hey, i'm working on that thing again. when i started it i thought it would be like a couple months work lol. there are a million things to consider @LeviMorrison
for instance now i'm wondering on whether i should disallow $map->putall($map); since it forces me to write really crappy code
i have been already strict on this. for instance i explicitly disallow modifying the collections concurrently... like during iterations. foreach($a as $b => $c){ $a->remove($b); } is not allowed
@Wes Designing collection like libraries is fine but having designed many at this point I think it's pointless to publish any more work until we have generics.
regarding setAll, putAll etc. i agreed with you until i realized these methods are not trivial. if it was just foreach(...) $a->add() then i wouldn't have them. but again there is not just that
well not just that, there are many other things. for example "add all" in the multiset type must make sure that the sum of all elements does not exceed PHP_INT_MAX. also setall could do preallocation for array based data structures, e.g. function addAll($items){ if($items instanceof Collection){ $this->ensureCapacity($items->count); } /* ... */ }
Hmm. I added an implements list to traits and it breaks tests, but I'm not sure why. Somehow that AST being present, even if empty, breaks stuff. Definitely should not happen.
For some reason the trait doesn't get registered...
@JoeWatkins I'm trying to implement generic traits at the moment. So far so good. There's a part I haven't gotten to yet that I'd like to pick your brain about. Let's say I have a trait:
trait Foo<T> {
function get(): T {}
}
Since traits don't use the interface list I've stored the generic type parameters in the interface slots.
When I get to apply the generic type parameters at runtime:
I've never done anything the right way in my my life
have you come up with a name for this ?
imo don't call it "generics", if you call it that, you will be met with a chorus of "let's have all of generics or none of it" ... I think it stands on it's own, I like "templates" ....
@Levi regarding your thoughts on generics, we may, internally, wrap our callable into a Closure wrapper having the expected types. Thus, passing a callable to function(callable(float): string $cb) will do the usual variance checks if applicable, and then effectively set $cb = function (float $arg1, ...$argn): string use ($cb) { return $cb($arg1, ...$argn); } in order to guarantee that values we pass in will be of the correct type (e.g. casting from int to float is done), and also return type
Obviously we also may go further and determine the return type of the actual callable, given the restricted set of input types (according to the functions callable() argument parameters) and compare it with the expected return type for superb compile time type inferring … (may be interesting for cases where there's only one possible value for the parameter)
that's so typical of @bwoebi… we are discussing coffee and he waltzes in without saying mrningin to anyone and then changes the topic to actual php development
@ChiragDaxini everyone here are just egoistic, have knowledge but not for sharing and those are active in this room are just doing their personal team stuff in this group
> I'm self-taught and it took me a long time to learn how to write good code. I learned from many different resources, mostly from non-PHP books. I am writing this book so that you don't have to go through the same trouble as me.
I'm trying to figure out what the correct status code to return on different scenarios with a "rest-like" API that I'm working on. Let's say I have a ending point that allows POST'ing purchases in JSON format. It looks like this:
{
"account_number": 45645511
"upc": "00490000486"
"p...
The general jist of it is that kelunik managed to hunt down and kill wizards, uploading their consciousness into git repos. The repos are therefore made entirely of magic, and do amazing things.
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Does anyone have any naming suggestions for a namespace that holds app specific types, that isn't quite 'heavy' enough to be called a 'model'. For example I'm creating a type to hold key-value pairs for variables that need to be mailmerged into an email.
I'd prefer to not just dump them all into the root namespace of the project.....
@Danack Do you really need an all-encompassing namespace? Wouldn't it be better if that would be closer to your email logic anyway? And all the others close to their usage?