> I can only agree once more. PHP is verbose, PHP always was verbose, PHP should stay verbose. Not to say that short closures are bad, but searching for the perfect symbol soup seems wrong. We could easily create a syntax that is totally unambiguous and easy on the parser without lots of look-ahead with a new keyword.
@PeeHaa real life is for pansies. I'm also waiting on the post, when you finish it, will you post it in chat? I'm not a usual blog follower. Maybe I should start...
@NikiC The issue is that when it comes to grammars and parsing you need people who aren't beginners, yet basically everyone who has proposed anything different than syntax I've suggested don't even know enough to make valid suggestions...
There are a few discussion points that have at least one vocal person on each side.
1. Single expression only, never to be extended to bodies. 2. Close by value or by reference (or allow choice). 3. Keyword or not. 4. Readability or concision (since we generally give up one for the other in this case).
I think {} sort of walks the line on a few of these.
^ That grammar (ignoring backing up flags and whatnot) I think will be generally liked by Internals.
It's readability is quite high for how concise it is because {} enclose the whole thing; don't have to think about if that => is for an array key or not, as well as generally delimiting it as a unit.
I'm just some guy, but I prefer fn() syntax. It's an easy logical leap to make from function to fn, and once that very small hurdle is cleared for the developer, it is always unambiguous
the brace syntax feels like all I did was complicate my function definition with a cryptic new place to put parameters, instead of just specifying that invoking this closure is equivalent to executing the expression to the right of the arrow. But again, I'm just some guy
- *turn around, value object* - *Once upon a time I wanted object literals but I don't care 'bout them anymore.* - *turn around, value object* - *once upon a time I get gc'd*
@Dereleased no no, the parens aren't wrapping the arguments in that. They're actually importing used variables from a scope you didn't know you don't need to not have.
@ircmaxell lol, you're saying that APL is a universal backdoor to all encryption. Encrypting APL makes it computationally distinguishable from uniform ^^
I must be missing something. I thought the RFC was about readability, but then most of the people commenting quickly conflated "character count" with "readability". So then I thought it was about character count, but then people start adding more and more ridiculous punctuation to make it even halfway legible and unambiguous to either people or a parser.
@LeviMorrison I meant the followup suggestions - not because I think any of them are at all readable, but to highlight "out of X suggestions, just 2 are actually feasible" type thing.
based on all the responses, it seems like less work to list the ones that are possible than the ones that arent
@LeviMorrison I'm partly guilty of this myself (I much prefer function to fn, even though both are clear keywords) but a lot of it seems to be this weird pseudo "pretty" appeal - no concern about whether its actually readable, parseable, or even easy to type regularly, just what the character string looks like.
basically the same argument that leads people to not using semicolons in JS: "its ugly"
@Stephen No, I agree, but the point of the short closures is to make them more visually appealing. That is going to be something people have disagreements about. People can't even agree on where braces go FFS
@Dereleased I don't think i'd use them much, but even I can accept that removing the return keyword and shortening the function keyword make for less characters in one-liner closures. that doesn't mean I want to be doing finger gymnastics to type the required characters
thats the thing: tabs/spaces, brace placement, splitting newlines etc are literally just style - it doesn't affect anything, at all. this RFC is about syntax though.
I would not ragequit programming and become a monk who whispers to flowers if it was a different syntax, but I think fn() has the best mix of shortening the syntax while maintaining a clear meaning, even to someone unfamiliar with the syntax.
@Stephen Depends on the implementation. Empty expressions are valid, e.g. for($i=0;$i;); as a dump way to initialize $i. Of course, in the short closure syntax, one would assume they would not allow an empty expression, because yeah, that looks like poop.
Actually, that raises a question for me. fn():void => seems like a syntax error
how can it be void when its only purpose is to return some expr?
@DrewT If this is in regards to the back-and-forth in comments you were having with Solomon, we've cleaned up most of those comments. Comment flags are fine to deal with that.
Anonymous
So, I am new to Google Drive or cloud storage (if that is what's called) ... and I need to ask what you guys use to upload your files (faster than the auto sync)
it's meant to install a plugin, and then run whatever you originally ran, but for some reason it's processing the whole thing as the plugin name (rather than the ; indicating the end of the command) @Jimbo
they've improved a lot since then. but problems like that can always happen. everything is so experimental that it is impossible to predict all the fuckups that might happen
@Tiffany It seems theres a lot of very similar approaches to the "how do i ensure my vagrant file gets plugin X" problem. This is a variation on what you have but separates the tasks (installing vs restarting vagrant) so should be more reliable, i guess: github.com/mitchellh/vagrant/issues/4347#issuecomment-92049326
for instance there is a problem in f1 that is still unsolved, when a car front wheel hooks another car back wheel it will take off @FélixGagnon-Grenier