I shun this coding style, because it either implies an additional dependency which
doesn't exist,
or introduces a dependency which shouldn't be there.
If you use
a && b && c
where you mean
if (a) { b; c; }
and b returns false, you're hosed.
Therefore, as an element of "elegance", I don't introduce or require any more
dependencies than I can safely justify.
In practical terms, I'd reject your code during a code review, demanding a rewrite
on the grounds of maintainability.
-- Randal L. Schwartz, Perl hacker
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