@QuolonelQuestions I genuinely believe it would help your RFC if you would consider proposing it for PHP 8.5 and not for PHP 8.4. Given the amount of parallel discussions at the moment, it would allow folks to give it sufficient thought.
At least speaking for myself, I really don't have the energy to think about it right now, as I've also indicated on the list.
@TimWolla Is 8.5 even a thing? I thought the next version was 9. In any case, you know what to do. Vote against and you'll get your wish. I don't think it's going to pass anyway. At this rate I'll be lucky to get 50%, never mind 66%
Sorry if that sounds curt, but you're the only one so far that is imploring me to delay it, and I don't want to wait another year for this feature that's ready today. If it doesn't pass this time then I'll field it again in 6 months if you think that's really going to make the difference
@QuolonelQuestions It's not clear what the version after 8.4 will be called, but I don't see anything on the horizon that would be sufficiently significant to call it a 9.0 rather than 8.5.
@QuolonelQuestions While it's technically allowed to repropose an unmodified RFC after 6 months, I do not believe that it will be well-received.
I expect the only vote that will change if we wait is yours. And even that is not guaranteed. If the RFC fails by one vote then I will take my hat off to you
I know you're just trying to help, but I didn't take a crash course in PHP internals this weekend to not take my shot here and now
Call it a character flaw, but I'm just not that patient
That is fair. One final note then: Given that you made significant changes to the RFC text and to my understanding the semantics just yesterday (including updating the version number), it would be in order to give folks at least another week before starting the vote.
I made very minimal changes. I just clarified some unresolved (open) questions. That said, as a result of the discussion today, I am convinced to allow static abstract, so that will be a somewhat more significant change I plan to make today. Regardless, I think there is enough time to grant your request, but why delay the start of the vote as opposed to just extend the end? There isn't a time limit on how long it can be open for is there?
@QuolonelQuestions 8.0 came after 7.4 for reasons that may not be recreated for 8.x :p I want to say it was because of JIT being a major change, which required a major version number increase, but i think there were other reasons, and JIT was a contributing factor
As to why the start of the vote should move: After making significant changes to the RFC, folks should have the opportunity to discuss the latest changes. That's what the discussion period is for.
Once the vote started there cannot be any further changes.