I don't like any of those. The reason is that you are hiding constant overhead (the O(1) part of your code) in the compiled extension, which makes it REALLY hard to debug anything.
Adding to that, you don't have IDE autocompletion, step-by-step debugging via xdebug or other debuggers, and you rely on C coders to fix their own implementation of userland code is broken because of a bug (you can't fix it yourself before going hardcore with C). Yeah, they're both a quite bad idea to me. A very noble aim, a very bad way of achieving it :( The initial concept is cool, but a better engine works better than that (HHVM, for example) by still keeping all relevant code in userland. Marco Pivetta http://twitter.com/Ocramius http://ocramius.github.com/ On 7 January 2014 08:54, dolphin [via Zend Framework Community] < [email protected]> wrote: > I would be like to know the opinion of the zf1 community about "yaf" and > opinion zf2 community about "phalcon". Who thinks that? > > ------------------------------ > If you reply to this email, your message will be added to the discussion > below: > > http://zend-framework-community.634137.n4.nabble.com/yaf-and-phalcon-tp4661414.html > To start a new topic under Zend Framework, email > [email protected] > To unsubscribe from Zend Framework Community, click > here<http://zend-framework-community.634137.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=unsubscribe_by_code&node=634137&code=b2NyYW1pdXNAZ21haWwuY29tfDYzNDEzN3wxNzE0OTI1MTk4> > . > NAML<http://zend-framework-community.634137.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=macro_viewer&id=instant_html%21nabble%3Aemail.naml&base=nabble.naml.namespaces.BasicNamespace-nabble.view.web.template.NabbleNamespace-nabble.view.web.template.NodeNamespace&breadcrumbs=notify_subscribers%21nabble%3Aemail.naml-instant_emails%21nabble%3Aemail.naml-send_instant_email%21nabble%3Aemail.naml> > -- View this message in context: http://zend-framework-community.634137.n4.nabble.com/yaf-and-phalcon-tp4661414p4661415.html Sent from the Zend Framework mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
