== Why I don't like inverted _if_ conditionals Perl has an often used feature where you can write a conditional statement in a form like: > _statement if (condition);_ (You can use _unless_ too.) I find this usage lurching because it's a dislocation in my flow of thought. I start out reading the code thinking that the statement always happens; then I get to the _if_ and whoops, time to backtrack on my understanding. The worst form of this is when the _if_ is indented a lot, so it's almost flush right with a lot of whitespace between it and the main statement. My eyes and mind have been carefully trained to expect that things hanging out by their lonesome in the right margin will be comments, not code that affects the program flow. (At one point I actually wrote Perl code that looked like this. I tell myself that I know better now, but I'm probably doing equally heinous things somewhere else. Reading your old code can be a very humbling experience.) Perl is not the only language that does this (there's Ruby, for example, and Python 2.5's conditional expressions also work this way). While Perl is the only one of them I currently have direct experience with, I don't think I'm going to like this any better in another language, Python included.