Hello Nikita,

I would love to hear your opinion on the `as` syntax from Hack, and whether it 
can be used in PHP the same way or would it be an issue.

Cheers,

- Saif

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‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Tuesday, April 23, 2019 10:16 AM, Nikita Popov <nikita....@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Mon, Apr 22, 2019 at 11:48 PM Benjamin Morel benjamin.mo...@gmail.com
> wrote:
>
> > Hi internals,
> > I'd like to revive an old discussion https://externals.io/message/67131
> > about
> > object type casting.
> > The idea would be to allow (ClassName) casting:
> >
> >     $service = (EmailService) $diContainer->get('email.service');
> >
> >
> > The above code would throw a TypeError if the value is not an instance of
> > the given class. I see the following advantages:
> >
> > -   Type safety: we can be sure that the value is of the correct type or 
> > that
> >     we'll get an Error. This syntax allows to fail early if the variable
> >     happens to not be of the expected type, and avoids much more verbose
> >     checks;
> >
> > -   Static analysis: IDEs and static code analysis tools can now understand
> >     the type of the variable, without having to resort to `@var` 
> > annotations.
> >
> >
> > These combine into a third advantage: readability. Today's equivalent of
> > the above one-liner could be:
> >
> >     /** @var EmailService $service */
> >     $service = $diContainer->get('email.service');
> >     if (! $service instanceof EmailService) {
> >         throw new TypeError('Expected instance of EmailService, ...');
> >     }
> >
> >
> > Which is a lot of boilerplate code that could be easily avoided by
> > introducing this new syntax.
> > Before moving forward and working on a formal RFC, I'd like to hear your
> > thoughts: what's your early feeling about this? Did I miss other
> > discussions around this subject? Are there any technical issues that come
> > to mind? Could this feature help the upcoming JIT compiler produce more
> > efficient machine code by knowing the type of the variable at compile time?
> > etc.
> > Note: "casting" might not be the perfect name here as what we're really
> > doing is a type check, but this reuses the type casting syntax and
> > resembles Java's object casting.
> > Thank you,
> > Ben
>
> Without commenting on the rest of the proposal: It's not possible to use
> (ClassName) as a cast syntax, because it is ambiguous. For example (Foo)
> [$x] is already valid syntax (fetch constant Foo and take index $x), or
> (Foo) +$bar, etc.
>
> The only reason why (int) etc are okay is because we treat the whole (int)
> as a single token, something we can't do in general (because it would break
> foo(Foo)).
>
> Nikita



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