Brian, On Thu, 2005-07-14 at 19:58 -0500, Brian Smith wrote: > On 7/14/05, Frederik Eaton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 14, 2005 at 03:15:32AM +0200, Lennart Augustsson wrote: > > > The offside rule is patronizing. :) > > > It tries to force you to lay out your program in a certain way. > > > If you like that way, good. > > > > I disagree. The offside rule in general makes a more concise syntax > > available to the programmer, who would probably choose a similar > > indentation style anyway. The issue that I brought up is a case where > > the programmer is *prevented* from using a certain syntax, for the > > sole reason that, if what you say is correct, someone has determined > > that the prohibition is "good for him". I dislike such design > > rationales because they always end up hurting advanced users, who may > > have atypical needs, but who should ideally play an important role in > > promoting the language to others; it makes it seem like the plan is > > I don't understand how a rule that requires one to prefer > easier-to-read layout over more-difficult-to-read layout is bad, if > each alternative is of equal verbosity (as is the case here).
I agree with Frederik since I've been bitten by that rule before. Defining a single function like so: let a very long definition of "a" = and the body has to be here is a very long application to "and" and using long arguments like definition is a pain in is harder to read and might force you to use shorter, less descriptive variable names. let an even longer definition of a function called "an" = is much easer to read I think in It is up to the programmer to write easy to write programs, not the language. I changed the 'a' to '"a"' afterwards which also forced me to indent the whole rhs as well. It's not a good feature IMHO. That said, I don't know if it's easy to change of if there are other ambiguities popping up. Axel. _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list Haskell@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell