Thanks! I do think the * is prettier than $_. :)

According to the Whatever docs, if you call a method on * then that creates a lambda (anonymous function):

<a b c>.map: *.uc; # same as <a b c>.map: -> $char { $char.uc }

Let's test that out on one of the examples in my question. I'll test whether:

Str $file where *.IO.f = 'file.dat',

...is the same as:

Str $file where -> $x {$x.IO.f} = 'file.dat',

Here's the full code with a file name, a.txt, that exists in the current directory:

#b.raku sub MAIN( Str $file where -> $x {$x.IO.f} = 'a.txt', Int :$length = 24, Bool :$verbose ) { say $length if $length.defined; say $file if $file.defined; say 'Verbosity ', ($verbose ?? 'on' !! 'off'); } --output:-- $ raku b.raku 24 a.txt Verbosity off $ raku b.raku --verbose --length=7 a.raku 7 a.raku Verbosity on

It looks to me like when you specify a code block on the right of where, the code block is called with the term to the left of where as the argument.

I don't think the if statements on the end of $length and $file actually do anything: with those default values both variables will be defined.


In reply to Re^2: Raku: * v. $_ (asterisk v. the topic variable) by 7stud
in thread Raku: * v. $_ (asterisk v. the topic variable) by 7stud

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