# my ($dbh, $schema, $table, $cols_type) = @_; my $dbh = $_[0]; my $schema = "$_[1]"; my $table = "$_[2]"; my $cols_type = "$_[3]";
First, stop using the parameter array like this, use your first incantation: my (...) = @_; is how you'd do it with numerous parameters.
Second, I think I saw something in a previous post that stated to stop double-quoting things ("$_[3]") unnecessarily. Take that to heart.
Is there any chance you could state an entire use case of what you're trying to achieve in a single example, along with some input data? That'd help the Monks a lot.
...or is this something you're just fooling with? (This almost seems like deja-vu for some reason).
In reply to Re: Uninitialized value and a dot between $schema and $table
by stevieb
in thread Uninitialized value and a dot between $schema and $table
by tukusejssirs
| For: | Use: | ||
| & | & | ||
| < | < | ||
| > | > | ||
| [ | [ | ||
| ] | ] |