Hello Florin,
2013/7/10 Florin Patan florinpatan@gmail.com:
Since you brought up the discussion, would you think it would make
more sense to actually start and integrate HHVM into PHP rather that
patching it up?
Or better yet, rewrite it with a HH VM in mind?
I know and fully understand it's a gigantic task but at some point in
a software lifecycle there's only so much patching up you can do
before you can't patch it anymore.
Thanks.
Not that this is not interesting, but this is deviating the discussion
so much than the original thread that it is worth having it as it's
own thread.
Please, remember to change the subject if you start an off-topic
discussion, it makes discussions easier to follow.
Thanks,
Patrick
On Wed, Jul 10, 2013 at 10:58 AM, Patrick ALLAERT
patrickallaert@php.net wrote:
Hello Florin,
2013/7/10 Florin Patan florinpatan@gmail.com:
Since you brought up the discussion, would you think it would make
more sense to actually start and integrate HHVM into PHP rather that
patching it up?
Or better yet, rewrite it with a HH VM in mind?
I know and fully understand it's a gigantic task but at some point in
a software lifecycle there's only so much patching up you can do
before you can't patch it anymore.
Thanks.Not that this is not interesting, but this is deviating the discussion
so much than the original thread that it is worth having it as it's
own thread.
Please, remember to change the subject if you start an off-topic
discussion, it makes discussions easier to follow.Thanks,
Patrick
Hi,
Thank you for moving this into a separate thread.
I'll look into HHVM in the following days/weeks but I think it's clear
that HHVM brings some nice concepts both to the language and to the
way PHP works, albeit compile it and so on.
Also reading articles like this:
http://ocramius.github.io/blog/accessing-private-php-class-members-without-reflection/
makes me very sad that this code is possible in PHP in order to
overcome speed issues of the language.
Could this be a topic of interest for more people, especially the core people?
Best regards,
Florin
Florin Patan
https://github.com/dlsniper
http://www.linkedin.com/in/florinpatan
If you run into issues (yes, our build system still sucks a bit) poke me in
IRC freenode/#hhvm (or ptarjan or any other @ in that channel).
And just to jump in front of what I detect in your comment "albiet compile
it". Repeat: HHVM is not a code translator anymore. Hasn't been for
awhile now. The basic functionality of HHVM is just like PHP. Put a .php
file in your webroot, browse it, profit.</broken-record>
-Sara
On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 12:45 PM, Florin Patan florinpatan@gmail.comwrote:
On Wed, Jul 10, 2013 at 10:58 AM, Patrick ALLAERT
patrickallaert@php.net wrote:Hello Florin,
2013/7/10 Florin Patan florinpatan@gmail.com:
Since you brought up the discussion, would you think it would make
more sense to actually start and integrate HHVM into PHP rather that
patching it up?
Or better yet, rewrite it with a HH VM in mind?
I know and fully understand it's a gigantic task but at some point in
a software lifecycle there's only so much patching up you can do
before you can't patch it anymore.
Thanks.Not that this is not interesting, but this is deviating the discussion
so much than the original thread that it is worth having it as it's
own thread.
Please, remember to change the subject if you start an off-topic
discussion, it makes discussions easier to follow.Thanks,
PatrickHi,
Thank you for moving this into a separate thread.
I'll look into HHVM in the following days/weeks but I think it's clear
that HHVM brings some nice concepts both to the language and to the
way PHP works, albeit compile it and so on.
Also reading articles like this:http://ocramius.github.io/blog/accessing-private-php-class-members-without-reflection/
makes me very sad that this code is possible in PHP in order to
overcome speed issues of the language.
Could this be a topic of interest for more people, especially the core
people?Best regards,
FlorinFlorin Patan
https://github.com/dlsniper
http://www.linkedin.com/in/florinpatan