Or, keeping in the spirit of this lightweight approach,
i.e. not bringing a hash to bear on the problem, if you want to munch
@_ with
shift you will have to do something like:
#! /usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
sub x {
# my $one = do { @_ ? shift : 'default' };
# my $two = do { @_ ? shift : 43 };
my $one = do { my $arg = shift; defined($arg) ? $arg : 'default' }
+;
my $two = do { my $arg = shift; defined($arg) ? $arg : 43 };
print "x($one, $two)\n";
}
x();
x( 'this' );
x( 1, 2 );
update: sheesh, misread a requirements document and get downvoted into oblivion. I corrected the code; you can stop now. The principal idea I wanted to show was that a do block is a pretty nice way of doing this, because the default value appears at the end of the code, making it easy to spot, thus letting you gloss over the mechanics.
print@_{sort keys %_},$/if%_=split//,'= & *a?b:e\f/h^h!j+n,o@o;r$s-t%t#u'
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