Christopher Wright wrote:
Don wrote:
I don't understand why runtime-determined array literals even exist.
They're not literals!!!
They cause no end of trouble. IMHO we'd be *much* better off without them.

You don't see the use. I do. I would go on a murderous rampage if that feature were removed from the language.

For example, one thing I recently wrote involved creating a process with a large number of arguments. The invocation looked like: exec("description", [procName, arg1, arg2] ~ generatedArgs ~ [arg3, arg4] ~ moreGeneratedArgs);

There were about ten or fifteen lines like that.

You'd suggest I rewrite that how?
char[][] args;
args ~= procName;
args ~= arg1;
args ~= arg2;
args ~= generatedArgs;
args ~= arg3;

Of course not. These runtime 'array literals' are just syntax sugar for a constructor call. Really, they are nothing more.
At worst, it would be something like:

exec("description", createArray(procName, arg1, arg2) ~ generatedArgs ~ createArray(arg3, arg4) ~ moreGeneratedArgs);

Depending on what the 'exec' signature is, it could be simpler than that. But that's the absolute worst case.

The language pays a heavy price for that little bit of syntax sugar.

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