What makes this worse is that you don't have control of whether other JS functions return null or undefined.
What I think would make sense (and had in mind as an option to do before) is make EQUALP and EQUAL compile to '==', and all the other equality predicates to '==='. I've pushed a patch that does that. Let me know if that works for your codebase. A lot of code is probably going to get affected by these changes, but IMO it's the right thing to do.
Vladimir
2010/4/21 Daniel Gackle danielgackle@gmail.com:
Unfortunately our code is still broken because of another variant of this business of null and undefined. The trouble comes when the two are being compared through EQUAL. That is, there are various expressions scattered through our code like this: (equal a b) and sometimes A is null and B undefined (or vice versa). Such expressions used to evaluate to true, now they're false, and it's breaking our code. I'm loath to change this to conform to the strict semantics of === because, as I mentioned earlier, we've written our PS code to conflate null and undefined, and this has worked well. For example, it allows you to not bother with explicit "return null"s at the end of functions. To switch to the strict semantics would require our code to keep track of what's null and what's undefined in a way that would not provide any gain, and would be brittle and error-prone. Daniel
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 3:43 PM, Vladimir Sedach vsedach@gmail.com wrote:
You're right, that absolutely makes sense. I've pushed a fix.
It's interesting to note that this is the only place in the code Parenscript generates where the semantics of '==' (as opposed to '===') make sense.
Vladimir
2010/4/19 Daniel Gackle danielgackle@gmail.com:
The array literals fix worked, thanks. Next up: the changes around equality are a problem. Specifically, the NULL operator, which used to evaluate to true on both null and undefined, now applies strict equality, meaning that (null undefined) is false. Since we use the NULL operator in a great many places precisely to check whether something is null or undefined, this change breaks our code. In general, I've found it to be good to conflate null and undefined in most of our PS code; it simplifies things and works fine. So I guess we have to go on record as protesting this change... especially since there already existed ways to distinguish null from undefined in the minority case when it's needed. Others' thoughts? Dan p.s. I haven't looked closely at the other implications of the equality changes, because the NULL issue is such a big one that I thought I'd start there. _______________________________________________ parenscript-devel mailing list parenscript-devel@common-lisp.net http://common-lisp.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/parenscript-devel
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