When executed:
- ??? is warn.- ... is fail.
- !!! is ‘die`.
Otherwise, they’re identical (notably, when *not* executed, which is the
usual case). You’d use ??? when you’re not implementing something yet but
it needs to be callable (say, a debugging function).
Given the difference in behavi
Semantically
!!! is "if control flow hits here, it's an error"
... is "The implementation is elsewhere, or this is not yet implemented"
at least that's my impression
-y
On Mon, Sep 10, 2018 at 12:04 PM, Parrot Raiser <1parr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> There are 3 kinds of yadda, yadda operator:
>
> Bash is treating ! as the history substitution character, and either erroring
> out or substituting a previous command line.
Thanks; that struck me between the time I hit send and got confirmation. :-)*
There are 3 kinds of yadda, yadda operator:
!!! dies with a message: Stub code executed
in block at yad1 line 2
... dies with an identical message
??? produces the message, but continues operating.
The only difference I can find between !!! and ... is that !!!
produces bizarre behaviour whe
Bash is treating ! as the history substitution character, and either
erroring out or substituting a previous command line. ^ has related
behavior at the start of a line.
... is specially recognized by the compiler, for example treating a class
stubbed with ... as a forward declaration. I don't kno
There are 3 kinds of yadda, yadda operator:
!!! dies with a message: Stub code executed
in block at yad1 line 2
... dies with an identical message
??? produces the message, but continues operating.
The only difference I can find between !!! and ... is that !!!
produces bizarre behaviour whe