« first day (5062 days earlier)      last day (115 days later) » 

08:33
I expect the compiler to tell me if something is broken or not, not to be opinionated about how things should be used. It's not a style checker
 
1 hour later…
09:36
@QuolonelQuestions You missed the point. zend_value_error() explicitly adds the ZEND_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT() attribute, which asks the for the compiler to check arguments according to the first constant string. MSVC only doesn't complain because it doesn't support this feature.
I see
Also on this topic, I guess we need to settle on what type to throw here. I am not sure what is the most "PHP" thing to throw. I've been using ValueError, but I also pasted your code in which used zend_throw_exception instead. It looks to me that ValueError is never actually thrown by the VM in any other scenario
AAALSO, how is it even valid to store a cache slot in an opcode at compile-time? Isn't the cache slot a memory address? How can that possibly be constant once the VM actually runs (especially WRT opcache)
Unless the VM somehow has some degree of control over its memory layout
It's just an offset.
You get the actual address with CACHE_ADDR().
Oh, that's what that does :^)
10:02
>⚠️ Failed to start an instance: FAILED_PRECONDITION: Monthly compute limit exceeded!
:<
Maybe I read too hastily, but with wiki.php.net/rfc/default_expression, is it (not) possible to differentiate two separate defaults in a scope? I think it was Juliette's last reply to Bilge that got me thinking.
10:27
There is no ambiguity I'm aware of.
@QuolonelQuestions There is one for foo(match (true) { default => ... }). Ambiguity in the semantic sense, not grammar sense. You should specify precedence, i.e. that default in match refers to the default case, not fetching the default value.
That's what it currently does, right? You mean just that it needs documenting?
It's also worth noting that foo(match (true) { default + 1 => ... }) will refer to the default arg, but foo(match (true) { (default) => ... }) will not, which is somewhat confusing.
@QuolonelQuestions Yes
Oh lol I didn't even realise that...
It kinda makes sense. It only doesn't when I stop and think about it, but somehow I find it kinda intuitive
For sure the match case needs more thoroughly testing and documenting
 
2 hours later…
12:16
@IluTov Why are we calling zend_emit_op_tmp? All tests pass if we just call zend_emit_op instead
Also some listers are saying we might need to split the token to make PHP easier to parse in userland
 
1 hour later…
13:53
Is there documentation on settings values inside an if statement? I have a function that accepts a single variable, and returns a sanitized version of it or false. I want to use the sanitized value within the if block (if truthy). I've done it before but wanted to look at the docs to learn more about it (in case it has hidden quirks)
Example: (I'd much rather the 2nd way, saves calling the sanitize function twice)

if ($this->validate_sanitize_output($output)) {
$this->output = $this->validate_sanitize_output($output);
}

--- vs ---

if ($validOutput = $this->validate_sanitize_output($output)) {
$this->output = $validOutput;
}
14:34
@Daniel Approach 2. is perfectly fine. It's equivalent to making the assignment just before the if statement.
Thank you @IluTov
15:06
@IluTov Ah sorry, for some reason I thought the plain version didn't use a result variable at all, not just that it switched types
15:34
@QuolonelQuestions No worries. The summary is that TMPVAR is a more restricted (and thus faster) version of VAR.
Yeah, I got that bit. Just didn't understand the implementation details of the function calls
15:56
Despite Bwobbi's great Bison patch, internals is lobbying against such an open grammar, to restrict the list of valid expressions involving default to only a subset they consider valid
Sad day
16:15
All I had to do was not explain what an expression is and we would have been fine :^)
16:45
Thanks for weighing in, Ilija :^)
17:08
@QuolonelQuestions Yeah, I was thinking this list might backfire when I saw it :D
 
2 hours later…
19:08
And the stupid thing is, they only believe it's the definitive list because I say it is. But it's not. It doesn't even cover variable expressions
But I'm not exactly incentivized to point it out now
19:36
34 comment in a single day? That's a ton of messages for a single thread o.O
20:05
People are flipping out over flipping function lookups :^)
Oh wait, you mean mine l0l
Don't look at me, flipping functions already has over 100
20:22
the flipping functions thread is quickly getting some bizarre takes
@QuolonelQuestions I went through your RFC, I find it compelling to accept, and I like that there are no arbitrary restrictions on the expressions (unlike some ppl on the ML). Nice work on the text and the code.
Thanks 🥰
I'm starting to conclude the ML is a bit toxic/counter-productive. Just chilling in here has been a far better way to spend time, learn and get things done
I don't like interacting with the ML either
I mean it's tough because some good stuff comes out of it, too. But there are also those who have to give their opinions on everything and won't let it go
The most annoying thing is when you have opposing group opinions on the ML and you have no idea what to do.
After a while you also learn who you should rather ignore
Pretty sure you're not the only one who has come up with a shortlist
20:29
Very true
21:18
>The parameter reduces to "(expression) ?: default", which I've already agreed is useful.

@IluTov Can you help me think through this? Because I don't particularly want to go back and start prototyping Bison grammars all over again. From what I recall, this is not really possible. That is, if you allow a special subset of expression grammars including `default` to recurse, then they can only recurse with that subset. They cannot have, as one of their operands, the entire expression grammar because that is just a catastrophic number of conflicts
If I'm right about that, then I think this is what the pro-restrictive grammar crowd is currently completely missing, i.e. the practicality of what they're advocating for is basically non-existent
Also @bwoebi could probably weigh in here if he's around :^)
21:41
I was a bit baffled when seeing that list of expressions - like most people don't really understand what an expression really consititutes, and that, in fact, not having arbitrary restrictions on the expression grammar makes the grammar much simpler.
Like it's such a batshit argument they have on the ml there.
Surely is. Can you verify this for me before I send it to the list, though?
>So, in this example, somehow expr ?: default is OK. This is simply impossible and would cause catastrophic shift/reduce conflicts in the grammar. If default is to live in a restricted subset of allowed expression grammars, then it can only recurse with those same restrictions, meaning both operands of any operators are so restricted.
Ergo I do not need to demonstrate the usefulness of applying other operators directly to default, merely including them somewhere in the expression is sufficient to demonstrate they are useful because at that point we're back to recursing the general expression grammars (free of any restrictions)
Is that accurate or am I missing something? (also does it make sense)
@bwoebi I think some people do get that it makes the grammar simpler, but they are asympathetic to that particular argument
It's a good thing to write, as in it makes sense and is a good argument (though not completely correct, but going into the details won't help anyone).
lol
It's like, I can just say whatever because nobody with the penchant for argument has the chops to prove me wrong
Precisely.
21:48
I guess if it were my RFC I'd just not reply to that point at all for a couple days, then just summarily describe why they're all idiots wrong.
I guess RFC duty requires me to list this as a rejected idea, so that summary dismissal is going to happen anyway
But I'm just curious to talk this through to its logical conclusion, if indeed it reaches one
22:47
@QuolonelQuestions That may be the case (I don't know; I'm not a parser engineer). But the way that's being presented on the list right now is really quite poor and needlessly adversarial. It makes me not want to engage, or support the RFC.
@Crell sigh. I just sent a mail, hopefully it makes sense.
@Crell news-web.php.net/php.internals/125247 … I don't know what else to add.
I definitely appreciate the support, but to play Devil's Advocate, I wouldn't feel particularly persuaded by just this.
>It is almost never sensible to arbitrarily restrict grammars.
Can you explain a bit more about why that is the case?
Not really. :-) There's two different questions being tossed around, both relevant, but frequently confused.

1. Conceptually, SHOULD we allow any ol' expression and let some of them be dumb, or should the language have guardrails to keep you from doing stupid things.

2. Technically, is it even feasible to restrict the expressions that `default` could be used in. Or would that be a 10x increase in complexity.
You are the best expert I know when it comes to this, and so I lean on you to provide any more useful details, as I've done all I can already, and apparently it hasn't helped my case due to the way I've responded (as I felt attacked)
22:53
@QuolonelQuestions Because it makes the grammar much more complex (you realized that while writing the code) and less intuitive (oh, I suddenly cannot use this operation in this context?? … but in my case it makes sense!).
That all makes sense to me. I don't know why anyone thinks they can do a good job of justifying a blacklist of arbitrary restrictions. They are, after all, artbirary
When pushback was given on the number of nonsensical expressions, the first response was "how dare you try to restrict the developer, we should let people shoot themselves in the foot." (Yes, hyperbolic description, but that's how it came off.) It then morphed into "well actually we tried limiting it, but that was hard, so an expert did the even harder work already, where's your gotcha now, eh, eh?"
Yeah, the line of argumentation went wrong.
Leading with "we actually tried to just allow a few expression styles, but it ended up being way way easier to support arbitrary expressions, trying to restrict it would balloon the patch", without the snark, would have saved a dozen messages at least.
@QuolonelQuestions But my main point is - which I have written in the mail with the coalesce example - is that we're currently not doing it and we should not suddenly start doing it, all technical issues aside.
22:56
@Crell I just assume everyone on the list knows what they're talking about because I'm new and I have the (reasonable?) expectation that everyone has more experience than me. So if people are saying, why don't we (arbitrarily restrict grammars) then I give them the benefit of the doubt that they could actually implement what they're promoting. Now it comes to light that it's basically a load of BS
It would be a RFC unto itself to restrict grammar.
@QuolonelQuestions 80% of mails from people on the list are just bullshitting and sounding more knowledgeable than they are.
@QuolonelQuestions The barrier to entry to post to the mailing list is "can figure out how to subscribe." Which, while a higher bar than it should be, is a vastly lower bar than "understands the details of Bison."
(Not 80% of people occasionally participating on the list, but 80% of the mails)
I've been around the list since 2007, and at least some people think I have a clue what I'm doing, but my attempts to actually patch php-src myself at all have all ended in me feeling like a total moron. :-) The skill level of posters on the list is highly variable, both between people and between subjects.
In short, approach someone's "dumb" statement as an opportunity to educate, not as an opportunity to point out why you're smarter than they are. The latter is what the thread has mainly consisted of, and it's going to backfire.
The thing is, I'm not smarter than anyone on the list, I just took a dive into src when others might shy away from it. Call it dumb stubbornness. I just got tired of waiting for things to get into PHP so I tried doing it myself (with a lot of help)
It's not that simple. You could, if you wanted, just copy and paste the entire list of expression grammars and add T_DEFAULT to it. i.e. [this](https://github.com/php/php-src/blob/master/Zend/zend_language_parser.y#L1198-L1327)
But would that ever be accepted? Now we have to maintain two types of expression in PHP instead of one. Just because of `default`. And for what? It would be the only token of its kind with that treatment
I believe Ilija said it best, but nobody seemed to pay it any attention.

>Looking at the `expr` nonterminal [1] I can't see any productions that are restricted in the context they can be used in

This is an important point that, if you want to suddenly start restricting where and how expressions can be used then it is a sudden and drastic departure from how we treat any other expression context. That needs a more solid justification than "the language should have guardrails". I think PHP is not the language for such a philosophy, mainly because it's a bit late for that
I'm not saying you shouldn't employ some defensive guardrails to your RFC or to concepts where they make sense, but I don't think this is one of those places where it makes any sense
23:06
@QuolonelQuestions Your "gotcha" comments to Rowan absolutely came off as "smarter than you", and rude. That may not have been your intent, but it was definitely the result.
@Crell To be honest and frank, I often think you don't know what you are doing; you have a bit of an idea in language design and even less idea in assessing capabilities of what the VM may provide. The proposals you have are in general quite naive, especially when it comes down to individual details. That you are able to make RFCs which pass depends a great lot on the people who partner with you and can guide you.
I don't mean that negatively, but I repeatedly got the feeling that you've been overestimating your own language designing capabilities. This was particularly blatant to me when we were discussing patterns and details of hooks, where Ilija was much more aligned with me than you. Please consider this feedback and no offence, but I've definitely privately heard by a couple people that "[you] should not design RFCs". No idea whether anyone directly told you, but here I am.
It's not about being smarter, it's just about having a little bit of practical experience modifying the grammar
As for the philosophical side, we've been adding guardrails for 20 years now, bit by bit. Types? Guardrails. Enums? Guardrails. Generics? Guardrails. Readonly? Guardrails.
I'm sorry for turning it into a pissing contest. I was just frustrated with the constant barrage of demand to change the entire core of the RFC when I didn't have the experience or knowledge to defend my position. You will note I came here for support in writing my response because I don't really know fully what I'm doing, and that leaves me feeling vulnerable and attacked
@bwoebi I am well aware that I am the junior partner when working with Ilija.
23:11
@QuolonelQuestions That's also a problem which can be avoided by … being silent at times and not doing too much back and forth.
@bwoebi Yeah you're right. I'm a bit too hot-headed at times
(Gotta head out; family here with cute baby.)
@Crell You are sometimes hiding it well, that you're aware of that :-P (at least in how much more junior you are)
@Crell I'm not sure these things are equivalent. You're talking about guardrails given to PHP developers for consumers of their code, not guardrails against the PHP developer
@QuolonelQuestions Yes, he's conflating these two topics.
23:15
Restricting where you can use grammars is nothing to do with protecting against how someone uses your userland library, but is everything to do with how you can (or rather, how you cannot) write PHP code in the first instance
Anyway I don't think Rowan can be helped (given his last reply), so ignore him @QuolonelQuestions
lol yes I've already resigned to that conclusion as well :^)
It's like, why should we have a shorthand to do the thing we can already do, when we could just not? That seems like an indefensible position to me, so he can die on that hill if he wants
Yeah, it's "do I want to have the feature itself at all?"
@bwoebi FWIW I think Crell's RFCs are pretty cool :) And I don't mind if he doesn't know VM details. Sometimes you need someone with a crazy idea, unburdened by what they know, or think they know, about what is possible, in order to push boundaries and move the language forward. I sometimes worry I might stop having crazy ideas if I become overburdened with implementation details and knowledge
@QuolonelQuestions I'm not saying his high level concepts are wrong. But the more it goes into details…
23:31
That's why Crell + Ilija is such a great team. You have the dreamer and the practicalist to ground them
They meet in the middle and produce something great
It's that Crell does a pretty fine job with the technical writing in the RFC, which nobody else wants to do :-D
I feel that
23:46
good news everyone, I just finished a lox interpreter after reading Bob Nystrom's "Crafting Interpreters" book, surely I can now speak with authority on all these topics and will join the ML shortly, brace yourselves
Dive in my dude, and godspeed
@FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier Okay, that's what I call an authority now :-P
fully agreed :) jokes aside, what a marvelous book
I read his Game Programming Patterns some decades ago, so it probably is :^)

« first day (5062 days earlier)      last day (115 days later) »