This is just fine:
def foo
a or b
end
This is also fine:
def foo
return a || b
end
This returns void value expression
:
def foo
return a or b
end
Why? It doesn't even get executed; it fails the syntax check. What does void value expression
mean?
return a or b
is interpreted as (return a) or b
, and so the value of return a
is necessary to calculate the value of (return a) or b
, but since return
never leaves a value in place (because it escapes from that position), it is not designed to return a valid value in the original position. And hence the whole expression is left with (some_void_value) or b
, and is stuck. That is what it means.
Simply because or
has lower precedence than ||
which means return a
will be executed before or b
, or b
is therefore unreachable
From a similar question I previously asked, Stefan explained in a comment that the or
and and
are actually control flow operators and should not be used as boolean operators (||
and &&
respectively).
He also referenced an article that explains the reasoning behind these control flow operators:
and
and or
originate (like so much of Ruby) in Perl. In Perl, they were largely used to modify control flow, similar to the if
and unless
statement modifiers. (...)
They provide the following examples:
and
foo = 42 && foo / 2
This will be equivalent to:
foo = (42 && foo) / 2 # => NoMethodError: undefined method `/' for nil:NilClass
The goal is to assign a number to foo
and reassign it with half of its value. Thus the and
operator is useful here due to its low precedence, it modifies/controls what would be the normal flow of the individual expressions:
foo = 42 and foo / 2 # => 21
It can also be used as a reverse if
statement in a loop:
next if widget = widgets.pop
Which is equivalent to:
widget = widgets.pop and next
or
useful for chaining expressions together
If the first expression fails, execute the second one and so on:
foo = get_foo() or raise "Could not find foo!"
It can also be used as a:
reversed unless
statement modifier:
raise "Not ready!" unless ready_to_rock?
Which is equivalent to:
ready_to_rock? or raise "Not ready!"
Therefore as sawa explained the a or b
expression in:
return a or b
Has lower precedence than return a
which, when executed, escapes the current context and does not provide any value (void value). This then triggers the error (repl.it execution):
(repl):1: void value expression
puts return a or b
^~
This answer was made possible due to Stefan comments (thank you).