>
> > or https://psalm.dev/ (open source) are projects in that area
> > (Matthew Brown is one of the authors of Psalm)
> >
> I don't like the idea of executing that on www.php.net for a few reasons,
> but someone else mentioned the possibility of donated cpu time from
> somewhere that's worth a con
On Wed, Oct 14, 2020 at 6:18 AM Dik Takken wrote:
>
> However, then we should also make sure that the example
> code actually works, and on which PHP versions. As soon as examples can
> be run right from the documentation pages, the examples will be run far
> more frequently than they are now, sim
On Mon, Oct 12, 2020 at 2:10 PM Eliot Lear wrote:
>
> What helps me when I spread the word is if there is a simple page that
> will look good on a retweet/FB/LinkedIn page, with a couple of release
> highlights. It doesn't need to be fancy, but something that flashes a
> big PHP 8.0 logo or some
Hi internals
Regarding the matter of a sandbox, one of my colleagues open sourced a Laravel
sandbox that runs straight in the browser and uses docker containers, with a
little work you can extract away the Laravel part and have it run plain PHP.
Here's the source: https://github.com/spatie/tink
On 14-10-2020 03:41, Larry Garfield wrote:
> This sounds like a fantastic idea. The inline-run capability of Go and
> Rust's documentation is a huge win. Writing good sample code for the
> documentation would be an interesting challenge, but it's the sort of thing
> that can be done over time.
On Wed, 14 Oct 2020 at 00:56, tyson andre wrote:
> There's two main options available for testing out php in a browser right
> now:
>
> - A general sandboxed php implementation hosted by the owners of php.net
> (requires that it be secured and may lead to additional hosting costs),
> https://