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- Subject: Re: Re[2]: ~= vs. !=
- From: Robert Raschke <r.raschke@...>
- Date: Thu, 27 Nov 2003 12:35:22 +0000
On Thu, 27 Nov 2003 around 13:23, you wrote:
>
> RI> Even today a lot of languages do not use `!=': Ada, Haskell, Eiffel, and
> RI> Fortran90 use `/='; Icon, Dylan, Smalltalk (and Lua) use `~='; several
> RI> Pascal-based languages use `<>'; Oberon, Modula2, and Modula3 use `#'.
>
> not to mention perl and php, which both have 2 different comparison
> operator sets, one for special cases: gt, lt, eq, ne for strings in
> perl, ===, !== for an actual comparison with false (as opposed to just
> a value that is considered to be false) in php. This is a lot weirder
> and has bitten me a lot more often than using a single operator, that
> might look strange at first, but does what you expect it to do.
>
And Icon has ... wait for it:
Numerical comparison: > >= = <= < ~=
Lexical comparison: >> >>= == <<= << ~==
Value comparison: === ~===
Hard to learn, but actually very, very useful.
Robby
PS: Icon info at http://www.cs.arizona.edu/icon/ , googling for it is hard.
--
Any fool can write code that a computer can understand.
Good programmers write code that humans can understand.
Martin Fowler