Feature #12624
closed!== (other)
Description
I'd like to suggest a new syntactic feature.
There should be an operator !==
which should just return the negation of the ===
operator
aka:¶
def !==(other)
! (self === other)
end
Rationale:¶
The ===
operator is well established.
The !==
operator would just return the negated truth value of ===
That syntax would mimick the duality of ==
vs !=
Impact:¶
To my best knowledge, !==
is currently rejected by the parser,
so there should be no exsiting code be affected by this change.
Do we really need that?¶
obviously (! (a === b))
does the job,
while, (a !== b)
looks a bit more terse to me.
What's the use case?¶
I personally got a habit of using ===
in type checking arguments:
raise TypeError() unless (SomeClass === arg)
You might argue that I should write instead:
raise TypeError() unless arg.kind_of?(SomeClass)
(you are obviously right in that)
But the ===
operator is there for a reason,
and it is actually a strong point of ruby,
that we do not only have identity or equivalence,
but this third kind of object defined equality.
I believe, that in some cases
the intention of a boolean clause
would be easier to understand if we had that !==
operator
instead of writing !(a===b)
I agree, syntax ahould not change.
But I believe that would add to the orthogonality.
Please see also:
my request on reserving the UTF operator plane for operators