shouting versus dotting
Steven Schveighoffer
schveiguy at yahoo.com
Sun Oct 5 08:11:19 PDT 2008
"Andrei Alexandrescu" wrote
> KennyTM~ wrote:
>> Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
>>> Michel Fortin wrote:
>>>> On 2008-10-05 01:14:17 -0400, Andrei Alexandrescu
>>>> <SeeWebsiteForEmail at erdani.org> said:
>>>>
>>>> -- snip --
>>>>
>>>> Or we could use special delimiter characters:
>>>>
>>>> Positive<real>(joke);
>>>> Positive"real"(joke);
>>>> Positive«real»(joke);
>>>> Positive#real@(joke);
>>>>
>>>> Each having its own problem though.
>>>>
>>>> My preference still goes to "!(".
>>>
>>> There was also Positive{real}(joke), with which I couldn't find an
>>> ambiguity.
>> >
>>
>> Ohhhh. Why isn't it considered then? (Suppose we already knew Positive is
>> not a keyword and not preceded by the keywords struct, class, etc.)
>
> I believe it should be considered. At some point there was discussion on
> accepting a last parameter of delegate type outside the function parens.
> The idea was to allow user-defined code to define constructs similar to
> e.g. if and foreach.
>
> But I think that has many other problems (one of which is that the
> delegate can't reasonably specify parameters), so we can safely discount
> that as a problem.
>
> I'd want to give it a try. How do others feel about Template{arguments}?
I like it much better than .()
But I'd still vote for keeping !(), as I have no problems with it.
-Steve
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