I don't wanna be bad interpreted or considered as rude, but I wonder why is it so hard for all of you to just vote instead of stay crying like lost babies. PHP is open for everyone to contribute, I want to help it but it seems impossible to help language move forward without people that accept global decisions.
Cheers, On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 3:47 PM, guilhermebla...@gmail.com <guilhermebla...@gmail.com> wrote: > @Chad: You're getting me wrong here. > > If results of poll decide for OK to meta attribute support, next poll > would be which implementation to choose. > I can find 3 different implementations that we can choose, but anyone > is free to contribute. > > - Docblock > > /** @Foo */ > class User { ... } > > - New syntax similar to first patch > > [Foo] > class User { ... } > > - A keyword scope similar to method/namespace declaration > > annotate { return new Foo(); } > class User { ... } > > But before even spend time talking over and over about implementation, > I wanna ask if we should invest time into it, since I got a lot of > flaming responses (and I still continue, even though people barely see > what I'm asking). > > If you say that we should enhance docblock to allow retrieve of @foo, > you're automatically saying +1 to this thread. > I do not want to enter in discussion about implementation because I > don't even know if it will be accepted. I don't want to spend a lot of > time to produce a patch to something that will not be accepted. So > let's decide IF and possibly WHAT to implement, then I can work on it. > > All I want is a democratic decision, and not something that one guy > answer as "NO" and end of story. > If majority says "YES", one person being against it doesn't sound to > me like a democracy/meritocracy. > > > Cheers, > > On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 3:37 PM, Chad Fulton <chadful...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 6:03 AM, Lars Schultz <lars.schu...@toolpark.com> >> wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> I certainly don't have PHP-Karma (Does meritocracy really refer to that?), >>> but simply I can't believe that you're talking about this, again. >>> >>> I think Annotation-Supporters have made their point, but shouldn't they let >>> the PHP 5.4 Developers get on with it and let them roll out a new version >>> instead of forcing them to reply to lengthy emails about the same topic over >>> and over again. One could almost believe that you're hoping to drown their >>> voices by frustrating them into not replying anymore, therefore winning your >>> vote. >>> >>> cheers. >>> Lars >>> >>> >>> -- >>> PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List >>> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php >>> >>> >> >> ^ I agree. >> >> ---- >> >> I also don't think you can discuss annotations without simultaneously >> discussing their implementation. To me, it looks like you're trying to >> force through a vote on a very vague topic "should PHP support >> Annotations", and then use that vote later to force through an >> implementation that many core people have already said is not >> desirable. >> >> Many of the arguments that are central to the question of "should PHP >> support Annotations" MUST deal with their implementation because they >> add a large new set of syntax to the language. >> >> I doubt anyone would support annotations "at any cost", and yet that's >> the vote you're trying to force here. >> >> -- >> PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List >> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php >> >> > > > > -- > Guilherme Blanco > Mobile: +55 (16) 9215-8480 > MSN: guilhermebla...@hotmail.com > São Paulo - SP/Brazil > -- Guilherme Blanco Mobile: +55 (16) 9215-8480 MSN: guilhermebla...@hotmail.com São Paulo - SP/Brazil -- PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php