Lua has a lot of useless syntax. For instance, the "then". I have been using ruby and python for many years. Lua is living in the old age here.
That's just one example of so many more. I get that lua occupies a useful niche with its focus on embedded systems, but lua is not really a well-designed language in general. JavaScript has a similar problem.
For readability, `then` allows splitting with newlines very long conditional expressions, without having to wrap the condition in parentheses:
after `if` and `elseif` the parser simply goes on until it finds `then`.This is something I don't see a lot of people do. I've tended to do
and I'm still a little irked it works so well, the only alternative would be for the language to have labeled blocks. but that might be too terseAgreed, it keeps the parser fast as well because it is a lot more clear when the boolean statement ends and the code block begins. You either need parentheses, `then` or brackets around the block to make parsing clearly defined.
Python spells "then" as ":"
In Ruby you can choose between "then" and a newline.
This is very pot calling the kettle black.
English too
[dead]