This is my new favorite idea, especially expr@place. It's concise. It reads
"expr at place", which is exactly what it does. It goes along with Rust's
putting the type after the value. "expr in place" could be good too.


On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 2:57 AM, Kevin Ballard <[email protected]> wrote:

> With @ going away another possibility is to leave ~ as the normal
> allocation operator and to use @ as the placement operator. So ~expr stays
> the same and placement looks either like `@place expr` or `expr@place`
>
> -Kevin Ballard
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