@MateKocsis So it was the cloning. Short version, sometimes you need to do something when an object is created/cloned and set a property inside the constructor/clone method.
class Foo
{
public function __construct()
{
$this->id = generate_unique_id();
}
public function __clone()
{
// having this here means it can't be forgotten.
$this->id = generate_unique_id();
}
}
I know you suggested a workaround of supporting 'withs' like:
class Bar extends Foo
{
public function duplicate()
{
// Yeah, I'm going to forget to do this bit eventually
return clone $this with {id: generate_unique_id()};
}
}
But to me, having to remember to do something when calling a particularly function is just a bad design, as being able to forget to do something, means that people will eventually forget. And in particular, it makes it really hard to reason about the code.
class Quux extends Foo
{
public function duplicate()
{
// When inspecting this code, it's impossible to see
// that it has an eror.
return clone $this;
}
}
tl:dr - I think cloning needs to put the new object into a state where the properties can be written to until the end of the __clone call.
@Srinivas08 you can't just blinding replace & with & . You'll need to parse the HTML and do appropriate encoding for & in text, but not for & in urls.
But as you're scraping other people's content without their approval.....
@Tiffany the issue was you'd merged master into your branch....which means that merging back gets really confusing. If you ever need the latest stuff in master in a branch, it's better to do that as rebase of the branch onto the latest version of master.
btw, it's okay to create branches in the repos you have access to. Doing that means I can delete the branches when they are merged, rather than having to tell you, that you can delete them from your repo.
@NikiC I fucked it up with Xdebug once too... git pull upstream master into the xdebug_2_9 branch... only noticed a week later and it was a pain to untangle
@Danack I got it, but it's an empty sound track for 35 minutes...
Windows Defender is zealous: it just flagged tests\lang\include_files\eval.inc as Backdoor:PHP/Dirtelti.MTF on my machine, and apparently also some other utility files of the tests which use eval on the testing VMs. This will get funny. ;)
@GabrielCaruso I might not be able to write anything sensible for this. It's clearly a reasonable idea, but I am still traumatised by experiencing it in Java, to the extent that I feel ill when talking about it.
Actually, I believe I can remember the reason why it might not fit for PHP. So it's useful in Java (though very painful) because it can be used to error out in the compilation stage, and so programs can be forced to handle particular exceptions.
Without a clear compilation phase, it wouldn't be possible to do that in PHP, and instead you would only be able to check the program for correctness through a static analyzer. At which point..................the value for having it be part of the language is pretty low.
something something use an attribute
> Swift has an interesting take on this, but I don't know if you could retrofit that onto PHP.
@Andrea I am le tired. What makes the Swift take on documenting what exceptions functions might throw, interesting please?
I tried gnu-indent yesterday. clang-format looks fantastic in comparison :P gnu-indent even broke code.
It added a line break to a comment without also continuing the comment :D
@GabrielCaruso I think this feature mostly makes sense when no throws declaration means "this can't throw an exception". And as with most things, we can't really check this at compile time, and as static analysers can already handle this (as you mentioned) adding it to the language probably isn't very useful.
@GabrielCaruso No agenda. The plan is to just hype PHP 8.
I have a page of notes about new features sorted by hype. We can easily fill time with that.
BTW, bear in mind we did a VotE back in February also talking about the coming 8-acalypse, so we can skip stuff that was already in by then. Or touch it lightly.
@GabrielCaruso Just sent you a link via email of a gist with my notes. Would love for you to do as much of the talking as you feel comfortable doing. I've done more than enough of these in my days, need new voices.
@Sara I've sent mine, I have a Google Docs that I'm using as a reference for creating my talks. I'll try to speak as much as I can, but sure most of the questions will be direct to you :)
@IluTov Does having a Californian accent touched with a hint of Midwest and occasional use of 'zed' as a letter count?
@GabrielCaruso Cal is good about spreading the love, but I personally have a habbit of just starting up and not stopping until about four topics past where we began.
Hello! I have a weird issue to debug and could use some help from folks more knowledgeable about PHP internals than me. In a custom stream handler, we execute some logic to persist data, but run into autoload exceptions if the stream being closed was left open in a global context. Is there a way to test for this weird state, or is this a bug?
Usually in those arguments I know which words will lead down which paths. Path 1: Let her have it and we argue and get at each other for a couple of hours. Path 2: Peace... no matter how much pride I have to swallow.
I've chose path 1 with my wife a few times even though it doesn't ever help... but I am in a bad mood. Path 2 is always better.
when my RSHUTDOWN handler, calls something that throws a notice, and a userland handlers converts that into an exception. could it be that my shutdown handler is jumped out off without being executed to the end?
Heya, I didn't follow any of the master/slave/offensive lingo discussion in here (in case there was any). Did we decide to rename PHP master process to PHP primary or guardian or something? I will have to adapt some regexes if we do.
@Gordon IIRC, the conversation seemed to be going in the direction of waiting to see what the development industry did as a whole first, so that whatever direction was chosen, if any, at least was standardized in some way, rather than everyone using different nomenclature as they implement their own fixes... but I could have missed a message during the chain.
While investigating a bug in PHP 7.4 regarding heredoc, I came across this next_newline function: github.com/php/php-src/blob/php-7.4.9/Zend/…. It seems to return a length of 1 for both "\n" and "\r\n", is that intentional? The length is used in strip_multiline_string_indentation further down
Update about the commit leaderboard: Dmitry and Nikita have just become the 2nd and 3rd top contributors respectively by commit number: github.com/php/php-src/graphs/contributors
if you block IP addresses you'll likely block 1000s of people at a time, and the people who are blocked will vary day to day depending on the mail relay path