Just for the heck of it (and I also don't recommend it), a prototype approach (they've gotta be good for something):

c:\@Work\Perl\monks>perl -wMstrict -le "use constant VALID_TAG => qr{ \A [[:alpha:]] [[:alpha:]\d]* \z }xms; ;; sub html (*@) { my ($tag, @strings) = @_; ;; $tag =~ s{ \A \s+ | \s+ \z}{}xmsg; die qq{invalid tag '$tag'} unless $tag =~ VALID_TAG; ;; return qq{<$tag>@strings</$tag>}; } ;; print html(p, qw(how now brown cow)); my $n = 2; print html('h' . $n, 'the rain in spain'); print html(strike, 'now', html(b, 'is the'), 'time'); ;; print html(42, 'oops...'); " <p>how now brown cow</p> <h2>the rain in spain</h2> <strike>now <b>is the</b> time</strike> invalid tag '42' at -e line 1.
The advantage of the  * prototype is that you can use a "naked" tag string. You save an underscore at the cost of a comma and an optional space; a wash, I'd say. It even does minimal validation (but something like
    print html(qw(b now is the time));
is accepted with an unenlightening warning).

Update: Added  strike example to show multicharacter tag.


Give a man a fish:  <%-{-{-{-<


In reply to Re: Technique for building arguments from function name? by AnomalousMonk
in thread Technique for building arguments from function name? by nysus

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