Reading @Girgias new RFC - do we need to distinguish fetch and get? Can't we just make interface DimensionFetchable implements DimensionReadable { function &getOffset($offset); }? Which is trivially allowed by LSP.
I also don't think the interfaces should specify mixed, as this preempts setting a more specific type on the implementations. The interfaces are there to describe the capability rather than "yeah all types accepted!"
I wished we could have default impls for interfaces, e.g. FetchAppendable could implement public function append(mixed $value) { $var =& $this->fetchAppend(); $var = $value; }
Also, can we have ArrayAccess implement the interfaces with identical method names? Not sure if possible...
Also is there a particular reason to rename offsetSet to offsetWrite?
@Girgias No, it doesn't mean mixed, it means unspecified. Unspecified means that you cannot rely on the type requirements of the specified method, but should look at the concrete implementation. It only really means mixed on concrete implementations.
@Girgias I guess the proper way would be having generics there... But well, that's a topic for another time :-P
I think we could maybe start the generics topic with interface generics... Where we infer the interface generic type to the closest matching type of the concretes...
@Girgias Reading this I wonder why this proposes usage of forward analysis coming from the input instead from the result type ... Like if I can infer that new C is going to be assigned to something (or returned) expecting C<A> ... why not just attempt to create a C<A>?
I was looking hammer-php (in the recent php roundup blogpost) and saw that it offers to switch: $example = array_merge($a, $b); to: $example = [ ...$a, ...$b ];
Is that as memory efficient?
This RFC claims ... is better actually: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/spread_operator_for_array although it says "performance" not necessarily memory.
@Daniel Generally yes, given that the ratio is consistent between versions I think this is reliable. Given the word "should", this statement may be unfounded, I'm not sure if somebody actually measured performance. array_merge should have the benefit of calculating the target array size, avoiding growing the array multiple times.
@IluTov not sure which message you are referring to. I was suggesting that it is incorrect to switch array_merge to spread (blindly). Are you agreeing to that?
(I assume you were responding to my 2nd message (3v4l) that seems to show that array_merge is preferable to spread notation)
Hmm. Guess it depends on how its being used. See here: https://gist.github.com/germanow/dc32035336d90bb44691bff047470a79#file-bench_array_merge_vs_spread-php
Although the spread edition there is also using array_merge. I guess we need to differentiate between the actual use cases.