@beberlei regarding the article I think it'd be better to replace blacklist with exclude list as most of it describes a list of filenames opcache should skip I guess
"You need to see color" is valid, but not taken to the point of "see color in absolutely everything." anything good can be taken to an extreme where it is counter-productive.
And btw. colors always have been assigned a meaning … white (light) has always been something good/pure, and black rather a saddening color (darkness).
@salathe I'll try to fix the indentation, but it's difficult for me to notice it (bad eyesight). I tried fixing it as best as I could before committing on the PR, but I guess it's still not good.
well, bad eyesight and the editor I'm using doesn't make it easily noticeable...
@Tiffany It's just that everything inside that new section needs one more space at the beginning... it's not a problem and could be fixed separately in a "whitespace fix" commit. :)
Wondering if a revote on syntax should be majority wins and be vs the selected syntax so that it is lile the secondary vote on the original rfc. Otherwise all will be 2/3
seems to work just so slow that it times out or something
``` Updating dependencies (including require-dev) Content-Length mismatch, received 482135 bytes out of the expected 1702355 http://repo.packagist.org could not be fully loaded, package information was loaded from the local cache and may be out of date ```
@beberlei Then there would be duplicate attributes that need to be kept in sync, though.
I actually tried changing the RFC examples to use `#[]` instead of `@@`: https://gist.github.com/theodorejb/e1048650c31512b149d898dcd76e89b8 Existing PHP syntax highlighters treat `#[` as a comment, though, which doesn't help readability.
Arguments against #[]: Slightly more verbose, larger BC break, more difficult to type.
@Trowski Why do you think <<>> is preferable over @@?
@Crell Using @@ as the new attribute syntax also isn't a syntax break. :D Just make an empty function with the same name as the attribute and you have backwards compatibility.
@TheodoreBrown i guess all of that is subjective again. :) I was wondering if we should do a threeway vote on <<>> vs @@ vs #[] for simple majority, other than a 2/3 vote for @@ and potentially another 2/3 vote for #[]
To me @@ just feels like syntax that has been chosen because @ wasn't possible but I don't have that feeling with #[]. The BC break is probably larger than @@ but still arguably smaller than something like the match keyword.
The thing is, IMO RFC votes with more than two options should be avoided. I think it's better when an RFC takes a stance and lays out the objective reasons for it and against other options.
From a "looks" perspective I think #[] equally readable to @@, but it's a bigger BC break, 50% more verbose, and (at least for me) noticeably more difficult to type.
@TheodoreBrown It is probably a bigger BC break. I could still just find one case on grep.app. @@ is pretty hard to search for because there are tons of false positives.
@TheodoreBrown I do agree it's harder to type as it's two different special characters instead of the same one twice. How much harder will depend on the keyboard layout.
@TheodoreBrown I used a slightly naive search string " #[" to rule out some of the false positives. It's probably a more. Either way, the BC break is very low compared to something like a keyword that we have added in minor versions before.
There are ample off-wiki RCV tools if we're willing to use that. I did a review of them early this year. I still have the blog post around somewhere where I collected said data.
@Derick yes, that should be possible. AppVeyor supports VS2019, but obviously, instead of using PHP releases, you'd need to use master snapshots, what would need some tweaks. I'll try to come up with something this week.
> There is a compilation here: While fopen() itself defaults to binary mode, some other functions like proc_open() on pipe descriptors still default to text mode. The default for these functions should be swapped for PHP 8, independently of this deprecation proposal.
@NikiC Re: DateTime::ISO8601, I think the problem is that many people's conception of “ISO 8601” is actually the RFC 3339 profile. Maybe we should 1) highlight it in the docs, and 2) add DateTime::RFC_3339 as an alias of DateTime::ATOM?
I was an enterprise WordPress developer (yes, I know), but I resigned from my job because I like to write architecture diagrams, tests, and SOLID - this is not a part of WP culture and I was banging my head against a wall there. I'm looking for a new language to learn, I thought I could be happy in Java, given it's the mother of OOP, but since I'm starting anew, I was also considering something cooler like Go, so I don't get stuck doing maintenance work on legacy applications for a living.
What do you guys think? I'm asking this because most PHP jobs here in Brazil are underpaid.
So I'm considering switching away from PHP because of salaries as well
@Girgias I haven't used it, so I shouldn't comment that loudly, but multiple people who have used Rust have said that it's great, for the first 90% of a project, but then getting the last part done is a bit of a nightmare.
Similar. In my final year at uni, as a physics project we were assigned to write a program to calculate, "nuclear magnetic resonance graphs for magic angle spinning". They wanted us to do it in Fortran on the mainframe.....but I had my trusty 486sx......
@IluTov yes, but the difference is for other languages the last 10% turns out to be another 90%. But for Rust, multiple people have said, you get to there and realise that you have some bad assumptions in the code that mean that finishing the last bit is a technical nightmare, not just a lot more work.
@Crell We had this project to revamp a certain template structure for a feature. I worked on an Events plugin, and we were revamping RSVP. There was no diagrams and things were like "everything is going to work fine"
@Crell true story. When I started at the particular company I was thinking of, one of the first things I did was to diagram the DB, so we could see what info was even in there. I showed that to a programmer who had been working there for years, and he said "No one had ever shown him that diagram, where did I find it?"
@LucasBustamante I don't have time to explain it in great depth, but I strongly prefer generating documents from code for things like events, so that the diagrams are kept up-to-date, rather than instantly wrong.
I've worked with Wordpress for enterprise clients such as Microsoft (their blog), Steelcase (multi-billion dollar company), Harvard Law, Stanford, and many other enterprise clients. I personally find it very difficult to organize a very complex feature in my head only. Writing high-level architecture diagrams was vital to paint a big picture before writing code. I find that doing so often lead in better design.
Writing complex stuff without a design or architecture, often might be messy
But I agree that detailed class-level UMLs might often get outdated quickly
At the risk of giving away a billion dollar idea. I would love to have an editor where you could 'switch views' and view code in different formats. e.g. have a 'routes view' that shows all of the api/controller endpoints in the code, and be able to click through to the code that is at the end of that endpoint. Or switch to a dataflow view, and see what code is communicating with the DB/redis instances.
@Danack I did a very rudimentary version of that last week, it was basically a RecursiveDirectoryIterator that you point to a folder and it parses it with Regex and writes to a PlantUML Sequence Diagram plantuml.com/sequence-diagram This could probably be better suited to a Class DIagram plantuml.com/class-diagram
@Danack one of the projects I worked on in my last job, no one knew what programming language it was written in...
(it was PL/SQL)
the project was worked on by one programmer who no longer worked there, then "maintained" by another who didn't know anything about the language, what the language was, or anything... then it was assigned to me, I figured out the language, maintained the project, and occasionally added features since it was a proprietary product
If you're interested in secops, we're hiring for the security team right now. We've been in a hiring freeze since coronavirus hit, though, so I don't know what else we may have open.
Our only major PHP code is a Drupal 7 ecommerce site. Most of the core system is Python with a bit of Go.
If any of that sounds interesting to you, let me know. :-)
platform.sh/company/careers - This is us. I have no idea if the position list is accurate at the moment, but if you're interested I'd recommend ignoring it and applying anyway. :-)
Feel free to DM me on Twitter (@Crell) if you want to talk more details. No sense filling up the room here with it.