So my question is, what the heck does //= do?

This is the relatively new "defined or" operator

$a //= $b;

means that $a is unchanged if it is defined, and is assigned to $b if not defined.

At least, that's my understanding, I have never used it, but the following test under the Perl debugger seems to confirm it:

$ perl -de 42 Loading DB routines from perl5db.pl version 1.33 Editor support available. Enter h or `h h' for help, or `man perldebug' for more help. main::(-e:1): 42 DB<1> $a //=5; DB<2> p $a 5 DB<3> $a //=6; DB<4> p $a 5 DB<5>

In reply to Re^2: How to use 2 files for calculating charges by Laurent_R
in thread How to use 2 files for calculating charges by rruser

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