Am Donnerstag, 27. November 2008 22:14 schrieb Thomas Davie: > On 27 Nov 2008, at 19:59, circ ular wrote: > > I suggest Haskell introduce some syntactic sugar for Maps. > > > > Python uses {"this": 2, "is": 1, "a": 1, "Map": 1} > > > > Clojure also use braces: {:k1 1 :k2 3} where whitespace is comma but > > commas are also allowed. > > > > I find the import Data.Map and then fromList [("hello",1), ("there", > > 2)] or the other form that I forgot(because it is to long!) to be to > > long... > > > > So why not {"hello": 1, "there": 2} ? > > In a similar vein, I suggest not only to not do this, but also for > Haskell' to remove syntactic sugar for lists (but keep it for strings)! > > I have two (three if you agree with my opinions on other parts of the > language) reasons for this: > 1) It's a special case, that doesn't gain anything much. [a,b,c,d] is > actually only one character shorter and not really any clearer than > a:b:c:d:[]. > 2) Removing it would clear up the ',' character for use in infix > constructors. > 3) (requiring you to agree with my opinions about tuples) it would > allow for clearing up the tuple type to be replaced with pairs > instead. (,) could become a *real* infix data constructor for pairs. > This would make us able to recreate "tuples" simply based on a right > associative (,) constructor. I realise there is a slight issue with > strictness, and (,) introducing more bottoms in a "tuple" than current > tuples have, but I'm sure a strict version of the (,) constructor > could be created with the same semantics as the current tuple. > > Just my 2p > > Thanks > > Tom Davie
I support this view. Best wishes, Wolfgang _______________________________________________ Haskell-prime mailing list Haskell-prime@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-prime