On 7/9/07, Larry Garfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On Mon, 9 Jul 2007 18:10:14 +0200, till <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>> By now you have probably heard about GoPHP5.  (If not, please see
>> http://GoPHP5.org/ for more about it.)  I also recall reading recently
> that
>> RoundCube was considering a move to PHP 5 already.
>>
>> I suppose it shouldn't come as a surprise that I would be very happy if
> that
>> were true. :-)  In just the few short days that GoPHP5 has been "live",
> we've
>> grown to over 20 projects and over 40 supporting web hosts.  The PHP
>> development team is also considering dropping support for PHP 4 next
> year.
>>
>> Please consider this a formal invitation for RoundCube to join GoPHP5.
> If you
>> have any questions, I'll still be on the list so just ask. :-)
>
> Good you made it here. We've had our own personal discussion about
> PHP5 if you check the list archives (http://lists.roundcube.net) a
> while ago and personally I've followed the discussion on the
> mailinglists of SM, PEAR and Smarty - so IMHO this really is the way
> to go.
>
> When Thomas gets to his email, I am sure he will comment also on if
> we'll commit to your deadline as well. For right now we decided to
> make the "devel-vnext" branch PHP5 only and I am in the middle of
> porting everything. But (of course) we have no date when it's due.
>
> Cheers,
> Till

Of course.  Standard open source procedure. :-)  That's great to hear, though.

One of the objections I saw repeated a few times in the earlier thread reading
through it just now was "there's no killer apps on PHP 5".  I suppose that's 
subject
to interpretation, as there's a fair number of quite good PHP 5 apps out there 
(killer
or otherwise).  The goal of GoPHP5, however, is to not wait for "the" killer 
app, but to
make all of the involved projects together the "killer apps".  If phpMyAdmin, 
Drupal,
Symfony, Typo3, RoundCube, etc. all require PHP 5, there's your killer app 
suite right
there.

Yeah, well. Personally a framework like Symfony (or Zend Framework in
my case) is killer^H^H^H^reason enough to use PHP5. But I think most
people who commented don't look at it from a developer perspective -
rather system administrators. At least that was my impression.

How you go about making use of PHP 5 is up to each project.  PHP 5.2 in 
particular
adds the ability for PHP apps to give meaningful upload progress meters, for 
instance.
That could be useful for adding attachments to messages.  So there are front-end
improvements that could be made, independent of the other developer benefits 
that
PHP 5 offers.

That's actually a pretty good idea, I had a look at the code the other
day and a progress meter wouldn't be so bad. Would you have a link I
could follow?

If you're already targeting PHP 5 for the next branch, it sounds like RC is 
already
moving along.

I hope! :-)

Cheers,
Till


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