"This might be a dumb question, but does your same_mod_time return 0 or 1 without the return?"

It returns TRUE or FALSE, i.e. whatever (stat($_[0]))[9] == (stat($_[1]))[9] evaluates to. In string context, that would be "1" or ""; in numeric context, that would be 1 or 0.

Modifying the test code I posted previously to demonstrate this:

$ > xxx 2> yyy $ perl -Mstrict -Mwarnings -E ' sub same_mod_time { (stat($_[0]))[9] == (stat($_[1]))[9] } say ">>>" . same_mod_time(qw{xxx yyy}) . "<<<"; ' >>>1<<< $ perl -Mstrict -Mwarnings -E ' sub same_mod_time { (stat($_[0]))[9] == (stat($_[1]))[9] } say 0 + same_mod_time(qw{xxx yyy}); ' 1 $ > xxx $ perl -Mstrict -Mwarnings -E ' sub same_mod_time { (stat($_[0]))[9] == (stat($_[1]))[9] } say ">>>" . same_mod_time(qw{xxx yyy}) . "<<<"; ' >>><<< $ perl -Mstrict -Mwarnings -E ' sub same_mod_time { (stat($_[0]))[9] == (stat($_[1]))[9] } say 0 + same_mod_time(qw{xxx yyy}); ' 0

The presence or absence of the return keyword, in that subroutine, is immaterial. Here's what the doco says:

"return EXPR
...
Returns from a subroutine, eval, or do FILE with the value given in EXPR.
...
In the absence of an explicit return, a subroutine, eval, or do FILE automatically returns the value of the last expression evaluated. ..."

-- Ken


In reply to Re^3: Will checking last modified date take more time than just overwriting? by kcott
in thread Will checking last modified date take more time than just overwriting? by Lady_Aleena

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