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2 points by pg 6139 days ago | link | parent

Because it turns out that in practice it's rarely to never an issue. If you have nil as a val in a hash table, you usually don't care whether that's because it was never set, or explicitly set to nil.


1 point by dr_drake 6134 days ago | link

Dear Paul, I can not believe you would make such a statement. Either you're living in a vastly different programming universe than the one I am living in, or you really haven't done that much programming at all. In any case, there are many situations where one stores types of values that may include nil in a hash table, and in most of these there is a very significant difference between 'value is nil' and 'value is not stored'. I understand that Arc isn't trying to all 'enterprisey', but these are fundamental concepts that, I thought, only complete amateurs did not understand. Sincerely, Dr. Drake

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2 points by pg 6134 days ago | link

You know, I do actually understand the difference between the two cases. What I'm saying is that in my experience hash tables that actually need to contain nil as a value are many times less common than those that don't.

In situations where the values you're storing might be nil, you just enclose all the values in lists.

My goal in Arc is to have elegant solutions for the cases that actually happen, at the expense of elegance in solutions for rare edge cases.

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