Author Topic: Anonymous structs (actually, tuples)  (Read 8790 times)

lerno

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 247
    • View Profile
Anonymous structs (actually, tuples)
« on: October 30, 2018, 03:35:19 PM »
We could have tuples through anonymous structs with destructuring.

Code: [Select]
func struct { i32, f64 } foo() {
   return struct { 1, 4 };
   // also ok: return { 1, 4 };
}

i32 a, f64 f = foo(); // <- we need to consider parsing here, this collides with the C comma operator.

struct { i32, f64 } x = foo();

What's missing here is some way to only keep one part. If we had named arguments, that could work though!

Code: [Select]
func struct { i32 loop, f64 time } foo();

i32 x = foo().loop;

The rewrite to C is fairly straightforward here, since we're just using structs.

bas

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 220
    • View Profile
Re: Anonymous structs (actually, tuples)
« Reply #1 on: November 08, 2018, 10:45:50 AM »
This is actually multiple return types right?

lerno

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 247
    • View Profile
Re: Anonymous structs (actually, tuples)
« Reply #2 on: November 08, 2018, 07:21:34 PM »
Well, it enables "multiple return types", but it's actually just partial assignment from a struct.

Let's say you have this:

Code: [Select]
type Foo struct {
  i32 a;
  f64 b;
}

func Foo getFoo() { ... }

Now obviously it's possible to do:

Code: [Select]
Foo f = getFoo();
i32 a = f.a;
f64 b = f.b;

What we allow is destructuring, that is:
Code: [Select]
i32 a; f64 b; Foo f;
{ a, b } = f; // or (a, b) = f,  struct { a, b } = f, or whatever syntax we pick.

What I like about this approach is that there's no magic. There is no tuple type, just a plain struct. It feels magic, but all we do is to assemble our variables into an ad-hoc struct to receive the reply.

It's merely a quick way of assigning fields from structs that mirror how we can create structs.

I mean we can do this:

Code: [Select]
f = { .a = a, .b = b };
f = { a, b };

And what we enable is the reverse, so basically

Code: [Select]
{ a, b } = f;
{ a = .b, b = .b } = f; // <- placeholder syntax

The reason why we want the latter (the one with placeholder syntax) is if we have a very large struct, say with 5 fields, and we like to keep 3 of them. Also, it might be useful if we don't remember the order of the fields.

So the feature is struct destructuring, and what we get is multiple returns.