Post ANHiGDhyGOAFpKxSS0 by norm@misskey.biribiri.dev
 (DIR) More posts by norm@misskey.biribiri.dev
 (DIR) Post #ANHiGDhyGOAFpKxSS0 by norm@misskey.biribiri.dev
       2022-09-06T10:25:36.324Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       One thing I do think programming languages should adopt is allowing if/else to be used as expressions, like in Rust. Honestly nicer than the ternary stuff so common in C and it's descendants.
       
 (DIR) Post #ANHiGEFIGUorUgY4OG by helene@p.helene.moe
       2022-09-06T10:27:07.495013Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @norm i prefer what ruby does with many many things
       
 (DIR) Post #ANHjD5V4QMbxSIzh5c by tusooa@kazv.moe
       2022-09-06T10:37:45.021564Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @norm >lisp>elixir
       
 (DIR) Post #ANHjMvRcfKIxAG4YPA by norm@misskey.biribiri.dev
       2022-09-06T10:39:00.272Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @tusooa@kazv.moe functional programming languages in general, I've used these sorts of stuff a lot when I was learning haskell
       
 (DIR) Post #ANHmNnE50TfbpMqKps by wolf480pl@mstdn.io
       2022-09-06T11:13:16Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @norm also match. But looks like recently developed languages like Zig or Hare do have that.Basically, it's a thing you need to decide to do early on in the language design, and there very few new languages started after Rust.