Comment by edoceo

17 hours ago

I love the ternary operator as much as anyone. But dang if it doesn't get hard to read when there is are a few, nested even.

Does that operator compile to faster assembly that if I make the same logic with verbose `if` logic? Is that a language specific outcome?

    cond1 ? res1 :
    cond2 ? res2 :
    cond3 ? res3 :
    or_else_res

If they are truly nested, then that is confusing. But if you have an if-else chain, then it can be quite readable.

  • or

      if cond1 then res1
      else if cond2 then res2
      else if cond3 then res3
      else or_else_res
    

    or

      if cond1 then res1
      elif cond2 then res2
      elif cond3 then res3
      else or_else_res
    

    what is most lua-like?

  • I find that so much harder to read compared to if/else or case/when in ruby.

    The ? is basically an attempt to use fewer if/else, at the cost of condensed if-else like structure. I always need to look at both parts after the ? whereas in a single if or elsif I don't. case/when in ruby is even better here e. g. regex check:

       def foo(i)
         case i
         when /^cat/
           handle_cats
         when /^dog/
           handle_dogs
    

    (I ommitted the "end"s here to just focus on the conditional logic.)