? "Elegance" isn't a real thing that can be measured, it's an aesthetic choice that is personal to each person." would probably be even better.
16:45
@IMSoP does it suck? I think the only thing that sucks about it is that we all can't be in the conversation at the same time in the right frame of mind. it's basic geometry, when the guy that can get all the shapes put together finally has the time to post an answer, all the shapes are broken into lines and consumed to the point where ... sorry ... i got distracted by something shiny... ah, the point was that i'm trying to find a system but searches just come up with the new shiny stuff.
what about a chat room like this? seems pretty organized :D
@yarns it lacks moderation tools. I am thinking of making a better place similar to it.... but I'm also going to invite people here tomorrow.
I don't mean to be annoying, i'm just too dumb to have any useful input. is mailing list and github discussions the only ones your looking at?
Sep 12, 2022 at 12:13, by Danack
So. Previously I have been against inviting more people to this room as I felt that there were so many useful conversations happening here, that the risk of being overwhelmed by annoying people outweighed the chances of their being a net gain to the PHP project.

For various reasons, it seems there are fewer conversations these days and so the risk balance had probably changed.
It appears to take me some time to write emails.
@yarns No....people look at reddit also, and other people look at mastodon. But they very rarely say anything insightful at all, instead it's all lots of people who are focused on their own project, who only think about how things affect their own project.
points vaguely in the direction of the symfony project
@Danack so what projects are we looking at? symfony? i read references to php internals somewhere
@yarns ah - externals.io/message/119955 I thought you weren't asking randomly.
16:52
i try and mix it up
thanks i'll look into it because its interesting, dunno if i can help though
@yarns the "mailing list sucks" comment was me rather grumpily paraphrasing some of the messages we get to the mailing list
people with little or no prior presence on the list come in, pronounce it "old-fashioned", and immediately start the conversation on the wrong footing with people who've been using it regularly for years
i think that a good search tool would help alot, splitting the conversation up is one thing but starting new threads on existing topics should be a feature to avoid. even if the thread has 7 years between posts
which is a shame, because there probably are alternatives worth exploring; I just don't see much effort spent on the exploring part
i agree
@yarns hm, I can see where you're coming from with that; I'd want a UI that was clear when there was a long time jump, though
17:06
is it just me or is it getting harder to find content from searches? i thought all this AI stuff would make things easier
@yarns google is optimising itself for showing ads, not for finding the right content. Also, many sites are dropping off the net, as they are not profitable.
among other things, i tried searching for the origin of gridiorns dousing the coach in gatorade thing and all i got was betting odds for what color it's going to be... i worded it in sooo many ways and it took a while to find the answer
@Danack also vice versa: content is optimising itself for Google
@Danack took the words outta my mouth
Sep 30, 2022 at 18:09, by Danack
Jul 18, 2019 at 12:08, by Danack
Systemantics should be required reading.
17:09
ok
I haven't used Google search for years; but DuckDuckGo still has some of the same bad habits, like ignoring -excludes or "exact phrase" because they value more results over accurate results
it's so much less spammy, though; gone are the days of Google priding themselves on clean UI
@Danack i'd have to go without smokes for a week, maybe the library has it
So, it would have health benefits?
@IMSoP HAHAHA clean? i cant even remember that being a thing
Though "systemantics pdf" appears to have search results....
17:12
back in the day, they were famous for it
@Danack yes but i'm too weak mentally and the stress outweighs the benefit
so like on another topic... i initially thought enums would be used for array keys but they're not. am i missing some basic concept that allows me to think that?
or enum cases rather
@MarkR Then we have different experiences in writing PHP code :-)
@yarns unfortunately, that's one of the downsides of the implementation being object-based
like from the RFC wiki.php.net/rfc/object_keys_in_arrays it seems like it's just a matter of implementing it. but i thought there might be some other reason
I think there was some discussion of how it might be made possible, but it's not trivial
everywhere that processes array keys needs to be updated to know what to do with them
yeah i don't know what the benefits of making them objects were
to pick a random example, the return type of array_search would change from int|string|false to int|string|enum|false
@Tiffany which is a better way of saying what my thoughts on them have been
which to be fair would be true of any implementation that didn't just get coerced to string|int
at which point, you can just use a backed enum and $case->value as the key
@yarns being objects means a lot of other places don't need to be updated to recognise them as a new type
yeah they just added that.. then i started to find that enums weren't as useful as i'd hoped... kept wanting to add cases dynamically or add them to the source when needed
17:32
that sounds like ... not an enum
takes me a while to learn new stuff, then learn i don't need it
the advantage of an enum is that consuming code can know, absolutely without question, that it's covered all possible cases
that's a nice summary
bool: true||false
exactly the example I was about to give
if you extend boolean to be true | false | file_not_found, then all sorts of craziness ensues
even keywords for html attr values are subject to change
17:35
but a particular processor might only handle a specific set
true|false|on|off... quantum just makes me want to learn binary
have you heard there's 10 kinds of people in this world? those who understand binary, and those who don't.
apparently, <form method="dialog"> is a thing now... but if you pass that to some old code that has specific cases for "post" and "get" you're going to get bugs
using enum FormMethod { case get; case post; } rather than string makes that literally impossible
damn i haven't seen that... thought i never needed to look at the specs again lol
I literally looked it up on MDN thinking it would be an example that hadn't changed lol
HAHAHA
i'm off, i'll be back.. sometime.. for now, it's time to watch the idiot box until the tv ends up watching me!
17:42
enjoy :)
GWAR RULZ! :marked as spam:
17:54
@TimWolla Huh. That sounds... exciting to fix.
I tried to follow the modulo vs remainder discussion a while back, and got lost quickly
the manual helpfully says that fdiv behaves "according to IEEE 754", but doesn't actually explain why that's different from /
fmod at least describes its algorithm, which ... I'm sure is useful to someone
IGP
IGP
18:45
google search is getting more unusable, yeah. Not only are sites ceasing to exist, google itself blacklists sites now that there are enough product placements to make the search results not look empty
I remember the good ole days when the algo was more naive and you could find things you weren't meant to find like a list of visa cards by using their range operator. The search query was something like "visa 0000000000000000..9999999999999999". Nowadays you try that stuff and you get a fun "we've been alerted of your suspicious behavior popup.
I also remember google being easily abusable to get a list of sites that didn't protect their environment files
Given how common it is to use a text file named .env , asking google "filetype:env" could yield some rather funny results. Back when I was a student I found some health related colombian site (can't remember if it was a hospital, clinic or something else altogether) with its database credentials there in plain text.
19:09
@IGP in fairness, on the other hand, stuff like doxxing a person from a profile picture, using Google image search... this has been made harder to do, and I think that's for the better. (In terms of the algo being pretty good at searching, but naive)
It's difficult for the algo to know what the intent of the user is, whether it's malicious or benevolent
Or even one of a gray hat (for lulz but not active harm towards a person)
IGP
IGP
That is a good side-effect of search becoming worse.
 
2 hours later…
21:03
@Crell Nothing to fix there. Both modulo and remainder are equally valid. Actual modulo is a little more useful, but they are easily converted between each other. See also this comment of mine: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24675729
Or rather, you can calculate the modulo from the remainder reasonably easy: stackoverflow.com/a/66777048/782822, not sure about the reverse case. Doesn't come up that often, because the remainder is much more common.
I believe x86 gives you the remainder for free whenever performing a division.
21:29
@Danack I watched a video on proper care of antique Japanese teapots where they pour water over them that I found interesting. (Honestly, first discovered this practice from an episode of the Sherlock series.) I like the patina on those teapots- not to mention those with excellent laminar flow.
 
2 hours later…
23:55
...
@pronskiy Anyway, I was thinking the PHP Foundation could be the place where users could give feedback on PHP internals development. /s

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