[ruby-core:122806] [Ruby Feature#21515] Add `&return` as sugar for `x=my_calculation; return x if x`
From:
"masterleep2 (Bill Lipa) via ruby-core" <ruby-core@...>
Date:
2025-07-17 04:34:03 UTC
List:
ruby-core #122806
Issue #21515 has been updated by masterleep2 (Bill Lipa).
Also:
my_calculation(input_a, input_b)&.then{return it}
----------------------------------------
Feature #21515: Add `&return` as sugar for `x=my_calculation; return x if x`
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/21515#change-114086
* Author: nhorton (Noah Horton)
* Status: Open
----------------------------------------
Let me preface this by saying I have no marriage to the exact keyword name of `&return`.
# Problem
It is very common to have an early return in code where you get some initial value and return it if it is non-null. i.e.
```
return my_calculation(input_a, input_b) if my_calculation(input_a, input_b)
```
That form on its own is verbose and one where you need to look at it for a moment to confirm it is the same code on either side of the if.
If `my_calculation` is non-trivial at all, it normally gets turned into something with a variable:
```
my_calc = my_calculation(input_a, input_b)
return my_calc if my_calc
```
That is now two lines. The worse scenario, however, is if the user did not bother doing that and my_calculation turned out to be expensive (and they did not know it).
# Proposal
I propose a syntax of `&return my_calculation(input_a, input_b)` where it will evaluate the argument and return it as the result of the method if it is non-nil, otherwise it will continue on.
# Alternatives
## Do Nothing
There is no way to work around this with rolling your own methods. You can't make a `returnif` method or something yourself since you can't do a return in the caller's scope.
## Different Name
The best other name I saw were permutations of `returnif`. The biggest issue I see is the similarity of the following two statements:
```
return if foo
returnif foo
```
Those are obviously very, very different statements, but are somewhat similar. However, things like this are common, and the code is still quite distinct on those, so I think it is acceptable.
Ultimately, this feels so similar to the safe navigator that using `&` in this context feels appropriate.
Thank you all for your consideration.
--
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/
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