in reply to Re^6: Experimental features: autoderef vs postfix deref
in thread Experimental features: autoderef vs postfix deref

The only other thing I can think of is that you did want $closure in ... to reference to same variable.

Exactly.

With this syntax:

{ my $closure; sub x1{ ... } sub x2{ ... } sub x3{ ... } ... }

I can share the closure between as many subroutines as I need.

With embedded state, the closure's scope is restricted to the one subroutine.

I could do:

{ state $closure; sub x1{ ... } sub x2{ ... } sub x3{ ... } ... }

But then state has no advantage over the simple closure.

I did start to use state when it first appeared (there are probably several examples here somewhere), but after the third or fourth time of having to revert it back to a standard closure as needs changed, I simply stopped using it.


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Re^8: Experimental features: autoderef vs postfix deref
by kcott (Archbishop) on Jul 13, 2015 at 13:52 UTC

    OK, I fully understand what you're driving at now. Thanks for the explanation.

    — Ken