Feature #6678
closedPrecedence of ^ operator
Description
I wrote about this here: http://trans.github.com/2009/12/13/a-failure-of-precedence.html (or https://github.com/trans/trans.github.com/wiki/2009-12-13-a-failure-of-precedence if you prefer)
In short I would like to see ^
operator move up in precedence to be the same as **
. We need another option besides **
at the top of precedence list and ^
fits the bill well since many languages already think of it as "power of".
Of course, this has downside that effects current use for XOR definition. A new operator would be needed for that but ^
could alias it by default, so only thing that changes is precedence. Thankfully XOR is not among the most commonly used operators and often when used the precedence will be okay either way. So there should be very few cases where new operator or parenthesis will need to be put in.
Ultimately it would be great if precedence could be controlled on per-class basis. But that is big change, and might not be altogether practical. So I propose this one modest adjustment instead in which it would be an improvement.
Updated by yhara (Yutaka HARA) about 12 years ago
- Target version changed from 2.0.0 to 3.0
Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) about 12 years ago
- Status changed from Open to Rejected
'^' is not a power operator in Ruby.
Updated by trans (Thomas Sawyer) about 12 years ago
I take it you read the article? Do you see the issue I am having in need of an operator with a precedence above + - * and /? So what solution would you recommend?
Note, I am not saying '^' should stop being XOR, or that it should become power operator for Numeric. I just was asking if it could get a higher precedence, so it could be used for such in custom classes. As a broader question, why are the bitwise operators lower in precedence that math operators? Is there are reason for that (other then that's how everyone has always done it). I've read that even Dennis Ritchie admits that the precedence of operators in C, which everyone has copied, isn't optimal.
Updated by duerst (Martin Dürst) about 12 years ago
On 2012/10/27 1:04, trans (Thomas Sawyer) wrote:
Issue #6678 has been updated by trans (Thomas Sawyer).
I take it you read the article? Do you see the issue I am having in need of an operator with a precedence above + - * and /? So what solution would you recommend?
http://trans.github.com/2009/12/13/a-failure-of-precedence.html gives me
a 404 (There isn't a GitHub Page hosted here, sorry.).
https://github.com/trans/trans.github.com/wiki/2009-12-13-a-failure-of-precedence
works, and I have read it. There's just one single example/use case. It
seems inappropriate to claim that this is a big problem with just a
single example/use case.
Also, what about alternatives such as 2.square.meters, or 2.meters.squared ?
Also, you say: "On the other hand, some simple issues doggedly persist
for little good reason (backward compatibility not withstanding).". This
sounds to me as if you think that backwards compatibility wasn't a
problem at all. But who is going to fix all these scripts out there that
rely on the current precedence?
Note, I am not saying '^' should stop being XOR, or that it should become power operator for Numeric. I just was asking if it could get a higher precedence, so it could be used for such in custom classes. As a broader question, why are the bitwise operators lower in precedence that math operators? Is there are reason for that (other then that's how everyone has always done it). I've read that even Dennis Ritchie admits that the precedence of operators in C, which everyone has copied, isn't optimal.
This is third-hand knowledge, and not in any way specific to "^", or the
absence of other operators with the same precedence as "**" (because C
doesn't have that). Also, I don't think Dennis Ritchie would agree
changing operator precedences in a widely used programming language.
(unfortunately, we can't ask him anymore)
Regards, Martin.
Feature #6678: Precedence of ^ operator
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6678#change-31614Author: trans (Thomas Sawyer)
Status: Rejected
Priority: Normal
Assignee:
Category: core
Target version: Next MajorI wrote about this here: http://trans.github.com/2009/12/13/a-failure-of-precedence.html (or https://github.com/trans/trans.github.com/wiki/2009-12-13-a-failure-of-precedence if you prefer)
In short I would like to see
^
operator move up in precedence to be the same as**
. We need another option besides**
at the top of precedence list and^
fits the bill well since many languages already think of it as "power of".Of course, this has downside that effects current use for XOR definition. A new operator would be needed for that but
^
could alias it by default, so only thing that changes is precedence. Thankfully XOR is not among the most commonly used operators and often when used the precedence will be okay either way. So there should be very few cases where new operator or parenthesis will need to be put in.Ultimately it would be great if precedence could be controlled on per-class basis. But that is big change, and might not be altogether practical. So I propose this one modest adjustment instead in which it would be an improvement.
Updated by trans (Thomas Sawyer) about 12 years ago
gives me a 404 (There isn't a GitHub Page hosted here, sorry.).
It was just the same write-up with different formatting. So nothing missed.
This sounds to me as if you think that backwards compatibility wasn't a
problem at all. But who is going to fix all these scripts out there that
rely on the current precedence?
It's a valid reason. I was just saying what I concluded putting that particular reason aside. It is important, of course. How much code would break if ^
had a high precedence? It can be hard to say. I would expect very little given typical usage I've encountered. Of course, there will still be cases, even if few.
This is third-hand knowledge, and not in any way specific to "^" ...
Pretty sure Dennis Ritchie did specifically say that the bitwise operators should have not been lower than ==
and that he would do it differently if he had to do over again. Inferring from his statements about this, it seems operator precedence arose more organically rather than being fully rationalized out. I too wish we could ask him.