Would making Ok(()) optional be insane ? This would have to be generalized, for example with an optional default value for enums when returned from functions.
@PeterHall just like for answers, the upvoted questions aren't necessarily the good ones. I'd say upvoted questions are the easy to understand ones, the ones that people find familiar
@DenysSéguret And that's the tragedy of SO, the accepted answer more often than not not the right one, the reputation does not reflect one's understanding or knowledge in any topic, and the most upvoted questions are not just the easy-to-understand ones but also the ones asked at the appropriate time of the day, isn't it?
So, instead of raising the rep-gain of the questions, these should've been the problems the platform try to tackle.
But then again, who am I to make suggestions what the new leadership should do..
I've several times suggested that questions should not impact reputations. Another reason is that it makes it super violent to asker when we downvote their bad questions, especially when they're newcomers
@DenysSéguret I guess it depends on the tag, and again the time of the day and complexity of the question. But I stand by my statement -- there even was a super cool caricature about this a few years ago: always check the next answer :)
@SébastienRenauld any source for that ? Because the SE team always had a MS technical culture and more integration in what they know doesn't hint for me as a desire to be bought by MS
Here is my honest take on this. Sara is going to fish for another job after acquisition and wants to look like she's a trailblazer. SE is looking to get acquired. All those changes are a bunch of hot air to hopefully attract the disgruntled again.
but this mean down vote question will have no effect on reputation - -
it's a very bad idea
I just cannot figure out how can anyone that has spent more than five minutes moderating this site come to the conclusion that increasing reputation for the questions will actually result with more quality questions being asked. I am genuinely baffled. — Dalija Prasnikar13 hours ago
well, I still think downvote should remove at least haft of what upvote give
Note that the rep cost for having your answer downvoted is still far less than the rep gained from having your answer upvoted. Does that policy make sense to you? And, if so, why should questions be any different? — Cody Gray ♦16 hours ago
@CodyGray To be honest, no, it doesn't make sense to me. If it was my decision to make, the rep cost would be symmetric -10/+10 for both questions and answers. — wim16 hours ago
Twitter bot makers are lazy as fuck. Every week I get followed by a few accounts, all having a rather attractive (but decent) woman as avatar and a description in the line of "I'm here to meet people" or "I want to find somebody to love". And no content, nothing else. This isn't more credible than a Nigerian prince story :\
that was the hard thing. I had mentioned other problems in a few comments, and somebody asked me to make an answer from a comment, which I did by focusing on the point which nobody was willing to openly address
Another addendum to the answer by JC007B:
We didn't solicit feedback from the wider community on this change. We have a robust roadmap and we are selective in asking the community for feedback on specific releases.
In other words:
SE Inc., on its own, solely, decides what goes on its prod...
the real fun is that I did this for the CoC also work for the Rust one
is there any RFC that allows shorthand arguments for rust closures? .filter(|string| string.contains(query)) vs .filter($0.contains(query)) (whereas $ followed by the input closure argument index represents the type without a name)
Coming from a swift background I think the rust variant is pretty verbose...
IMO $0.contains is more readable than |s| s.contains
but it's a matter of style
I am used to the swift way, since the two languages have a lot of similarities, I expect there is a (maybe even rejected) rfc of this way of dealing with closure input variables
it is only readably to you, because you got used to that notation and not the other
having a special character to indicate something is always a problem -- we even have disagreement on whether we actually need the @ for variable binding in pattern matching
I think it makes to ask for an rfc of making shorthand closure arguments, since I have seen rfc's of things swift has and rust doesn't (the must_use annotation for example: swift has default warnings for unassigned function return values, named parameters, fields in traits (swift has them)). I want to see the Rust's communities reaction so I can better understand why they implement things and why they don't
In Rust we need to annotate it explicitly... I don't see any benefit from it, regardless if I read the book or not. I program fulltime in Java and an unassigned return value is most likely a bad thing
Like in Swift. Really, in Java I have to fix bugs because people (and also me) just forget to use the return value. If the return value is not important, don't return anything haha
Well ok, I really disagree with the fact no warning should be shown for an unassigned return value.
Because the ONLY thing that function does do is adding two values
And that's essentially what function have to do right? Do one thing good. If it results in a result (no Rust's result) and it returns it, it should be used.
Anyway, I think it all boils down to interface design really. If most of your functions have side effects, it is a better idea to leave the decision to the caller, if they don't then it is better to leave it to the callee
Swift's function that does pretty much the same is defined here: developer.apple.com/documentation/swift/array/1641390-remove (@discardableResult mutating func remove(at index: Int) -> Element). Its a pretty rare case using the @discardableResult, in this function it is exactly what we want though
Ok
Well I just want to say: when I write a function that returns something, my intention is very, very likely the caller should do something with the return value
And so can I speak for the developer at my work which program in Java. Maybe it is completely different in Rust but I don't really think so :P
Quoting from today's blog post "Welcome Wagon: Classifying Comments on Stack Overflow":
According to those of us deeply involved here and familiar with Stack Overflow, about 7% of comments on Stack Overflow are unwelcoming. What did some unwelcoming comments look like?
“No. As it stan...
I want to call a function inside a main.rs file. I have made one directory name "library" inside the same src folder as main.rs exist.
src/main.rs
mod library;
fn main() {
println!("{}", library::name1::name(4));
}
src/library/file.rs
pub mod name1 {
pub fn name(a: i32) -> i32 {
...