@FINDarkside I think you're severely underestimating the complexity of a parser and compiler, and how removing this ability simplifies their rules and logic and (mostly) test cases.
You compared the variable naming to another hypothetical situation that you imply is stupid. I was pointing out that it's not stupid and some people do that, and find it useful.
@Pedram I literally learned about it an hour ago, but I get the impression that the primary focus is binary serialization. They do json serialization as well because it'd be useful and easy to implement, I guess.
Like for instance:
if ( this.IsValid )
{
Matrix matrix = new Matrix();
}
Matrix matrix = new Matrix();
The compiler warns me saying:
"A local variable named 'matrix' cannot be declared in this scope because it would give a different meaning to 'matrix', which is already used in a 'child'...
> Using the same simple name to refer to two different things in the same declaration space -- remember, the inner declaration space is a part of the outer one -- is both confusing and dangerous, and is therefore illegal.
The prosecution rests.
Freedom to shoot yourself in the foot is C++'s domain
@FINDarkside A method scope is supposed to be a small scope. If you're redefining x in a method scope, there's a good chance you're doing something iffy - if you just defined x a second ago, why do you need a different x again? Field references, however, aren't necessarily even relevant to each method, and thus aren't part of the method's conceptual declaration space.
For me, having the use the same var name twice feels wrong. If I have a variable called node, and then I iterate over its children, I'll call them childNode, not node again.
The fact that a variable is inside a scope will usually have semantic meaning.
It's more of a frustration vent, but it should be that the yellow item on the right will be compared to the yellow item on the left. If they're the same, my condition succeeds, which will be inverted by the "Not" element above.
I've once had to debug an issue that came about because some import from excel of freeform text had a different kind of space character to the one you get when you hit your spacebar
Failing to do a string match on strings that (appear) identical
Is this not one of those times where there's a maybe 50/50 chance that the client will sit on it for a week anyway because they're not ready, and might actually appreciate a delay?