From: shevegen@... Date: 2019-02-19T14:38:35+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:91593] [Ruby trunk Feature#15612] A construct to restrict the scope of local variables Issue #15612 has been updated by shevegen (Robert A. Heiler). I think this is an interesting idea but the syntax is a bit confusing (to me). This may be because I am so used to: begin code_that_may_break rescue Duck puts 'all ducklings were rescued.' end It seems a bit surprising to see "begin" used with the intent to modify/restrict/extend local variables specifically. Personally I do not need many local variables for most of my methods. The longer a method becomes, the harder it is to modify it (at the least when I try to). It may be better to try another construct than begin/end, if only for illustration purpose (it may read better with an alternative to begin/end, but I can not think of a good alternative myself). ---------------------------------------- Feature #15612: A construct to restrict the scope of local variables https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15612#change-76855 * Author: sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) * Status: Feedback * Priority: Normal * Assignee: * Target version: ---------------------------------------- We sometimes have local variables that are to be used only to keep track of some temporal states/values during a short routine: ```ruby ... foo = some_initial_value some_routine_that_uses_foo ... ``` Currently, the scope of local variables are either a proc, a block, `loop` body, a method definition, or a class/module definition, but such routines are sometimes just only a part of them. In order to improve readability of the code by explicitly indicating the scope of such local variables, and to avoid pollution by the variable, I propose to have some construct to restrict the scope of local variables. One possibility, without adding a new keyword to the current syntax, is to use the `begin`...`end` construct. The expected behavior would be: ```ruby begin foo = "foo" foo # => "foo" end foo # => `nil`, or "Undefined local variable or method error" ``` ```ruby foo = "bar" begin foo = "foo" foo # => "foo" end foo # => "bar" ``` Or, does this break the existing code too much? If so, can a new construct be added to the current syntax? -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: