+1 agreed on both accounts.
On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 9:18 PM, Benjamin Striegel <ben.strie...@gmail.com>wrote: > I don't agree that the type of a function and the return type of a > function are the same thing (specifically, the type of the function > contains the return type). :) If nothing else, this would make the function > signatures of higher-order functions much harder to read IMO. > > > On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 8:29 PM, Patrick Walton <pwal...@mozilla.com>wrote: > >> On 7/29/13 4:29 PM, Wojciech Miłkowski wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I'm observing rust development for some time, and I must say it slowly >>> encourages me to use it. Especially the progress from Perl-like syntax >>> to more sane and quiet form is enjoyable. >>> That said I wonder why the function definition has form: >>> fn name(var: type, ...) -> return_type {...} >>> instead of more unified: >>> fn name(var: type, ...): return_type {...} >>> >>> Is it constructed to mimic mathematical form f(x)->y or is there other >>> reason i.e. syntax ambiguity? >>> >> >> Personal preference of Graydon, I believe. This is one of the few >> decisions that has survived from Rust 0.1 :) >> >> I slightly prefer `:` to `->` but never enough to bring it up. >> >> Patrick >> >> >> ______________________________**_________________ >> Rust-dev mailing list >> Rust-dev@mozilla.org >> https://mail.mozilla.org/**listinfo/rust-dev<https://mail.mozilla.org/listinfo/rust-dev> >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Rust-dev mailing list > Rust-dev@mozilla.org > https://mail.mozilla.org/listinfo/rust-dev > >
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