@Shepmaster I'm in the neutral group on this particular problem -- let's see how it goes.. I'm really keen on using the try-blocks myself, after all, it is such a cool feature.. that being said I have doubts that anything that introduces more nesting would be responsible for (less competent) developers writing unnecessarily nested code, which is something I don't like to see (and read)..
I have two modules, MyCore and Special. MyCore has a public getter:
pub fn get_core_account() -> Option<T::AccountId>
Which gets an accountId. If I call this from Special in a simple manner:
let core_account = MyCore::get_core_account();
then rustc complains that it can't infer the type, wh...
@DenysSéguret That's called an owl result. Some people might find that more useful than a bool. There are a few similar examples in std of results in which the error type isn't an error, if you'd like to have a look. (e.g. binary_search_by).
It's not really more useful than a bool for me, it's just clearer. I don't really like bools in arguments and returned types except when the function is something like has_ or is_
@Shepmaster Imagine a stack with an operation which consumes elements (without returning anything) until there's nothing less. There's no error, it's just empty. An alternative I'm considering is Option<()>
But in fact I prefer to force the user (me) to check the error so I'll keep the owl