Let's break it down! First, I reformatted the line to somewhat increase "readability".
let val = !(
(
|(..): (_, _), __@_| __
)(
(
&*"\\",
'@'
) /**/,
{}
)
==
{
&[..=..][..];
}
)//
;
It starts with let val = and ends with //<newline>;. So it's a simple let-binding of the form let val = ⟨v⟩;. Let's discuss what ⟨v⟩ does:
- A negation via the not operator:
!( ⟨_⟩ )
- A comparison via
==: ⟨lhs⟩ == ⟨rhs⟩
- ⟨lhs⟩: a function call of a closure
( ⟨closure⟩ )( ⟨args⟩ )
- ⟨closure⟩: a closure definition
|⟨first_param⟩, ⟨second_param⟩| ⟨body⟩
- ⟨first_param⟩:
(..): (_, _). This parameter has a type annotation (_, _) meaning that it is a 2-tuple. The pattern (where normally, you would find a single name) is (..) which means: a tuple, but ignore all elements of it.
- ⟨second_param⟩:
__@_. This is a pattern usually known from match bindings: name @ pattern. So the actual pattern is _ (which doesn't bind anything) and the value is bound via @ to the name __ (two underscores, which is a kind of valid identifier).
- ⟨body⟩:
__. This is just the identifier which we bound the second parameter to. So the closure is basically equivalent to |_, x| x.
- ⟨args⟩: a list of two arguments with an inline comment
/**/ in between: ⟨first_arg⟩/**/, ⟨second_arg⟩
- ⟨first_arg⟩:
(&*"\\", '@'). This is simply a 2-tuple where the first element is a string containing a backslash and the second is the char '@'. The &* for the first element cancels out.
- ⟨second_arg⟩:
{}. This is an empty block which has the type (). So as second argument, a unit is passed.
- ⟨rhs⟩: a braced block with one statement inside:
{ ⟨stmt⟩; }. Note that this is a statement, with a semicolon. This means the result is not returned from the block. Instead the block returns () just as the empty block {}.
- ⟨stmt⟩: an indexing expression
{ &⟨collection⟩[⟨index⟩] }.
- ⟨collection⟩:
[..=..]. This is an array with one element. The element is ..= .. which is a RangeToInclusive where end of the range is the RangeFull written ...
- ⟨index⟩:
... This is just the RangeFull again.
So in summary: we compare the result of calling a closure to a braced block which evaluates to (). The closure is basically |_, x| x and the second argument we pass to it is {} (which evaluates to ()), so the whole closure calling expression evaluates to ().
This means the whole thing is equivalent to:
let val = !( () == () );, which is equivalent to:
let val = !( true );, which is equivalent to:
let val = false;