@DeadMG If you're asking: "Should I mandate braces, even if they only enclose one statement?", then the answer is definitely no. It's just a crappy, misconceived idea. IMO, those who use it are basically cargo-cult programmers, going through the motions without understanding what they're doing.
@CatPlusPlus There's no exception here at all. The subject of an if statement, for example, is a single statement. The BNF for an if statement in C++, for example is:
selection-statement: if ( condition ) statement if ( condition ) statement else statement
What you'd be doing is changing the controlled statement to a compound-statement instead of a statement. You could do that, but you could not be addressing any inconsistency in so doing.
@BrunoAlano Extremely. Virtually every C++ programmer needs it (though as a second book, not first).
@BrunoAlano In the case of anything by Schildt as the first book, you want to move Effective C++ to third place -- after replacing the Schildt book with something decent.
@DeadMG Because an if statement controls a single statement. That can be a simple statement or a compound statement as needed. The real question is why you'd mandate that it be a compound statement.
@MartinhoFernandes Yes -- actually, if as an expression (a la Algol) can eliminate the conditional operator, and make a lot of code more readable. x = if a then b else c; is generally a lot easier to read than x=a?b:c;.
@MartinhoFernandes Yeah -- Haskell does a lot of things right. Unfortunately, I think the emphasis on functional purity is misplaced -- there are places/times/situations in which it works well, but others where it's just plain stupid (and the difficulty people have with monads, for one example, demonstrates that quite nicely, IMO).
I've seen the argument (similarly made for C++) that this is what makes OCaml great: "natural" FP, but the ability to drop to imperative programming when it's more convenient.
@MartinhoFernandes Like them or not, the difficulty a lot of people have with them seems impossible to deny. They're kind of a neat solution to difficult problem, but when you get down to it, it's a problem of their own making that would be better avoided than solved.
There are mixed functional-imperative languages, OCaml, F#, but TBH, if I'm switching to a functional language, then I don't want to stick to the imperative stuff, I want to use the more awesome style.
@JerryCoffin there's still a tradeoff involved though, in that picking a more "natural" solution would break functional purity, which would make it harder (for the compiler and the programmer) to reason about many aspects of the code
which isn't to say I disagree with you. My preferred functional language isn't pure, and doesn't have monads built in
@CatPlusPlus I think there are different degreese of "impurity" too. Some languages, like F#, seem to make it very easy to stick in an imperative mindset, which might make the transition to FP needlessly hard. Other languages have a few rarely-used "back doors" allowing impure code, but without really influencing the core language much at all.
@DeadMG Probably pretty much like C does: an if, and an else. If they want an else if, that's an entirely separate if statement in the else leg of the first if statement.
Right now your assignment expression also allows things like 2+2=17. You just about need to separate expressions into some analog of rvalues and lvalues.
@DeadMG They can be made part of the grammar, and doing so generally makes things simpler overall, and (particularly) makes it a lot easier to diagnose problems.
@CatPlusPlus I've always wondered about that, since it's (IME) the most common style but it goes both against typography ('the question mark goes where? it goes where the colon goes: here') and also ';'.