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I would like to perform the following:

if(x == true)
{
    // do this on behalf of x
    // do this on behalf of x
    // do this on behalf of x
}

Using a conditional operator, is this correct?

x == true ? { /*do a*/, /*do b*/, /*do c*/ } : y == true ? ... ;

Is this malformed?

I am not nesting more than one level with a conditional operator.

The expressions I intend to use are highly terse and simple making a conditional operator, in my opinion, worth using.

P.S. I am not asking A. Which I should use? B. Which is better C. Which is more appropriate

P.S. I am asking how to convert an if-else statement to a ternary conditional operator.

Any advice given on this question regarding coding standards etc. are simply undesired.

15
  • 5
    This is mostly a style issue (although in some cases, you may find syntax gets in the way too). I'd say the first alternative is generally much more readable. Apr 24, 2013 at 12:03
  • 2
    if (a) b else c; is a statement. a ? b : c is an expression. Pick the one that makes sense.
    – Kerrek SB
    Apr 24, 2013 at 12:05
  • 1
    @Mushy: I don't see any reason to "compress" code more than necessary. Why would that be better? Apr 24, 2013 at 12:57
  • 1
    Once upon a time, when you had 12k RAM and a 10 cps printing terminal, being terse was good. That went away about 1978.
    – Bo Persson
    Apr 24, 2013 at 13:00
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    @Mushy: So, you are asking which is better, but you can't change it, because the code is really old. Sorry, but if you don't want to know which is better, because you can't change it, why are you asking? I still think that if you are ever writing NEW code, you should try as best as you can, to convert it to "more readable". There is no excuse these days to write unreadable code just because it's shorter. Apr 24, 2013 at 14:09

3 Answers 3

3

Don't compare booleans to true and false. There's no point because they're true or false already! Just write

if (x)
{
    // do this on behalf of x
    // do this on behalf of x
    // do this on behalf of x
}

Your second example doesn't compile because you use { and }. But this might

x ? ( /*do a*/, /*do b*/, /*do c*/ ) : y ? ... ;

but it does depend on what /*do a*/ etc are.

1
  • Good point and thank you regarding booleans but that was just for illustration purposes as I was trying to make a meaningful example. Now I will try your solution.
    – Mushy
    Apr 24, 2013 at 12:11
1

Using comma operator to string different expressions together is within the rules of the language, but it makes the code harder to read (because you have to spot the comma, which isn't always easy, especially if the expression isn't really simple.

The other factor is of course that you can ONLY do this for if (x) ... else if(y) ... type conditionals state.

Sometimes, it seems like people prefer "short code" from "readable code", which is of course great if you are in a competition of "who can write this in the fewest lines", but for everything else, particularly code that "on show" or shared with colleagues that also need to understand it - once a software project gets sufficiently large, it usually becomes hard to understand how the code works WITHOUT obfuscation that makes the code harder to read. I don't really see any benefit in using conditional statements in the way your second example described. It is possible that the example is bad, but generally, I'd say "don't do that".

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  • I should have noted that the expressions I use are highly terse and very simple.
    – Mushy
    Apr 24, 2013 at 12:15
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    Show a REAL sample of the actual code (in your question, as comments with code are rubbish on SO). Apr 24, 2013 at 12:17
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Of course it works (with C++11). I have not tried a solution but following Herb Sutters way you can use ether a function call or a lambda which is immediately executed:

cond ? 
  [&]{
    int i = some_default_value;
    if(someConditionIstrue)
    {
        Do some operations ancalculate the value of i;
        i = some calculated value;
    }
    return i;
} ()  
  : 
somefun() ;

I have not tried to compile it but here you have an result whih is either computed with an lambda or an normal function.

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