On 10 Oct 2012 at 19:17, David McGlone <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> BTW - in any of your other computer languages didn't they utilize a >> 'return' statement? PHP's is no different. > > back in like '85, I learned Pascal that's the only language I learned and I > don't recall if it used return. Mmmm. There's the problem. Pascal doesn't *have* a return statement. In Pascal, implicitly, you return when execution reaches the end of a function. In fact the same is true of PHP and JavaScript, but in those languages you can return early just by saying return. IMO, this is a major limitation of Pascal. I use returns wherever I feel like it - if I detect there's nothing more for the function to do, I return. Purists object to this; they say you should enter a function at one place and leave at one place. Well, that's a point of view. But more often that not it just leads to convoluted code in order to achieve that. The one time I *had* to use Pascal as that was the only option, I simply put a 999: label at the end of the function and did goto 999 wherever I wanted to do a return. Simples! -- Cheers -- Tim
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