I had a very brief look at that — I haven't read this previously.

It indicates that code is "syntactic sugar". It's a subroutine definition (see perlsub) with a prototype. It's not actually intended to do anything by itself anymore than any other subroutine definition is.

Following the point where it's introduced, it appears in a number of examples as function arguments. The first one is this:

node($m, promise { upto($m+1, $n) } );

Here's a very trivial example of usage which, with the information from the links I provided above, may help your understanding.

#!/usr/bin/env perl use strict; use warnings; sub promise (&) { $_[0] } make_good_on_promise(promise { print @_ }, "Hello.\n"); sub make_good_on_promise { my ($promise_to_do, $whatever) = @_; $promise_to_do->($whatever); }

Sample run (as stated — a trivial example):

$ pm_example.pl Hello. $

-- Ken


In reply to Re: How to understand chapter 6 of Higher Order Perl? by kcott
in thread How to understand chapter 6 of Higher Order Perl? by Anonymous Monk

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