From: philip.claren@... Date: 2015-10-27T09:13:09+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:71213] [Ruby trunk - Feature #11537] Introduce "Safe navigation operator" Issue #11537 has been updated by Philip Claren. Thomas Sawyer wrote: > In this way is more an extension of the ternary operator -- the initial dot on the method signals the difference. This should also allow: > > u ? .profile ? .thumbnails ? .large : default Although I agree that .? is not that intuitive to read, the extended ternary operator would have a problem: boolean false passes for the safe navigator (because it's a valid value) but not for the ternary operator. ---------------------------------------- Feature #11537: Introduce "Safe navigation operator" https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/11537#change-54593 * Author: Hiroshi SHIBATA * Status: Closed * Priority: Normal * Assignee: Yukihiro Matsumoto ---------------------------------------- I sometimes write following code with rails application: ```ruby u = User.find(id) if u && u.profile && u.profile.thumbnails && u.profiles.thumbnails.large ... ``` or ```ruby # Use ActiveSupport if u.try!(:profile).try!(:thumbnails).try!(:large) ... ``` I hope to write shortly above code. Groovy has above operator named "Safe navigation operator" with "`?.`" syntax. Ruby can't use "`?.`" operator. Can we use "`.?`" syntax. like this: ```ruby u = User.find(id) u.?profile.?thumbnails.?large ``` Matz. How do you think about this? -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/