>>>>> "s" == skud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: s> On Fri, Aug 04, 2000 at 01:07:07PM -0400, Uri Guttman wrote: s> - case/switch >> try/catch s> Any thoguhts on the errors sublist? should this be there, or in -flow, s> or what? s> Can we predict any of these potential sublists? Or rather, s> sub-sublists. s> My guess is that exceptions and case/switch will be the noisy ones. exceptions will be loud. i think damian's switch solution is so good and perlish, it will be a quiet victory. i think damian's influence on perl6 is our real triple top secret weapon. i thank $DEITY every day he is working for the forces of good (perl) and not evil (pick one or more of: @other_languages). here are some immediate sublists i can envision (all below perl6-language-flow): errors - exception handling, $!, $?, return val of system(), etc. subs - all aspects of sub and method calls: named params, prototypes, want, etc. some of those subs sub list have been proposed as new ones. i think they should go under this parent list like perl6-language-flow-subs-want. BTW i do wish we had picked lang instead of language. laziness, you know is an positive attribute! switch - the usual suspects dispatch - discuss support of the multiple ways to control dispatching of perl ops (event loops, threads, co-routines, etc.) the dispatch list should eventually split off lists that focus on the semantic details of each technology. the final RFCs from those lists will be coordinated and hopefully presented as a unified design of the control flow of Perl. i think a very clean spec which encompasses all of our needs will be doable. we just have to make the language features which support them as perlish as possible. the major goal of this group is to create a clean model of perl flow that can use any or all of the desired features with no major performance penalties. uri -- Uri Guttman --------- [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------- http://www.sysarch.com SYStems ARCHitecture, Software Engineering, Perl, Internet, UNIX Consulting The Perl Books Page ----------- http://www.sysarch.com/cgi-bin/perl_books The Best Search Engine on the Net ---------- http://www.northernlight.com