PHP

Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, ...
Aug 19 08:48
No-one's come across this "error: unused variable ‘buf’" before? chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/57578555#57578555
Aug 18 14:36
`/vagrant/sapi/phpdbg/phpdbg_cmd.c: In function ‘phpdbg_read_input’:
/vagrant/sapi/phpdbg/phpdbg_cmd.c:743:7: error: unused variable ‘buf’ [-Werror=unused-variable]
char buf[PHPDBG_MAX_CMD];
^~~
`
Aug 18 14:35
this is the specific error I'm seeing:
Aug 18 14:19
is it normal to get unused var error (and thus have to set -Wno-error=unused-variable or similar) when compiling 8.3.10 with phpdbg enabled?
Jan 10, 2023 19:49
@Crell any thoughts on a beforeGet (aka init) hook? Essentially allowing lazy loading of a property but still using the default storage implementation?
Jan 3, 2023 15:35
I've got a reduced reproduction without any other deps etc, if that helps.
Jan 3, 2023 15:34
if I change it to return an array of the same values, it steps in fine, I tried turning off the "smart" helpers (return debugging, __toString object view, etc and nothing changes - it just refuses to step in.
Jan 3, 2023 15:31
@Derick I'm seeing weird behaviour where I can't step into a function that returns a generator; I don't see anything obvious about why in the Xdebug log, any hints here? This is with php 8.2.0/xdebug 3.2.0/IDEA Ultimate+PHP plugin.
Jan 2, 2023 17:41
It turns out opening a 72GB Xdebug profile dump is not fast.
Jan 2, 2023 14:09
but that's what I would expect, not necessarily what others would expect.
Jan 2, 2023 14:09
I think I would expect uint to never over or underflow to another type, and instead throw an error; for the sake of getting it passed I think you'd have to leave int overflowing to float. I'd expect to be able to cast an int to uint, and probably that it'd essentially abs() the value as part of the cast.
Jan 2, 2023 14:03
@SaifEddinGmati those are very good questions - my initial thought on it was whether it would be too confusing if uint does or doesn't overflow to float, like int. I guess for the strict types substitution, I'd expect the logic would always be: can X be converted to Y without loss of precision?.
Jan 2, 2023 09:11
Anyone know if there has been any discussions about adding a uint builtin type to PHP? I don't recall seeing anything on the internals list but obviously that isn't the only place discussion happens.
Dec 19, 2022 14:25
Does anyone remember discussion about #[SensitiveParameter], w.r.t making it apply to object properties too?
Dec 19, 2022 14:25
@Danack it looks like they appear on the OOP variant page only, and don't appear in search results or from the url function redirector
Dec 7, 2022 06:30
@Danack Yes, I'm using a global constant (in a namespace though) to determine if debug logic runs - by using a constant it gets compiled to nothing when the condition is false.
Dec 4, 2022 05:26
:
Dec 4, 2022 05:25
Pretty much most scenarios that property accessors/hooks is meant to provide, __set/__get can provide now, it’s just “uglier” and less obvious. I’m in favour of the hooks rfc (comments above notwithstanding) but making current usable behaviour “unsupported” when it’s not hard to support it is a shitty deal
Dec 4, 2022 05:22
Avis allows the boilerplate __get to be dropped and the property becomes a regular one for gets.
Dec 4, 2022 05:21
@AlexP using __get and __set to provide poor man’s set accessor/hook (ie a public property that has checks on set operations) is a common pattern.
Dec 3, 2022 19:44
@Crell fair enough - ultimately the exact syntax is not as important I think, as the actual behaviour. So I guess my informal “vote” would be to leave out the implicit form initially and cross that bridge later. I guess it could be a secondary vote on the initial rfc?
Dec 3, 2022 19:39
I.e two visibility’s makes more sense to me than one with (set) appended
Dec 3, 2022 19:38
Id personally prefer to see something like public:protected [readonly] string $foo rather than protected(set) [readonly] string $foo but I’m aware the bikeshedding for syntax has come and gone.
Dec 3, 2022 19:36
@Crell I must admit I was pretty focussed on a single ahem other problem I saw in the rfc; I don’t see this as a complete show stopper - assuming it’s still possible to use the explicit form - but I do see how it can lead to issues/confusion, and I’d expect a decent number of projects/devs would forbid the implicit style.
Dec 3, 2022 19:30
@Derick I think this is a future proofing exercise for when if/when it’s allowed together
Dec 3, 2022 19:29
You can allow dropping the public later - making public required later would be a BC break surely
Dec 3, 2022 19:28
@Crell i think I’d still be more concerned about the “accidentally implicit public get” than the verbosity there, and I thought the general consensus was to be “conservative” initially and relax things later (ie readonly __set limitation) if it’s deemed “safe”
Dec 3, 2022 19:22
@Crell I can see how that might be concerning - at a glance it might look like just private. I tend to be explicit in my code so I wouldn’t use the abbreviated form at all. Can you expand on “going to be mandatory w/readonly”?
Dec 3, 2022 15:06
@IluTov the only alternative I can see that would have the same flexibility, is being able to declare the new hooks block at a class level, but I think that's likely getting too complex/confusing in terms of syntax, for not much gain over the existing magic methods.
Dec 3, 2022 10:02
Allowing the two systems to coexist gives developers a lot of power (yes and potential to shoot themselves in the foot, the face and the crotch) - e.g.
- validate per-property using beforeSet();
- let library provided __set() record a changed property (and actually set it);
- trigger per-property actions using afterSet();
Dec 3, 2022 09:55
One of the few benefits of the __set/__get approach is that e.g. libraries can provide functionality without needing to repeat a lot of boilerplate on every defined property that wants the library behaviour for that property.
Dec 3, 2022 09:53
A property with a set() hook pretty obviously shouldn't call __set(), or the same for get()/__get; but I think I would expect a protected/private property with an afterSet() or beforeSet(), to still call __set() if there's no set() hook.
Dec 3, 2022 09:49
@Crell @IluTov and while I'm on it - I saw the draft for your hooks RFC. I generally like it, but again: I think the interaction with magic methods needs to be tweaked.
Dec 3, 2022 09:47
@Crell I do tend to agree with @Derick that the "calling of __set for readonly properties" probably needs to be revisited for consistency's sake, but I also can understand 100% that you don't want to burden your RFC with that particular discussion
Dec 3, 2022 09:46
@Crell that seems like it matches with what I would consider consistent to current behaviour.
Dec 2, 2022 18:35
Night all.
Dec 2, 2022 18:35
@cmb I’ll tell my neighbours that when they ask about using power tools at 10pm.
Dec 2, 2022 18:31
@Jimbus it’s not guaranteed to be “morning” by any means.
Dec 2, 2022 18:27
@Crell shut up and take my money.
2
Dec 2, 2022 18:26
@crell Right but if the weird broken behaviour is tied to the readonly keyword specifically (or the writeonce behaviour of you want to use the term) then what BC break is there?
Dec 2, 2022 18:23
Have a good weekend everyone
Dec 2, 2022 18:23
@Crell I hope this discussion clarified what im asking about, and I really hope you’ll reconsider your position on it.
Dec 2, 2022 18:21
I need to go too, because it’s 1am and I have concrete to pour tomorrow…
Dec 2, 2022 18:19
@Crell you mean the list of examples that will/won’t call __set?
Dec 2, 2022 18:14
@Crell from outside the class I don’t see why they wouldn’t
Dec 2, 2022 18:13
I’ve never asked about the unset behaviour. I didn’t even know that behaviour exists. I just want __set to be called when the property’s set visibility is unmatched.
Dec 2, 2022 18:13
@JRL no. Well my original request/question isn’t no.
Dec 2, 2022 18:10
That doesnt preclude using readonly and avis together - it just means it gets the existing behaviour of readonly and makes it eg public protected(set) not public privste(set)
Dec 2, 2022 18:09
Ok, using whatever terminology you want to use, why can’t the existing - acknowledged as weird and arguably broken - behaviour of __set with readonly be limited to properties that are marked as readonly (or in a class marked as such)
Dec 2, 2022 18:07
@IluTov we’re a long way down this discussion for one of the authors to say think they’re using the wrong term