If an argument error refers to a variadic argument, we normally
do not print the name of the variadic (as it is not referring to
an individual argument, but to the collection of all of them).
However, this was not the case for the userland argument type
error message, which did it's own formatting.
Closes GH-6101.
Both of these functions are well-defined when used with a single
array argument -- rejecting this case was an artificial limitation.
This is not useful when called with explicit arguments, but removes
edge-cases when used with argument unpacking:
// OK even if $excludes is empty.
array_diff($array, ...$excludes);
// OK even if $arrays contains a single array only.
array_intersect(...$arrays);
This matches the behavior of functions like array_merge() and
array_push(), which also allow calls with no array or a single
array respectively.
Closes GH-6097.
Currently, unexpected tokens in the parser are shown as the text
found, plus the internal token name, including the notorious
"unexpected '::' (T_PAAMAYIM_NEKUDOTAYIM)".
This commit replaces that with a more user-friendly format, with
two main types of token:
* Tokens which always represent the same text are shown like
'unexpected token "::"' and 'expected "::"'
* Tokens which have variable text are given a user-friendly
name, and show like 'unexpected identifier "foo"', and
'expected identifer'.
A few tokens have special cases:
* unexpected token """ -> unexpected double-quote mark
* unexpected quoted string "'foo'" -> unexpected single-quoted
string "foo"
* unexpected quoted string ""foo"" -> unexpected double-quoted
string "foo"
* unexpected illegal character "_" -> unexpected character 0xNN
(where _ is almost certainly a control character, and NN is the
hexadecimal value of the byte)
The \ token has a special case in the implementation just to stop
bison making a mess of escaping it and it coming out as \\
This patch adds missing newlines, trims multiple redundant final
newlines into a single one, and trims redundant leading newlines in all
*.phpt sections.
According to POSIX, a line is a sequence of zero or more non-' <newline>'
characters plus a terminating '<newline>' character. [1] Files should
normally have at least one final newline character.
C89 [2] and later standards [3] mention a final newline:
"A source file that is not empty shall end in a new-line character,
which shall not be immediately preceded by a backslash character."
Although it is not mandatory for all files to have a final newline
fixed, a more consistent and homogeneous approach brings less of commit
differences issues and a better development experience in certain text
editors and IDEs.
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap03.html#tag_03_206
[2] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c89/c89-draft.html#2.1.1.2
[3] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c99/n1256.html#5.1.1.2
PHP requires integer typehints to be written "int" and does not
allow "integer" as an alias. This changes type error messages to
match the actual type name and avoids confusing messages like
"must be of the type integer, integer given".