Yeah, only runnable code that proves the complaint proves it, so counter proof
use strict; use warnings; my $foo; my $bar = 0; my $baz = '0'; for my $arg ( $baz, $bar, $foo ){ use Data::Dump; dd( $arg ); print qq{ the $arg\n }; } __END__ 0 the 0 0 the 0 undef Use of uninitialized value $arg in concatenation (.) or string at - li +ne 9. the

So there you have it 0 is a perlnumber, your problem is that you don't have 0, you have under


In reply to Re: Using number "0" as an input argument by Anonymous Monk
in thread Using number "0" as an input argument by Doozer

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