HaloO, Mark J. Reed wrote:
? Multiple-assignment second-class? I don't see how you get that out of Larry's message...
Well, he explicitly says that loop is second-class because it uses multi-assignment. Actually he says it "tends to violate single-assignment". But I interpret that sort of intensionally as being worse than an outright violation. That is already the tendency of violation means second-class ;) Regards, TSa. -- "The unavoidable price of reliability is simplicity" -- C.A.R. Hoare