Hi Ken

`|>` is not something new it appeared in many languages long time ago (in
some forms). JavaScript also has a proposal of it. And PHP someone has
already proposed one.
https://github.com/tc39/proposal-pipeline-operator
https://wiki.php.net/rfc/pipe-operator

Cheers

On Fri, Oct 25, 2019 at 4:53 AM Ken Stanley <doh...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> On Thu, Oct 24, 2019 at 5:19 PM Kosit Supanyo <webdevxp....@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Ken
>>
>> I totally agree with Andreas especially:
>>
>> One purpose of the operator should be that you don't have to repeat
>>> the variable. Here you do, e.g. $_SERVER['fname']
>>
>>
>> But if this operator provide some way not to repeat the variable it will
>> make sense. For example:
>>
>> $_SERVER['fname'] !??  $user->setName($$)
>>
>
> I asked Andreas for their opinion on why this is bad in this context?
> Especially since if I were to use a traditional ternary or if condition,
> then I'd still be repeating the variable.
>
>
>>
>> But I think this functionality should be of something like pipeline
>> operator:
>>
>> // send tmp variable to the next expression unconditionally
>> $ret = $_SERVER['fname'] |>  $user->setName($$);
>> // send tmp variable to the next expression only when $_SERVER['fname']
>> is set.
>> $ret = $_SERVER['fname'] ?|>  $user->setName($$);
>>
>> Also the syntax like above will be consistent with the proposed
>> safe-navigation operators.
>>
>
> I'm more interested in having a negation operator for the null-coalescing
> operator, especially since cognatively it should be easy to discern what it
> does. I've personally not seen |>, and I'd be confused as to what it does
> (e.g., is it a bitwise OR on a greater than comparison?).
>
> Thank you! The idea of $$ is neat, but not quite what I'm trying to
> achieve here. If anything, wouldn't that facilitate a different RFC?
>
> - Ken Stanley
>
>

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