1:47 AM
Realizing that break returns an unset (and not none) by default, I'm wondering if return should be zero arity and return an UNSET! by default, and have them both provide a /WITH refinement for giving a value.
So this is a spin on what @rgchris suggested with a default of NONE!, except unifying them under a default of UNSET!.
It's elegant for the reason of ducking the question of how to pass an UNSET! to either of these routines. You don't, that's their default behavior. And if idiomatically one usually does not invoke a return on the last line of a function but assumes it's the result, then the only time you would put a return would be to generate an unset at the end to suppress the last value from leaking.
return/with and break/with look nice and translate into english in a non-awkward fashion. "What value did you break the loop with?"
"with" is one of those words you usually wouldn't use as a variable name, so things like return/value and break/value don't wind up leading you to write return/value value which is a mess.
And I've mentioned my lack of love for break/return which looks like an "either-or" sort of statement. "Well, you're in that loop and I guess... however you get out if it with your break/return/what-have-you..." Junky.
Anyway, just comes on the heels of realizing that break returns unset, and that I think that's the right decision, which makes me think "hmm, well that sure is convenient..."
@MarkI C'mon, opinions here! I know you have one!
Were Rebol not a language that just evaluated to whatever was in the last part of the chain, I might be troubled by how "wordy" it is to have to use a refinement to do a return. But I think the bias is actually the other way... to make it short and succinct to suppress a value being returned!
If one were to argue from a standpoint of backwards compatibility, then, this would suggest making a definitionally-scoped EXIT, adding a refinement, and then deprecating RETURN.
(It might further suggest that QUIT/WITH would fit in all right in this set.)
GoogleRank survey... "exit language keyword" gets the predominant expected hits for exiting a program completely. First-couple-pages-disagreement from
PL/SQL and
"xojo" where it's for exiting loops
(their break). Something called
Oxygene uses it to exit methods, and I've never heard of that.
Perhaps obviously, "return language keyword" has a lot more hits and it's what you'd think.
One question to be asked is "if RETURN were reclaimed, what might it be for?" and one answer is that it could just be the ^M character. So [space tab newline return]. Keeps people from spelling out "carraige-return"
I think the cognitive block I have is with the severity of the word EXIT, and its connotations. You think of emergency exits on planes; a very radical state of being, while you "return to your seat". Something about the word just sounds "big" and exit signs are big and red.
Well, we don't want keywords. So make function! needs to be parameterized to let you pick another word to serve RETURN's function. It probably shouldn't even pick a default.
It would then be the function generators that give us the imposition of RETURN: by default, or EXIT:, or whatever.