Seems to be a problem with references ...
The map operator receives all the elements of the array (x, y, z) and passes all of them correctly to the function f2:
#! /usr/perl -l
sub f1 {
my ($f) = @_;
my @z = ("$f");
for my $d (@z) {return $d}
}
sub f2 {
my ($f) = @_;
print "\n*$f*\n"
for my $d ("$f") {return $d}
}
sub f3 {
for my $d (@_) {return $d}
}
print map {f1($_)} qw(x y z);
print map {f2($_)} qw(x y z);
print map {f3($_)} qw(x y z);
Extrange, is like the function f2, only has been collecting the ref of the $d variable, and when print is going to print the array, it prints the value of the same reference; that is the last 'z' (what's about the scopes!!! arrg)
I have solved the problem using a intermediate variable:
#! /usr/perl -l
sub f1 {
my ($f) = @_;
my @z = ("$f");
for my $d (@z) {return $d}
}
sub f2 {
my ($f) = @_;
for my $d ("$f") {my $a=$d; return $a}
}
sub f3 {
for my $d (@_) {return $d}
}
print map {f1($_)} qw(x y z);
print map {f2($_)} qw(x y z);
print map {f3($_)} qw(x y z);
cheers
perl -Te 'print map { chr((ord)-((10,20,2,7)[$i++])) } split //,"turo"'
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