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i personally find this a lot less readable than the switch example. the case keywords at the start of the line quickly signify its meaning, unlike with => after the pattern. though i dont speak for everybody.
the problem is that, while skimming the start of each lines, nothing about 'G' | 'g' tells me that its a branch. i need to spend more time parsing it. mind you, this may simply be a problem with rust’s syntax, not just ur formatting.
i personally find this a lot less readable than the
switch
example. thecase
keywords at the start of the line quickly signify its meaning, unlike with=>
after the pattern. though i dont speak for everybody.How about this one? it more closely mirrors the switch example:
match suffix { 'G' | 'g' => mem -= 30, 'M' | 'm' => mem -= 20, 'K' | 'k' => mem -= 10, _ => {}, }
How about this other one? it goes as far as cloning the switch example’s indentation:
match suffix { 'G' | 'g' => { mem -= 30; } 'M' | 'm' => { mem -= 20; } 'K' | 'k' => { mem -= 10; } _ => {}, }
the problem is that, while skimming the start of each lines, nothing about
'G' | 'g'
tells me that its a branch. i need to spend more time parsing it. mind you, this may simply be a problem with rust’s syntax, not just ur formatting.