But probably because you chose two languages with relatively scary syntax.
I don't know how to create automation to summon extraplanar nightmare creatures, but if I had to start, my first attempt would be PHP, and I know in my heart that getting it working would require C++.
The AI model has revised your prompt: A terrifying creature from another dimension is being summoned. This is happening through a unique and unusual method, which combines elements of computer coding. The person initiating the summoning is dynamically typing a hybrid language that merges the syntax and functions of two popular programming languages, PHP and C++. The scene is imbued with a supernatural feel as ethereal lights emanate from the lines of code, giving a clue that this is not ordinary programming but something arcane and otherworldly.
Half of that are lies and you can clearly see how up to date it is, because in one example it mentions php 5.1. That is close to 20 years old, it was released in 2005. I'm not gonna spend my time trying to disprove something that refers to a 20 years old version as its point of reference.
Don't get me wrong, there are valid drawbacks of PHP (as with any language), this document just isn't a good representation of that.
I mean, PHP is pretty clearly a dumpster fire. It was pretty badass 20 years ago, but it hasn't stood the test of time. There's not any use case that PHP is best for today. You're welcome to like what you like, but it's indefensible as a choice for any new work IMO.
You got it backwards there. PHP was pretty bad (mostly because it was easy to pick up so novice and shitty programmers used it a lot), but got insanely better, and it absolutely stood the test of time - most of modern web still uses it and it isn't going anywhere. There are also few languages that would have such a robust ecosystem where you could whip up a solid, complete app in a few hours. JS comes close but its ecosystem is a clusterfuck. Everything else has poor third party support - be it libraries, connectors to various services or just simply best practices (for web).
I would argue but there is nothing to say about clearly wrong statements. PHP was 'good' (compared to nothing comparable) and is now no challenger any more. It stays as a result of dullness. "Everything else has poor third party support"? Well let me answer this as accurate as possible: lmao