Hello hghosh,

how would I use $line directly in the while condition? And what makes that better than declaring it as I did?

I think LanX is recommending something along these lines:

while (my $line = <IN>) { chomp $line; ...

which is simpler and clearer.

Also, if I left $_ as it is in the second, strictured code block, it would refer to the same $_ as the first block of code, right?

Not sure which blocks you’re referring to; but, just to be clear, $_ refers to the “current” (i.e., the most closely related) syntactic construct that sets it. For example:

use strict; use warnings; for ('A' .. 'C') { print "Outer: \$_ = $_\n"; for (10 .. 12) { print " Inner: \$_ = $_\n"; } print "Outer: \$_ = $_\n"; }

produces:

23:21 >perl 2004_SoPW.pl Outer: $_ = A Inner: $_ = 10 Inner: $_ = 11 Inner: $_ = 12 Outer: $_ = A Outer: $_ = B Inner: $_ = 10 Inner: $_ = 11 Inner: $_ = 12 Outer: $_ = B Outer: $_ = C Inner: $_ = 10 Inner: $_ = 11 Inner: $_ = 12 Outer: $_ = C 23:22 >

— showing that there are actually as many independent instances of $_ (two, in this case) as the scoping requires.

Hope that helps,

Athanasius <°(((><contra mundum Iustus alius egestas vitae, eros Piratica,


In reply to Re^3: (Perl 5.10.1 or before)What does $_ refer to here? by Athanasius
in thread (Perl 5.10.1 or before)What does $_ refer to here? by hghosh

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