Instead of using long lists of arguments in my function definitions, I prefer to pass a few fixed parameters and a table of 'additional params' like this:
function:doit( text, params )
end
This is nice as it allows me to add new named parameters later without breaking old calls.
The problem I am experiencing occurs when I try to force default values for some of the params:
function:doit( text, params )
local font = params.font or native.systemBold
local fontSize = params.fontSize or 24
local emboss = params.emboss or true
-- ...
end
The above code works fine in all cases, except where I have passed in 'false' for emboss:
doit( "Test text", { fontSize = 32, emboss = false } )
The above code will result in emboss being set to true when I really wanted false.
To be clear, what I want is for the first non-NIL value to be assigned to emboss, instead I'm getting a first non-false and non-NIL.
To combat this problem I wrote a small piece of code to find the first non-NIL value in a table and to return that:
function firstNotNil( ... )
for i = 1, #arg do
local theArg = arg[i]
if(theArg ~= nil) then return theArg end
end
return nil
end
Using this function I would re-write the emboss assignment as follows:
local emboss = firstNotNil(params.emboss, true)
Now, this certainly works, but it seems so inefficient and over the top. I am hoping there is a more compact way of doing this.
Please note: I found this ruby construct which looked promising and I am hoping lua has something like it:
[c,b,a].detect { |i| i > 0 } -- Assign first non-zero in order: c,b,a