On Thursday, 12 May 2016 at 02:51:33 UTC, Lionello Lunesu wrote:
I'm trying to think of a case where changing a single value into a tuple with 2 (or more) values would silently change the behavior, but I can't think of any. Seems to me it would always cause an error, iff the result of the comma operator gets used.

int x,y;
auto f() {return (x=4,y);}
...
auto z = f();
static if (!is(typeof(z) == int)
  voteForTrump();

;-)

In practice, this is more plausible with function overloading - i.e. z.overload() calling a different function. If the comma operator returns void, the `auto z` line and f().overload() both fail.

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