Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Sat, 4 May 2013 09:39:33 +0200 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
Am 30.04.2013 11:42, schrieb Lars Hellström:
>
> IMHO, the notion that "one cannot use \IfNoValueTF at the code level
> because that is a high level command" is utterly bizarre.
not utterly, no :-) but the phrasing is wrong.
> That many
> low-level features should not be exposed in a high-level context is one
> thing, but also doing the converse is usually a sign that one's design
> is flawed somewhere.
right, which I tried to discuss in my other mail
> When a sensible representation of a fundamental
> concept (missing value, boolean true, boolean false, etc.) can be
> exposed at the high level, then that representation should be used also
> at the low level to the extent possible.
yes, that is missing here.
> To me, it is intunitively correct that a \SplitArgument { 2 } { ; } on
> {bar} should yield two NoValues, since clearly two more pieces of data
> were expected but not provided. It also seems that you may want to
> provide some variant of \SplitArgument that supplies default values when
> nothing explicit is given. For \ang{<degree>;<minute>;<second>}, one
> would probably want 0 (i.e., fixed value like for classical \newcommand)
> as default. For \cline{<from>-<to>}, one would probably want the other
> value to be the default (a classical feature of \section and friends).
> So that might be two siblings of \SplitArgument.
This part here is now solely a discussion of what the UI should offer
and I agree
- there should be both a split interface that returns "no value" if
the value is missing
- and there should be one where defaults can be specified, just like
they can be specified for single optional arguments
frank
|
|
|