> Le 13 janv. 2026 à 23:19, Larry Garfield <[email protected]> a écrit :
>
> On Tue, Nov 4, 2025, at 2:13 PM, Larry Garfield wrote:
>> Arnaud and I would like to present another RFC for consideration:
>> Context Managers.
>>
>> https://wiki.php.net/rfc/context-managers
>>
>> You'll probably note that is very similar to the recent proposal from
>> Tim and Seifeddine. Both proposals grew out of casual discussion
>> several months ago; I don't believe either team was aware that the
>> other was also actively working on such a proposal, so we now have two.
>> C'est la vie. :-)
>>
>> Naturally, Arnaud and I feel that our approach is the better one. In
>> particular, as Arnaud noted in an earlier reply, __destruct() is
>> unreliable if timing matters. It also does not allow differentiating
>> between a success or failure exit condition, which for many use cases
>> is absolutely mandatory (as shown in the examples in the context
>> manager RFC).
>>
>> The Context Manager proposal is a near direct port of Python's
>> approach, which is generally very well thought-out. However, there are
>> a few open questions as listed in the RFC that we are seeking feedback
>> on.
>>
>> Discuss. :-)
>
> Hi folks. The holidays are over, so we're back on Context Managers.
>
> [...]
>
>
> --Larry Garfield
Hi,
Just a small question. What happens when an `exit`/`die` instruction is
executed inside a `using` block? Is the relevant `exitContext()` handler
invoked, just like for an early `return` or `break`?
This is probably self-evident, but it is worth to state it explicitly, because,
for some hysterical reason, relevant `finally` blocks are *not* executed with
`exit`.
—Claude