Lars T. Kyllingstad:
> I've never understood why people have a problem with the semicolons.  

In real life there are all kind of errors, communication channels are noisy, 
and the number of possible meanings is huge. So people are forced to try to 
understand what other people meant. When people interact with computers, they 
expect a bit of "basic" understanding from the machine. A language like Perl 
that tries to read too much into what you meant leads to a messy design and 
messy programs. But the other extrema (obligatory semicolons at the end of 
lines) are often seen as excessively fussy by programming newbies (or normal 
Python programmers).


>I would say I like to have them optional. When you start using delegate 
>literals it's just too much:
foo((int i) { writeln(i); });<

If semicolons will ever became optional in D, I want the D parser to not add 
them in a smart way as JavaScript does, they can be accepted only as a 
replacement of ;<newline>. So even if D semicolons become optional, in that 
lambda you will need to add the inner semicolon still (so Python has lambdas 
but no Ruby blocks and Guido V.R. likes it this way).

Bye,
bearophile

Reply via email to