After a 2 year Clojure stint I find it very hard to explain the clarity that comes with immutability for programmers used to trigger effects with a mutation.
I think it may be one of those things you have to see in order to understand.
replies(17):
I think it may be one of those things you have to see in order to understand.
With a very basic concrete example:
x = 7
x = x + 3
x = x / 2
Vs
x = 7
x1 = x + 3
x2 = x1 / 2
Reordering the first will have no error, but you'll get the wrong result. The second will produce an error if you try to reorder the statements.
Another way to look at it is that in the first example, the 3rd calculation doesn't have "x" as a dependency but rather "x in the state where addition has already been completed" (i.e. it's 3 different x's that all share the same name). Doing single assignment is just making this explicit.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_single-assignment_form