How does one jump from my $something = shift; to my ($something, $else) = @_;? No mention of () or @_ ... that's quite a leap ;Dsub blartg { my $foo = shift; . . . sub blartg { my $foo = shift; my $bar = shift; my $baz = shift; ...
What I don't like is refering to @_ directly, as in $_[0]. I do it sometimes, but by no means do I like it.
______crazyinsomniac_____________________________ Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most. perl -e "$q=$_;map({chr unpack qq;H*;,$_}split(q;;,q*H*));print;$q/$q;" |
In reply to Re: (jeffa) Re: Shift versus Sanity
by crazyinsomniac
in thread Shift versus Sanity
by tadman
For: | Use: | ||
& | & | ||
< | < | ||
> | > | ||
[ | [ | ||
] | ] |