There exists an opinion about else
statement that we should not use it with unless
?
Can anybody explain why this is so, or are we free to do whatever we like?
There exists an opinion about else
statement that we should not use it with unless
?
Can anybody explain why this is so, or are we free to do whatever we like?
You definitely can use else
with unless
. E.g.:
x=1
unless x>2
puts "x is 2 or less"
else
puts "x is greater than 2"
end
Will print "x is 2 or less".
But just because you can do something doesn't mean you should. More often than not, these constructs are convoluted to read, and you'd be better served to phrase your condition in a positive way, using a simple if
:
x=1
if x<=2
puts "x is 2 or less"
else
puts "x is greater than 2"
end
Yes, we can use unless
with else
. We are free to go wherever we like but some people have opinion that it's not a good habit to use else
with unless
. We need to avoid from this.
Unfortunately, unless statement supports only else construct not elsif or elseunless with in it.
unless true
puts "one"
elsif true
puts "two"
else
puts "three"
end
SyntaxError: compile error
syntax error, unexpected kELSIF, expecting kEND
This may also be the reason that it restrict us.
unless
causes, I propose to add not only elsif
but also elsunless
.
Jul 28, 2016 at 11:06
puts "two"
also will never be executed. As written above the above code give error if you try to run it because the code contains syntax errors and the error is that we are not allowed to use elsif with unless.
Aug 4, 2016 at 17:49
Ruby allows it, but in English "if ... else" (or "if ... otherwise") is a common construction whereas "unless ... else" is pretty much unheard of, to the point where many native speakers would reject it as incorrect.
This results in some confusion with unless/else
in Ruby. People whose native language doesn't allow it just aren't used to following it. That's why there are many opinions against it. Since Ruby supports it you are of course free to do it anyway.
There is nothing stopping anyone from using unless - else
. It is perfectly valid. But the else part of unless-else is a double negative.
In some cases, unless
is easy to comprehend. But when combined with an else
statement, if - else
is always easier to comprehend than unless - else
. Imagine trying to understand the else part of an unless - else
condition. It is a double negative and double negatives is just very not not wrong.
Also if there are many conditions with combinations of &&
and ||
operators, unless
becomes more difficult to comprehend
unless
, I - as non-rails developer - do. A kind of motto I once found is: "Don’t obscure your (boolean) statement with unnecessary layers of negation".
Jul 28, 2016 at 13:46
Yes we can use unless
with else
but it's not a good practice to write
unless foo
# Foo
else
#Bar
end
It's not better readable code. Here is a Ruby coding style guide which most developers follow.
Technically it is perfectly fine to use an unless
with an else
:
unless user.staff?
# do foo
else
# do bar
end
The only problem is that it is sometimes hard to read and to understand. Since code is way more often read than written, it makes much sense to focus on readablity and to write code that is easy to understand for other developers in the future.
Therefore you might want to change it to:
if !user.staff?
# do bar
else
# do foo
end
Or even better make remove the negation from the condition completely:
if user.customer?
# do bar
else
# do foo
end
if true
is just easier to understand and simpler to parse in you head than if !true
or unless true
. Dealing with negations (or sometimes even double negations) makes you think twice. Therefore the community tries to avoid it.
But technically it is fine...
It might be appropriate (more readable than any alternative) to use unless ... else ...
when the code in the else
block is very long and the code in the unless
block is very short.
unless user.staff?
raise SecurityError, 'not authorized'
else
# ...
# ...
# ... lots of code
# ...
# ...
end
If you wrote this the other way around,
if user.staff?
# ...
# ...
# ... lots of code
# ...
# ...
else
raise SecurityError, 'not authorized'
end
the else-clause might be so far removed from its condition that you'd be making people scroll up and down to keep things straight in their heads.
This particular example is better written without an else
at all...
unless user.staff?
raise SecurityError, 'not authorized'
end
# ...
# ...
# ... lots of code
# ...
# ...
... but that transformation is not always possible.
Executes code if conditional is false. If the conditional is true, code specified in the else clause is executed.
x=1
unless x>2
puts "x is less than 2"
else
puts "x is greater than 2"
end
We can use else with unless but its a bad approach.