Thank you all, for this discussion. Really. It was more informative than the release notes could even hope to be. The exemplars of why the new array features were so obviously useful helped me a lot in exactly one way: I have no idea what you who promote these ``new'' features are on about. Opaque doesn't begin to describe my appreciation of your views on these ``new'' features. Admittedly, I have only been programming in everything from machine code through every passing fad since the 1960s, so I may be either dated or stunned. But, really, I just don't get it. Again, I ask, what have we gained by the ``new'' array features, besides more brackets? Setting fred[z] to empty does not seem to me to be a major advancement. Or, at least not one that is at best a trivial change.

Telling me that you can now set orange to apple does not help except in light of how anyone could not do so before. As far as I can see nothing prevented anyone from doing so in the old array system. So, please, please, help me. I am usually the first to jump on the newest and latest, but these new array referencing functions leave me non- plussed.

And they still suffer from an old incongruity that I have complained about for years: array[fred] differs if fred has been previously defined (i.e., has content), in which case the content (value?) of array[fred] is the value(fred) of array; otherwise it is the literal fred of array.


--
Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments.
See <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html>

-Dr. John R. Vokey


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