1. By rule #1 {grin}. "Larry said so."
  2. There's never a chance of the "dangling else" problem.
  3. The syntax would be ambiguous without it. I forget the exact case, but apparently it'd be hard to tell for certain Perl constructs whether it was a curly-expression or the block that belongs to the if, and then you wouldn't know where the end of the block was.
  4. Perl has the "backward if" that C doesn't have:
    $simple_expression if $some_condition;

-- Randal L. Schwartz, Perl hacker
Be sure to read my standard disclaimer if this is a reply.


In reply to •Re: If Statement by merlyn
in thread If Statement by Baz

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