@Crell This talk explains better what I was aiming to discuss with you.
The only operations I need to perform on my data is to check its integrity, authenticity, persist it, retrieve it, display it. These operations don't have to be bundled with the data. And I don't want my cpu "to perceive" it as I perceive it. Only to perform said operations well.
@Crell I remember we discussed match(true) and that the match limits pattern matching or something like that, recently I found similar feature of Kotlin that seems to be universal and address expression and statement uses with true validation and pattern matching kotlinlang.org/docs/control-flow.html#when-expression would it be stupid to propose copy of when and deprecate match and switch ?! :D
@Girgias yes, with few differences, can be used as statement OR expression - with slightly different behaviour related to exhausitngness
also you can use that with (true)
when {
x.isOdd() -> print("x is odd")
y.isEven() -> print("y is even")
else -> print("x+y is odd")
}
some pattern pmatching
fun hasPrefix(x: Any) = when(x) {
is String -> x.startsWith("prefix")
else -> false
}
when (x) {
in 1..10 -> print("x is in the range")
in validNumbers -> print("x is valid")
!in 10..20 -> print("x is outside the range")
else -> print("none of the above")
}
@brzuchal There's really nothing there that we cannot evolve match into. Pattern matching would cover some of it (as in wiki.php.net/rfc/pattern-matching), a shorthand for match (true) would cover some, my short-functions RFC (wiki.php.net/rfc/short-functions) would have covered the "function that is just a when" case, Ilija still wants multi-line expressions although I'm skeptical, etc.
@brzuchal That's one of the points Ilija and I have been debating. :-) I like the idea of allowing is to apply to all arms automatically, rather than having to repeat it for each one.
Subjective question. I expect "is on all" to be the common case, at which point it's easier to just say "is" once. But the engine shouldn't care, so it's not a hill I'll die on.
in was Nikita's sample feature for his old blog post on how to write patches for internals. :-) He specifically said it was because it was a silly thing to propose.
docbook XML question, the PHP manual files have things like &reftitle.install; ... what is the name for that? "entity reference"? "entity token"? "entity"? "token"? something else entirely?
anything that has an ampersand preceding it that is used as a reference that relies upon one of our .ent files to tell it what text to put in its place (assuming I summarized what I think these do, correctly)
@Girgias is there any accuracy with phpstorm calling it "entity reference"? (Composing a list of ways phpstorm can improve support on PHP manual XML files, this is one of em)