[swift-evolution] [Pitch] 'Double modulo' operator
Erica Sadun
erica at ericasadun.com
Sat May 21 20:17:53 CDT 2016
This is one of those things that takes very little to add, I would use it if it existed (having written workarounds), but it isn't horrible not having it there.
The only place off the top of my head that I consistently use it for is wrapping, but that's a really nice use case.
-- E
> On May 21, 2016, at 2:22 PM, Adam Nemecek via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org> wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I think that Swift could use the 'double modulo' operator which is for example in CoffeeScript (some discussion can be found here https://github.com/jashkenas/coffeescript/issues/1971 <https://github.com/jashkenas/coffeescript/issues/1971>).
>
> This operator, unlike normal modulo, takes sign from the divisor, not the dividend e.g. -10 % 3 == -1, but -10 %% 3 == 2.
>
> In practice, this operator is useful for 'cyclical' indexing. For example, it would be useful for calculating the real index into a collection when we are using an index outside of the range of valid indices and could be used to index into a collection using a negative index à la Python and Ruby (where [1,2,3,4][-1] == 4).
>
>
> The implementation would probably be something along these lines:
>
> infix operator %% {
> associativity left
> precedence 150
> }
>
> func %%<T: IntegerArithmeticType>(lhs:T, rhs:T) -> T {
> return (lhs % rhs + rhs) % rhs
> }
>
> If accepted, this could be later incorporated into a method or operator that works directly with collections using their count property.
> Maybe the syntax could be something like [1,2,3,4] %% -1 == 4.
>
> Ideas, suggestions?
> _______________________________________________
> swift-evolution mailing list
> swift-evolution at swift.org
> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-evolution/attachments/20160521/f20fb460/attachment.html>
More information about the swift-evolution
mailing list