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00:22
@nielsdos Right. It seems like a pretty polarizing topic... I tried to go for the middle ground, which apparently nobody is interested in. Anyway, I consider this a lost cause a this point.
@QuolonelQuestions Complex grammar workarounds to forbid syntax doesn't seem like a good idea to me, nor is it a good user experience. Through the compiler, you can provide better error messages. I'm not sure why we would do that.
@Crell The biggest problem is in the way it was presented. default is proposed to be a general expression, which makes it useless in many contexts. But it behaves the same as pretty much all other expressions. It executes, yields a result, and that can be used. E.g. we didn't go through match and say "oh, it doesn't make sense with bit-shifts, so let's forbid that."
To play Devil's Advocate, what do you think about forbidding certain syntax in the compiler?
I think it was relatively clear that there were relatively few use-cases. I think, given the relatively small complexity of the feature itself, it's justifiable. So, if it solves these use-cases nicely, I'm fine with it.
00:40
@Crell @bwoebi FWIW, I think Larry and I have very different skill sets which seems to work out well. You don't need to be a language expert to be helpful (I'm certainly not one). But yes, I agree that sometimes, people on the list try a bit too hard to appear superior.
@QuolonelQuestions Restricting expressions doesn't generally make sense from a language perspective, IMO. They are composable by design, and it's impossible to anticipate all the combinations that are potentially useful. Contrary to what people say, I don't believe there's a big risk of finding unsolvable "gotchas" in this case.
Thanks for giving me those words. I'm inclined to agree strongly enough that I would copy them into the RFC if that's OK
As I've shared with you all along, I find the use-cases quite rare. But I find it baffling when people who don't maintain the engine complain about engine complexity. Since this doesn't add much, I don't object to adding a small improvement.
I agree, this isn't an everyday tool, it's just occasionally very handy
01:12
@IluTov I finally patched the match() problem: github.com/php/php-src/pull/15437/commits/…
 
8 hours later…
09:18
Happy Monday
09:33
Is there any way we can make coalesce work with default?
i.e. default ?? 1
Since default is a separate opcode, I don't see how this would work
09:53
@QuolonelQuestions This doesn't match what you said yesterday, namely that you planned on preventing match (1) { default, 2 => ... }. But I believe it should behave correctly.
Yes, you're right, it permits default to share a conditional branch
Whilst that is a new feature, I'm not sure why we want would to prohibit this?
Personally, I have never needed my default branch to share a value with another condition, but I imagine it could come up
@QuolonelQuestions The lhs of ?? is compiled using BP_VAR_IS. In this mode, there are no undeclared variable errors. To handle this, you would need to pass some flag to your opcode and suppress exceptions if it is set. However, this is even more niche.
Andreas Leathley posted a good use case for it on the list
Polymorphic calls with conditionally available default values and call-site fallback default values sounds like the definition of niche. ^^
lol
But I still think we should support it if it's not too difficult
10:14
How would I pass a flag to my opcode? Using one of the ops? Or maybe the extended value?
10:52
OTOH Andreas makes a good point. Holding off for now as it probably isn't worth it
11:37
@QuolonelQuestions Either will work. If you use extended_value, you'll need to share it with the cache slot offset. See ZEND_FETCH_REF on how that's done. The offsets are multiples of sizeof(void*), so the first few bits are free.
Low bits, I mean
11:48
I don't think I understand enough about C to know what that really means. I'm guessing the size of a void pointer would just be whatever the OS uses for memory address sizing? But in any case, why you would ever be able to assume some bits would always be free makes no sense to me lol
if sizeof(void*) = 8 (which it usually is on 64 bit platforms)
and only every 8th number is used, then you have bits 2 1 0 free to do stuff
Because we don't point into the pointers, only to the start of the pointers. If sizeof(void*) is 8, then the offset is a multiple of 8. Multiples of 8 don't use the 1, 2 or 4 bit. On 32-bit, sizeof(void*) is 4, so only the 1 and 2 bits are free.
Beat me to it ^^
you wrote more text though :-D
12:11
xD
OK, I think I get it. Memory addresses are always multiples of the address size, hence the low bits are never on
But if you start packing information into those low bits, presumably you need to remember to mask them off again otherwise it would be an invalid pointer?
Pointers don't have to contain multiples of sizeof(void*). This isn't really a pointer anyway, it's an offset that's added to a pointer. The relevant part is that we're storing the offset into a list of pointers, so the offset will be a multiple of the pointer size.
@IluTov Is there some compelling design reason why default could not previously share a match arm with other conditions or was it mostly an incidental restriction?
@QuolonelQuestions Have you looked at ZEND_FETCH_REF? If not, please do so. I give you practical examples so that you get into the habit of checking similar code.
I am mindful that even though relaxing this restriction seems good and harmless, someone is bound to use it as an excuse to vote against, and really this RFC should not be hiding unrelated features within
@QuolonelQuestions Functionally, it's pointless. It may be useful for clarification or documentation. So I don't really mind it.
12:25
Why is it pointless? Seems like it would be a useful way to avoid specifying the same output expression for default and one or more other conditions
@QuolonelQuestions That doesn't really make sense. Then you can just not specify the other arm and just keep the default one.
Oh lol I see
@IluTov of course, as soon as I'm back at the computer 🙂
12:51
@QuolonelQuestions Actually, I think it's better to prevent `default, ... =>` for now. It implicitly changes order:

var_dump(match (1) {
default => 'default',
1 => 'default',
1 => 1,
});
// default

var_dump(match (1) {
default, 1 => 'default',
1 => 1,
});
// 1

I would expect these two examples to be equivalent.
Hmm that is weird
So the default arm is always evaluated last?
But yes, I concur, to avoid complicating the RFC (and to make good on my original promise)
13:06
@QuolonelQuestions It's modeled after switch, so yes.
13:38
OK I patched it :^) https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/15437/commits/082dd45b4f3ddb7501ca43fb12d798ce1971a83a
I added a new commit instead of rewriting the old one, for posterity
 
2 hours later…
15:35
@QuolonelQuestions Yeah but that's spread over days. Yours was one day! Crazy. I'm not sure I even want to read that lol
Do any other languages have a "default" keyword or similar? I haven't read your RFC, but did quickly scan it and didn't see any such sections.
15:52
@IluTov I agree the presentation/discussion is lacking. "It would be way more work to restrict the expressions allowed" is a valid and compelling argument. I wish the RFC had led with that in the first place. At the moment I am overall undecided on it. I could still be swayed either direction, I think.
16:13
@LeviMorrison I can recommend you don't 😋
I'll try to summarise the key disputes in the RFC
The key criticisms seem to be: the grammar is too permissive, and default values are now part of an objects public API
Weren't they always?
Not without reflection
Sorry I suppose I should also mention there is now a growing continent of people that believe default should not get resolved at call time but rather be passed as a token and get resolved after it has been sent to the function, for reasons they don't seem to clearly articulate
16:40
@QuolonelQuestions You needed to use reflection to obtain the value, but they're still part of the public API. Changing a default is a behavior change.
16:57
Since named args it's easier than it once was for relying on defaults, I take it what this RFC is asking for is to be able to treat an arg like it wasn't passed for the sake of its default, but to do so like a named arg in a terniary?
Looks that way
echo (new Xkcd149)->(sudo)make_me_a_sandwich(); // OK, here you go...
that gem of a suggestion on the ML had me laugh out loud :-D
17:20
@MarkR I'm not sure I fully followed that description, but I think so, yes; conditional defaults are the most compelling use case in my view, although for some reason a lot of listers gravitated more to my random example in the appendix regarding flags
@Trowski if that is truly the case then their argument to that effect would be entity moot, which is... interesting
17:47
@QuolonelQuestions I also agree that default argument values are part of the public API. People look at an API doc and see "oh yeah these defaults are the values I need, so I don't need to pass them explicitly". At least I do this.
Makes sense
So I don't buy their argument
Me neither. The ML is where good ideas go to die
And where RFC authors get gray hair
@QuolonelQuestions Yeah I took a glance through, using it like that is weird, I was thinking it would just be functionally equivalent to omitting the arg at call time.
18:10
I wonder whether my rejection of Jims proposal will be unpopular, at least in the PR it sounds rather positive...
 
4 hours later…
22:09
@bwoebi Which one?
I try to keep up with the list, but good grief, these last few days are just too much.
@bwoebi Ah, that one. "I read this RFC as an opportunity to allow community-driven PHP projects to be embraced when it suits PHP's internals needs." I also understood it way. I.e. when people are asking for a specific feature, it may be useful to point them to something specific. The intent is definitely not for projects to promote themselves.
@IluTov Well, there was a PR which prompted that RFC and I'd reject that PR too.
So I at least have to assume that this PR would have been covered under the RFC

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