The only place where I find the "end" requirement annoying is for one line 
IF statements. When you have a short one liner, the "end" part just does 
not feel right. It would be nice if the "end" could be left out for one 
liners. Even PHP allows one to skip the accolades in such cases. 

If there's some other way of achieving this I'd love to hear about it. I 
don't like the ternary operator in this situation cause it forces me to add 
the 3rd part as "nothing" or whatever. And doing "expr1 && expr2" only 
works when expr2 is "return" for instance, otherwise the compiler complains 
about using a non-boolean in a boolean context. 


vineri, 6 mai 2016, 20:37:49 UTC+2, Stefan Karpinski a scris:
>
> There is a long history of languages using this syntax, including Algol, 
> Pascal, Ruby and Matlab.
>
> On Fri, May 6, 2016 at 2:26 PM, Ford Ox <[email protected] <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
>> Is there any reasoning behind it? It seems to me like a weird choice 
>> since you have to type three letters, which is the complete opposite of the 
>> goal of this language - being very productive (a lot work done with little 
>> code).
>> On top of that, brain has to read the word every time your eyes look at 
>> it so you spend more time also reading the code - tho this should be easy 
>> to omit, by highlighting this keyword by other color than other keywords 
>> (the current purple color in ATOM just drives me crazy, since it is one of 
>> the most violent colors, so my eyes always try to read that useless piece 
>> of information first, instead of the important code).
>>
>
>

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