However (you knew that was coming right?), as I can do:
my (@a1,@a2) = ([1,2,3],[3,2,1]);
This doesn't work, sorry. You get @a1 with two array references and @a2 undefined.
tstock
Update : This is your one liner: (someone please -- me down for posting this)
map {
($_ ne '.') && ($_ ne '..') &&
push @{ -d "$base/$_" ? \@dirs : \@files }, $_
} (readdir DIR);
I think we can agree that the FOR LOOP/IF STATEMENT is probably a nicer solution ? :)
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