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On 2024-06-04 08:58:53 +0000, David Brown said:On 04/06/2024 09:14, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:>Would it break backward compatibility for C to add a feature like thisDo you mean, could C treat "a <= x <= b" as "(a <= x) && (x <= b)"
from Python? Namely, the ability to check if a value lies in an interval:
def valid_char(c) :
"is integer c the code for a valid Unicode character." \
" This excludes surrogates."
return \
(
0 <= c <= 0x10FFFF
and
not (0xD800 <= c < 0xE000)
)
#end valid_char
without breaking existing code? The answer is no, C treats it as
the expression "(a <= x) <= b". So you would be changing the
meaning of existing C code. I think it's fair to say there is
likely to be very little existing correct and working C code that
relies on the current interpretation of such expressions, but the
possibility is enough to rule out such a change ever happening in C.
(And it would also complicate the grammar a fair bit.)
<https://c-faq.com/expr/transitivity.html>
That does not prevet from doing the same with a different syntax.
The main difference is that in the current C syntax that cannot be
said without mentioning c twice. In the example program C would
require that c is mentioned four times but the shown Python code
only needs it mentioned twice. An ideal syntax woult only mention
it once, perhaps
>
return c in 0 .. 0xD7FF, 0xE000 .. 0x10FFFF ;
>
or
>
return c : [0 .. 0xD800), [0xE000 .. 0x10FFFF] ;
>
or something like that, preferably so that no new reserved word is
needed.
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