Feature #7907
closed
Give meaning to staby word
Added by trans (Thomas Sawyer) almost 12 years ago.
Updated almost 12 years ago.
Description
=begin
I noticed that ->word
doesn't mean anything. i.e.
->foo
SyntaxError: (irb):4: syntax error, unexpected '\n', expecting keyword_do_LAMBDA or tLAMBEG
from /opt/Ruby/1.9.3-p327/bin/irb:12:in `'
If that is always so, then could it be given a meaning as a shorthand for method()? i.e.
->foo
would be the same as writing
method(:foo).to_proc
=end
- Description updated (diff)
- Assignee set to matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto)
- Status changed from Open to Rejected
=begin
I think filling the syntax hole eagerly is a bad idea.
Besides that, I don't think making ((%->foo%)) as method(:foo).to_proc seems a good idea,
since foo in ((%->foo{}%)) is a argument name, not a method name.
Matz.
=end
Ah, ->foo{}
did not know that the parenthesis could be left out.
Ok, I'll suggest slight modification then, b/c it still would be nice to have a shorter notation (not just to fill a syntax hole). Could it be a symbol, i.e. ->:foo
.
Once a issue has been rejected, is it necessary to open a new case for a modified form of the proposal? In other words is any one going to see the change if it has already been rejected? As with this case?
People will see the changes but when they're looking for open issues to decide what to do about them they won't touch closed issues :)
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