I agree totally on giving options. The users have the option to either
use PHP 5 (non-unicode) or PHP 6 (PHP 5 + unicode)..

So essentially we're just forking here, nothing special about that.
(just that it happens inside the project, between two major versions)

--Jani

p.s. Andi, the outsiders like myself value people on what they actually
commit, everything you do behind the curtains means nothing to us.


On Wed, 2007-06-20 at 20:52 -0700, Andi Gutmans wrote:
> I very much agree with Rasmus that giving our users the option is
> extremely valuable.
> 
> Unicode support is useful to some people but I think it's a mistake to
> force it down everyone's throat. Forget the fact that it will be
> considerably slower and eat up more memory than PHP 5 & 4, but there
> will also be some serious BC issues and idiosyncrasies which a huge part
> of our community (arguably over 90%) just don't care about.
> 
> Some people here said that we weren't successful in keeping BC between
> PHP 5 and PHP 4. Whoever said that must not have migrated applications
> between the versions. It took very little effort to do so. Most people I
> know did it in a matter of hours for sizeable code bases and in fact
> most time was spent on regression testing which would need to be done
> anyway.
> 
> I also think that the fact that we *do* still support PHP 4 is a
> strength and not a weakness of the PHP project (as much as I'd like
> everyone to migrate to PHP 5). Sure maybe that gave less incentive to
> upgrade which is a bit of a PITA for the PHP eco-system. On the other
> hand look at technologies who didn't do that. Microsoft with VB, DNA,
> DCOM and some of their other technologies are good examples. Every
> version their users would suffer time and time again, often having to
> completely migrate their investment because they were not officially
> supported anymore. Look at how Microsoft are looking to ditch XP early
> in the process. I don't think we want to follow that path. The fact that
> we do our best not to break BC and are very careful when doing it is a
> HUGE plus for us. Not to mention still doing security and critical fixes
> for PHP 4.
> 
> Btw, on the "if (UG(unicode)" issue. That's really a bunch of BS.
> There'll be no problems once we get into optimizing Unicode mode to make
> sure we take good advantage of CPU branch predicition (with compilers
> help). We are intentionally not trying to do premature optimizations
> right now but rather make sure we get the end result that we want from a
> functionality point of view, and the optimize according to what the real
> bottlenecks are. I have always been against premature optimizations and
> I can pretty much promise that the "if (UG(unicode))" is not going to be
> an issue. It's a bit more code yes. But I think it's worth it.
>  
> We had a lot of discussions on this issue within the core development
> team and I think there was a strong enough case to keep things this way.
> If we are proven wrong down the road then there's always PHP 6.5 or 7
> where we can nuke the 8bit mode. But my guess is that at least 80%+ of
> PHP 6 users will not run in Unicode mode. For many there's just not
> sufficient reason to do so.
> 
> Andi
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Rasmus Lerdorf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> > Sent: Tuesday, June 19, 2007 9:05 AM
> > To: Jeremy Privett
> > Cc: internals@lists.php.net
> > Subject: Re: [PHP-DEV] What is the use of "unicode.semantics" 
> > in PHP 6?
> > 
> > Jeremy Privett wrote:
> > > But, let's look at this situation from another angle. What if 
> > > unicode.semantics becomes the next magic_quotes or 
> > safe_mode, and is 
> > > ALWAYS OFF in 95%+ of PHP installations? All of the work you did to 
> > > add unicode support was WASTED on this presumption that if 
> > you don't 
> > > have BC, no one's going to use it. Whereas the opposite is clearly 
> > > true, in this case. If you have BC, it'll get used simply 
> > because it 
> > > works with old code, but the main thing that changed about the 
> > > language will never be touched.
> > 
> > I actually don't have a problem with 95% of PHP 6 
> > installations turning off Unicode support and this being the 
> > default setting for ISP's.
> > 
> > Full Unicode support in an application is a big commitment 
> > and it will take quite a bit of work.  I just don't think 
> > that many people will invest the time and effort into doing 
> > this, but at the same time there will be large applications 
> > and services that have full control over their server 
> > settings that will make use of it.  Think Flickr, Yahoo, 
> > Facebook, etc.
> > 
> > If enough people think it is a good idea to remove the switch 
> > we can do it, but we have to realize that everything we 
> > improve in PHP 6 will mostly be for the benefit of these 
> > large dedicated applications and the regular Joe User on a 
> > shared server will never see these them.
> > 
> > -Rasmus
> > 
> > --
> > PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List To 
> > unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
> > 
> > 
> 


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