Michel Fortin wrote:
On 2010-02-21 10:19:06 -0500, bearophile <[email protected]> said:

Michel Fortin:
    array.sort(predicate)     // sort in place using predicate
    array.sorted(predicate)   // create sorted copy using predicate
array.isSorted(predicate) // tell if the array is sorted using predicate

Good.

Another possibility is to let D2 accept ? and ! too inside variable names, so they can become (as in Ruby I think, and something similar is common in Lisp-like languages too):
array.sort(predicate)
array.sort!(predicate); // void function
array.sorted?(predicate)

Note that Ruby only accept this as a suffix, but yeah it's part of the identifier.

And I'd love this, but the ! suffix is totally ambiguous with the template instantiation syntax, and the ? suffix would be ambiguous in the ternary operator "?:".

But ruby has the ternary operator "?:", it just gives the "?" in the identifier more precedence.

So there's just the backwards compatibility problem, but if you had:

foo? something : something_else

then now it won't compile ("foo?" can't be found) and you'll have to change it to

foo ? something : something_else

so it's a safe backwards incompatible change.

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