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by jasonjmcghee
1303 days ago
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I see where you're coming from. Many languages support the ternary operator, where it would be: foo = y ? x : z
Which "feels better" but I think that's because I learned ternaries first.Some languages like Rust and Kotlin do support assignment of an if statement like foo = if (y) { x } else { z }
And I think that's a good step, as it doesn't need to introduce new syntax, just allows assignment of "blocks" |
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In the beginning of doing Rust I was missing the ternary operator, but now I couldn't care less.
Works well :-)