So if you want a ruby operator because false and nil are confusing that s a totally different story than kotlin s.
Ruby nil check operator.
September 11 2010 4 minute read tags.
Notice ruby uses elsif not else if nor elif.
Assign something to a new something object if it isn t already initialized and return it otherwise return the preexisting value of something.
For example a plus.
You learned that nil is just a ruby object that represents nothing.
In this case i was told that with the combination of the operator and ruby s implicit return this means.
Array 1 dog nil array.
To use unless and neither the invert operator which is usually much easier and more straightforward.
Using the safe navigation operator we can rewrite the previous example using the safe navigation operator.
It s a simplistic answer but a sufficient one to tell a.
Most operators are actually method calls.
Executes code if the conditional is true.
For each operator plus.
It accomplishes the same thing it either returns the address or nil if some value along the chain is nil the first example may also return false if for example the owner is set to false.
B is interpreted as a plus b where the plus.
I m not against the feature itself.
Such a method could help with readability.
For many beginning rubyists especially those having experience in other programming languages such as java or c checking whether variable is nil may seem a little bit confusing.
Everything else is truthy.
There is a corresponding form of abbreviated assignment operator.
Method in the object referred to by variable a is called with b as its argument.
The values false and nil are false and everything else are true.
Ruby supports a rich set of operators as you d expect from a modern language.
So in that context.
Comparison operators take simple values numbers or strings as arguments and used to check for equality between two values.
Array 1 dog nil array.
You also learned that nil false are the only two things in ruby that are falsy.
There does not seem to be a method in ruby to check if an object is not nil.
And even those speaking ruby quite fluently don t usually know the tiny little details.
Memoirs of a software team leader read more.
This is probably the most basic and ubiquitous form of memoization in ruby.