Mercurial > repos > other > SevenLanguagesInSevenWeeks
view 2-Io/day2-messages.io @ 71:32f018861e36
Add Day 1 Erlang content
author | IBBoard <dev@ibboard.co.uk> |
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date | Fri, 02 Feb 2018 20:38:36 +0000 |
parents | 86668d32e162 |
children |
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# Everything is a message in Io, apparently. Everything. # Messages have senders, receivers and args, and you can get and use those objects. # So the example makes a post office. postOffice := Object clone # Add a method that returns the sender object postOffice packageSender := method(call sender) "Post office: " print postOffice println mailer := Object clone # Call the PostOffice's method mailer deliver := method(postOffice packageSender) "Mailer: " print mailer println # Calling the method returns the caller (sender via the postOffice object) mailer deliver println # We can also get message arguments and name # Let's do this a little differently to the book! postOffice messageDetails := method(call message name println; call message arguments println) postOffice messageDetails("One", 2, :three) # Because of how args are passed unevaluated then we can make our own "unless" method unless := method( (call sender doMessage(call message argAt(0))) \ ifFalse(call sender doMessage(call message argAt(1))) \ ifTrue(call sender doMessage(call message argAt(2))) ) # Note the line continuations - this seems more readable than the approach in the book of # leaving the "ifFalse(" and "ifTrue(" on the previous line! # Also, this is an IF in the form "[boolean statement] ifFalse(code) ifTrue(code)", not the earlier # "if(boolean, true-code, false-code)" form unless (1 == 2, write("One is not two\n"), write("OMG! Maths has broken!!!!\n"))