« first day (4594 days earlier)      last day (581 days later) » 

07:09
TBF IMO it's dumb that it always puts a German message first. It could easily get the default language from the HTTP headers and adjust accordingly. For an international (/English) site like the PHP manual it's kind of unexpected.
And when people visit the PHP site, they're probably in the middle of trying to get something done, looking up documentation, so they're already possibly a tad frustrated and suddenly they have this weird page they've never seen before (or just saw 5 minutes ago from some reports) in their face.
 
2 hours later…
08:50
Have I missed something, or why are people assuming that PHP 9 is going to come out after PHP 8.4????
3
Because people are dumb and spammy sites start reporting "PHP 9 soon" / "What's new in PHP 9" as soon as it appears on an RFC
because like php 7.4?
The "reason" for the split was mainly the JIT and how fastly that branch diverged with 7.4 due to Engine changes
I'm not sure if there wouldn't have been the JIT we would necessarily be on 8.x
@AllenJB I agree with the unexpected part, but it's not neccessarily easy: The response could be entirely static to be able to serve it with as little CPU processing required as possible.
09:15
@Girgias until the latest changes in my RFC, I used PHP 9.0 as a shorter form of "the next major PHP version". Unfortunately, I got rid of the clarification sentence last week.. :/ But I agree, it would be the best not to speculate about the release date of PHP 10.0 and such
09:55
Given the amount of breakage in 9.0 i'm sure the community wouldn't object to a longer period before it (unless more than 3 years of support was offered for 8.final)
10:36
Morning o/
mornin
 
1 hour later…
11:53
I don't see anything major coming up, so it might be somewhat boring PHP 9.0.
I'm just struggling to find time to do my breakages :(
Generics/Typed arrays would be nice for 9.0, but doesn't seems anyone wants to touch them right now.
Well if there's something that would drive adoption, it would be that. But yeah, extremely difficult from what ive read / seen
It's extremely difficult to implement them efficiently for sure
Honestly I think the community would be happy if we could just use them as annotations to start with. Static analysers in IDEs and CI are ubiquitous. It would certainly be "different" from PHP's usual way of doing things but it would be a start and offer a path to progressively enhance it
12:07
The problem is you would lock certain syntax, which you cannot change in any way for proper implementation. Also beginner might expect that they do something - which is not good.
I think that's a solved problem tbh, at least so far as classes go. The only thing which isn't is array's overloaded style.
12:27
@Girgias Well, technically, I am pretty sure 9 will be out after 8.4. But I guess you meant that 8.5 could also precede it....does it cause a problem people doing that?
@AllenJB I think maybe you're learning how annoying English by default is for non-English speakers?
Well if your intended audience is mainly going to be in English, which the docs are.
> if your intended
Myras customers are mostly german speakers. Yeah, it's not great that it's not setup as the PHP project would like....maybe we should ask for a refund.
Or they could do what they do on myrasecurity.com and detect the accept-language header :-)
except that's a proper website, not a DOS protection service that is probably malfunctioning.....Unless it's a deliberate nefarious scheme to make a list of PHP users...
@Danack For me the internet was always in English, despite being non-English speaker. However other languages are unexpected.
12:48
@Danack Right. Considering that the debate is "should we remove stuff that gets deprecated in PHP 8.3 (and later) in PHP 9.0 because there are only 2 years to prepare for it" is annoying
We already did not do a bunch of deprecations in PHP 8.0 because the argument was, let's make it easier to upgrade to 8.0 and have people not need to deal with some deprecations, which is all good and fine. But this also means we removed 1 year for people to deal with those deprecations
> But this also means we removed 1 year for people to deal with those deprecations
I think there is an assumption that the longer things are deprecated for, the better. I don't believe that is automatically true.
> Deprecation notices only deliver their value when the old versions of
the functions are removed, and before then are a cost.
Yeah, it's nice being able to tell users "you've had 4 years to deal with this", rather than say only 2. But it doesn't make it easier to deal with.
Sure, but the current debate is complaining that we are not providing enough time for people to deal with the removal. I.e. have it deprecated for the whole of the PHP 9.x release
Oh I agree
I am totally expecting the rush for deprecation in PHP 8.LAST the moment we know what it is....
@Girgias That's not quite my concern....it's more....people are tired. Although the wiki.php.net/rfc/deprecate_functions_with_overloaded_signatures is a good idea, those things have been like that in PHP for 20(?) years, so it seems hard to argue that they're causing a big problem.
something something, tradeoff between internals peoples time vs userland peoples time.
From what I can see, people who are complaining about short deprecations, are the same people who are not willing to fix their code no matter how much time they have.
Since taking over a new team I gained a better appreciation of 3 years not being a long time when dealing with legacy.
We managed to turn a 7.4 codebase around to 8.2 in about 4 months, but getting those 4 months, that wasn't easy.
13:01
Some are. But it's also mildly annoying for maintainers of open source libraries...and users thereof. It makes finding a version of PHP that all of your libraries work on be quite tricky in some cases.
It's not our fault that the previous set of core contributor didn't want to do anything to align userland and engine semantics for the last 20+ years. The fact that within the current roaster of core contributors, multiple of us want to improve the semantics is more a coincidence than anything else.

If we don't do it "now" then the argument "it has always been like this, lets not do this" just gets "stronger".
In particular, the incompatibilities in PHPUnit made life really quite annoying, and resulted in symfony/phpunit-bridge needing to be made.
If people would argue, introduce it and only deprecate it in 8.LAST then sure. But the assumption being PHP 8.4 is the last minor in the 8 major cycle is something that comes from nowhere.
@Krzysiek Why would generics need a major version bump tho?
> the argument "it has always been like this, lets not do this"
To be clear, my argument isn't saying that. It's "lets take the decision now, so that the improvement is baked in, and doesn't need to be a surprise/drama later". But I also don't particularly care that much...
Oh then sure
13:06
@Danack I had to write tests for php 5.3 to 8.2 for part of the codebase, a lot of things are missing in older versions, but surprisingly you still can write quite good tests which works in all versions without any additional libraries.
@Krzysiek Did you use PHPUnit? how did you work around the tests needing to return void in some versions, and that not being a thing in others?
@Girgias Scale of changes in the engine, nothing currently discussed seems to be complex enough to require major version
yesterday, by Danack
> it seems that new features for the JIT in the current form aren't accepted
@Danack I return nothing, no return type hint
and don't use the setup/teardown or other hooks that phpunit allows you to define?
ftw - if new features aren't accepted in the current JIT, that must mean Dmitry is thinking of merging his WIP of the new one 'soon', right? Has anyone asked him explicitly what his plan is for it?
13:21
Not really, but I'm restricted a lot by PHP compatibility anyway. Used versions:
php:5.3+ - phpunit:4.8.36
php:5.6 - phpunit:5.7.27
php:7.0 - phpunit:6.5.14
php:7.1 - phpunit:7.5.20
php:7.2 - phpunit:8.5
php:7.3+ - phpunit:9.5
php:8.1 - phpunit:latest
13:44
@Wes did you get my message? Can you ping me on twitter please? I can't remember your new username.
13:56
@Danack to be clear, It was my impression that new features aren't accepted based on these two comments: github.com/php/php-src/pull/10206#issuecomment-1375239711 and github.com/php/php-src/pull/10206#issuecomment-1417597653
So merge sometime end of this year according to the comment
Also wow the SO chat on mobile has a really bad UX, the text input always goes out of view and it's hard to reposition the cursor
I think your impression sounds accurate...
> I hope, it's going to be merged into master in this year.
that sounds like before PHP 9 though.....I should ask him.
14:28
Does PHP have a "Larry Wall?"
14:47
I just now realize that @Girgias range() proposal breaks the "hack" to force a range across ascii characters, possibly involving numbers: range("$startchr ", "$endchr ") reliably returns single char strings… even if $startchr is numeric :-D
truly cursed range() function
@Girgias If it works … it works? :-D
Do a map on a range on ASCII code points array_map(range($start_byte, $end_byte), chr(...));? :D
expensive and boring!
@bwoebi can't argue against this
14:51
Might be cheaper to just prepend @
I'll have a quick think to see if I can do something to use the string behaviour if one of them is a single byte instead of casting the string to 0
Might be more sensible...
 
1 hour later…
16:14
@Danack "it seems that new features for the JIT in the current form aren't accepted" Tbh I don't think this is a fair representation. Nothing changed here recently, Dmitry has always been hesitant with changes from other people, when he hasn't carefully considered them.
I don't think the new JIT is close to being ready.
16:37
... am I just losing it or did @Girgias's auto avatar thing change?
It did, it put me off too :D
17:03
*3
 
1 hour later…
18:26
TBH, I also got it granted that we'll have PHP 9.0 right after PHP 8.4.. but thinking about it, I can hardly imagine that we can come up with such a huge feature that really warrants it, except for: IR JIT (?) or streams to objects (?) as @Girgias wrote.
Another reason to release PHP 9.0 in the not too distant future could be not to accumulate even more deprecations over more than 5 years.
18:45
@MateKocsis The engine warning / exception changes (and we've still got a lot more needing to be RFC'd) would be the big ones
 
1 hour later…
19:49
@MarkR Don't ask me why it did it...
I maybe should just put my face
20:43
Afternoon all
20:59
@FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier Yes, like Rasmus, ty
21:14
Or with a bit of art for flair....
@Danack o/
21:38
@MarkR Thanks for the info. Since I expect most issues to be discuss-and-consensus rather than a vote per se, I didn't think it was that big a deal.
22:15
github.com/php/php-src/issues/11244#issuecomment-1548682851 is this a bug or ... just how it works? :-D
(I know, you all like by-ref foreach iteration.)
I'm scratching a bit my head over whether this can be fixed at all with the ht_iterators implementation
But it's ... probably a bug, as in, who would expect the current behaviour. Side effect of a copy... CoW is supposed to be transparent.
wiki.php.net/rfc/php7_foreach#foreach_by_reference_over_arrays This seems to suggest that any change to array should not reset internal pointer of foreach
@Krzysiek The emphasis is change to the array. But in this case the iterated array itself is replaced with a new array. Which should reset iteration. ... normally. Except probably if it gets separated due to modification...
Are there any ways to test an ldap_bind for more debug? I have 2 servers that have the same code but with different php version.
22:37
@bwoebi Is this due to cow using the same internal pointer as the foreach?
ayy
@Krzysiek no, it uses a different one, which is the problem
probably the foreach-iterator pointer needs to be duplicated on array duplication
I think it may be fixable, but only in PHP 8.3 as the fix probably requires an ABI break.
23:06
@bwoebi chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/56228547#56228547 There is also variant with object and clone. As it turned out, I was wrong with the explanation, but live and learn :)
Trying to implement a fix right now, will report back when compiling the first time...
3v4l.org/Yithb I'll just leave that here for later
23:51
$ ./sapi/cli/php x.php
0
1
2
remove 2
3
better

« first day (4594 days earlier)      last day (581 days later) »