Ah, yes.. i see now
class A
{
10000 => int foo;
}
class B extends A
{
fun void bar()
{
0 => int foo;
<<< "a", foo >>>;
if (true) {
<<< "b", foo >>>;
}
<<< "c", foo >>>;
}
}
B bobj;
bobj.bar();
indeed.
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 4:51 PM, Ian South-Dickinson
The bug appears in other inner scopes, such as an if-statement, and probably for/while loops.
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 7:40 AM, Dealga McArdle
wrote: Ian, why do you have that innermost scope? that's not intended use of syntax I think.
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 9:00 AM, Ian South-Dickinson
wrote:
I encountered a strange case where a variable was changing value within the scope of an if statement, because I had a superclass with an identical variable name. I am able to reproduce it with this simple case:
class A { 10000 => int foo; }
class B extends A { fun void bar() { 0 => int foo;
<<< "a", foo >>>; { <<< "b", foo >>>; } <<< "c", foo >>>; } }
Prints out:
a 0 b 10000 c 0
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