From: "AlexandreMagro (Alexandre Magro) via ruby-core" Date: 2024-11-06T21:12:41+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:119781] [Ruby master Feature#20770] A *new* pipe operator proposal Issue #20770 has been updated by AlexandreMagro (Alexandre Magro). mame (Yusuke Endoh) wrote in https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/20781#note-9 at DevMeeting: > AlexandreMagro (Alexandre Magro) wrote in #note-8: > > * Improves readability by transforming `p(q(r))` into a more natural `r |> q |> p`, matching how we think. > > Do you mean `r |> q(_) |> p(_)`? Yes, `r |> q |> p` was just an abstract notation to explicitly show the order of method calls. @mame I���m replying here because of the "DO NOT discuss then on this ticket, please." mention in the DevMeeting thread. ---------------------------------------- Feature #20770: A *new* pipe operator proposal https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/20770#change-110449 * Author: AlexandreMagro (Alexandre Magro) * Status: Open ---------------------------------------- Hello, This is my first contribution here. I have seen previous discussions around introducing a pipe operator, but it seems the community didn't reach a consensus. I would like to revisit this idea with a simpler approach, more of a syntactic sugar that aligns with how other languages implement the pipe operator, but without making significant changes to Ruby's syntax. Currently, we often write code like this: ```ruby value = half(square(add(value, 3))) ``` We can achieve the same result using the `then` method: ```ruby value = value.then { add(_1, 3) }.then { square(_1) }.then { half(_1) } ``` While `then` helps with readability, we can simplify it further using the proposed pipe operator: ```ruby value = add(value, 3) |> square(_1) |> half(_1) ``` Moreover, with the upcoming `it` feature in Ruby 3.4 (#18980), the code could look even cleaner: ```ruby value = add(value, 3) |> square(it) |> half(it) ``` This proposal uses the anonymous block argument `(_1)`, and with `it`, it simplifies the code without introducing complex syntax changes. It would allow us to achieve the same results as in other languages that support pipe operators, but in a way that feels natural to Ruby, using existing constructs like `then` underneath. I believe this operator would enhance code readability and maintainability, especially in cases where multiple operations are chained together. Thank you for considering this proposal! -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ ______________________________________________ ruby-core mailing list -- ruby-core@ml.ruby-lang.org To unsubscribe send an email to ruby-core-leave@ml.ruby-lang.org ruby-core info -- https://ml.ruby-lang.org/mailman3/lists/ruby-core.ml.ruby-lang.org/