Is ruby the new Perl?
That deserves an “always has been” meme… But IMO, Ruby outperled Perl since the beginning.
Perl doesn’t let you redefine the syntax so that you can write the same program multiple ways. All it does is to encourage multiple programs to have the same meaning.
I never looked at Ruby, but that doesn’t seem like it would be great for readability (although maybe productivity).
People mostly refrain from using it.
Much like people used to create an idiom in Perl and stick to it.
And lets you easily write metal languages due to the way you can pass around blocks. Think configuration as code type stuff.
The liberty to not name things that are obvious.
and that’s yet another way to end up with hard to read code.
Variables hold values that have meaning. Learn how to name things and you’ll write good code.
This makes me want to write a function for you to add to numbers where the variables are leftumber and rightnumber, instead of x and y.
Lhs and rhs are much better than x and y
In what way? If you encountered a function that had x and y which just added them together, that’s not readable enough?
Well in a vacuum yes sure, you’re right, but in practice there’s always some context. x and y could be referring to axes, where an addition makes little sense. However lhs and rhs make more sense if you’re overloading an operator
Damn, I wish rust had that
It wouldn’t be as relevant, since passing a function or method instead of a closure is much easier in Rust - you can just name it, while Ruby requires you to use the
method
method.So instead of
.map(|res| res.unwrap())
you can do.map(Result::unwrap)
and it’ll Just Work™.Except when Type::Method takes a reference, then it doesn’t just work
Well, that’s to be expected - the implementation of
map
expects a function that takes ownership of its inputs, so you get a type mismatch.If you really want to golf things, you can tack your own
map_ref
(and friends) onto theIterator
trait. It’s not very useful - the output can’t reference the input - but it’s possible!I imagine you could possibly extend this to a combinator that returns a tuple of
(Input, ref_map'd output)
to get around that limitation, although I can’t think of any cases where that would actually be useful.
In the case of your example we’d do
.map(&:unwrap)
in Ruby (if unwrap was a method we’d actually want to call)Notably, these are not the cases
_1
and_2
etc are for. They are there for the cases that are not structurally “call this method on the single argument to the block” e.g..map{ _1 + _2 }
or.map { x.foo(_1) }
(
_1
is reasonable, because iterating over an enumerable sequence makes it obvious what it is;_1
and_2
combined is often reasonable, because e.g. if we iterate over a key, value enumerable, such as what you get from enumerating aHash
, it’s obvious what you get; if you find yourself using_3
or above, you’re turning to the dark side and should rethink your entire life)
I’m glad it doesnt.
Swift does, though using the dollar sign rather than underscores
I sincerely doubt Rust would ever add something like this.
OMG looks like Raku
I do think the unnumbered variant of such anonymous parameters is useful, if you’ve got a team of devs that knows not to misuse them.
In particular, folks who are unexperienced will gladly make massive multi-line transformations, all in one step, and then continue blathering on about
it
or similar, as if everyone knew what they were talking about and there was no potential for ambiguity.This is also particularly annoying, because you rarely read code top-to-bottom. Ideally, you should be able to jump into the middle of any code and start reading, without having to figure out what the regional abbreviations or
it
mean.Is it just me or does it feel kinda unclean for it to just support 1 through 9?
tbf positional arguments are already bad enough. Now if you’re using over 9 positional args… just take a break, go for a short walk, and maybe you’ll come back with a better plan