On Tuesday, 29 January 2013 at 00:56:41 UTC, Chad Joan wrote:
snipThe limitation this imposes is that void foo(int a) {...} void bar(int a, int b) {...} cannot be called in this way: foo = 2; 2.bar = 3; snip
I have been following the properties discussion a bit and lack the experience to really comment on much. However, looking at your posting I couldn't help but ask one question. You state that not allowing at statement like: 2.bar = 3; is a 'limitation'. Was 'limitation' really the word you were looking for? I find such code rather baffling. Perhaps it has valuable uses somewhere, which is why I am asking. It sort of reminds me of Python where you can do something like: ' '.join( list_of_strings ) which is very cute and all, but the following, rather mundane function call would do a better job of conveying to the reader what is going on, using the same number of keystrokes: join( list_of_strings, ' ') Craig
