Except it’s ass if you want to do non-destructive data processing of arbitrary structures and your input and output might have null as a value. You can’t just know about fields a, b, and c of the table and leave everything else as it is, you need to know the whole structure and make sure you write null in the output for fields that have nil in them.
Or, more realistically, use libraries that implement null as custom user data.
Iirc Roberto Ierusalimschy even considered introducing a null value in one of the recent versions, of course confusingly named ‘undefined’ — but changed his mind. Perhaps it’s for the better than to have such a backwards name for it.
To my knowledge, Lisps like Emacs Lisp implement this better: trying to get a value for a nonexistent key will get you nil, but you can still retrieve the list of all keys, including ones that are set to nil.
Except it’s ass if you want to do non-destructive data processing of arbitrary structures and your input and output might have null as a value. You can’t just know about fields a, b, and c of the table and leave everything else as it is, you need to know the whole structure and make sure you write null in the output for fields that have nil in them.
Or, more realistically, use libraries that implement null as custom user data.
Iirc Roberto Ierusalimschy even considered introducing a null value in one of the recent versions, of course confusingly named ‘undefined’ — but changed his mind. Perhaps it’s for the better than to have such a backwards name for it.
To my knowledge, Lisps like Emacs Lisp implement this better: trying to get a value for a nonexistent key will get you nil, but you can still retrieve the list of all keys, including ones that are set to nil.
yeah that’s probably when you should drop down to C.