On Thu, Jun 9, 2016 at 9:45 PM, Dany St-Amant <dsa....@icloud.com> wrote:

>
> Le 9 juin 2016 à 14:55, Xiaodi Wu via swift-evolution <
> swift-evolution@swift.org> a écrit :
>
> There have been, in previous threads, several examples given where users
> of Swift have found the behavior of `where` to be misleading and confusing.
>
>
> Sorry Xiaodi, but beside you (on multiple instances), and recently Erica,
> I have do not recall hearing that many voices saying that 'where' is
> confusing.
>

Shawn Erickson wrote this to the list just yesterday:

"I support your position on the use of where and while/when being confusing
in the loop statement. I (and I know others) have for example used where in
a loop statement mistakenly thinking it would terminate the loop early but
of course learned that it basically filters what causes the loop body to be
executed. After the fact that made sense to me but it didn't click at
first."


> Yes, there's was maybe even less voices stating that it is not confusing,
> but which group is more vocal?
>
> Maybe I have been recently corrupt by Solid SQL queries:
> select * from PEOPLE_TABLE where AGE_FIELD = 100
>
> Or by my (likely) broken English:
> The places where I had the most fun
>
> But, to me, where can only suggest some filtering (thus tag to a for ..
>  in .., continue if not matching).
>

I'm glad that you find it very clear. I do as well. That does not mean it
is clear to everyone.


> I know there's a linguist on the list, maybe he could comment on whether
> or not using 'where' as a filter is proper or an abomination.
>
> I do not think that because something is confusing to some, or at first,
> that it warrant removal from the language.
>

It is a very bad sign if something is confusing at first, especially to a
significant proportion of users. It's true by definition that once you have
mastered something you are no longer confused by it.

As has been stated on this list, education is a valid and important
consideration for Swift. If something is confusing rather than difficult
(and the *concept* of filtering a list is not at all a difficult concept),
and if the same underlying concept can already be invoked in alternative
and equivalent ways that are not confusing, then it's a no-brainer that the
confusing thing is harmful to the language and should be removed on that
basis alone.

By analogy, Chinese and Japanese share difficult writing systems. Yet many
people use those languages daily without difficulty. Does that mean there's
not a problem? Far from it: in fact, you'll find that many intelligent
people have devoted their life's work to mitigating the issue. Both Chinese
and Japanese underwent a round of simplification in the 20th century. Think
about it: real languages used for daily life by a significant fraction of
the world's population were revamped for the purpose of increasing
accessibility to new learners.

The by-value/by-reference is well define, but can be confusing at first.
> Same goes for eager/lazy processing, or escaping vs non-escaping closure,
> or even the difference between closure and function. But no one suggest to
> remove them.
>

Value types vs. reference types is a concept (and a moderately advanced
one), eager vs. lazy processing is a concept (and a moderately advanced
one), and closures are a concept (and definitely an advanced one).

Filtering a collection is a concept as well, and no one is suggesting its
removal. We are proposing to simplify and rationalize the syntax by which
filtering is invoked. If there were a way to dramatically simplify the
syntax surrounding value types and reference types so as to diminish
confusion, you can absolutely guarantee that there would be proposals to
change the syntax. If I could think of one tomorrow, you'd see a thread
tomorrow about it. I don't think I'm that smart though.


> Dany
>
> In fact, the first of these proposals began with a question: how does one
> write arbitrary Boolean assertions after a let binding? The answer (use
> `where`) was found to be misleading and confusing.
>
> I think you're being unfair to say that these proposals have no purpose
> other than an academic consistency.
> On Thu, Jun 9, 2016 at 13:29 Jon Shier via swift-evolution <
> swift-evolution@swift.org> wrote:
>
>>         As time goes on, I’m feeling more and more that these consistency
>> proposals are sorely misguided. Frankly, unless the syntax is confusing or
>> misleading, even once the developer has learned the guiding principles of
>> Swift, consistency is not a good argument for change. This proposal is the
>> perfect example of this. No one will find the use of “where” in loops
>> confusing, aside from those who will wonder why it was removed from if
>> statements. There is no misleading behavior or confusing syntax here. This
>> is just consistency for consistency’s sake. Once this proposal is done,
>> then another will be made to remove “where” from another place in the
>> language. Then another and another until it’s gone completely and a very
>> useful part of the language is removed in the name of consistency. Which
>> really just comes down to “where” isn’t used here, so it can’t be used
>> there anymore. It’s death by a thousand cuts.
>>
>>
>>
>> Jon Shier
>>
>>
>> > On Jun 9, 2016, at 1:16 PM, Erica Sadun via swift-evolution <
>> swift-evolution@swift.org> wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> >> On Jun 9, 2016, at 11:11 AM, Charlie Monroe <char...@charliemonroe.net>
>> wrote:
>> >> See my latest post - included results with -Ofast. But still, using
>> filter and lazy.filter is 10+% slower, which were the suggested
>> alternatives to `where`.
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>> > I need to correct this misapprehension.
>> > My suggested alternative to where was and remains `guard`.
>> >
>> > -- E
>> >
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