There are no
pointers in perl, perl has "
references".
Also, there are no
null terminated strings. Now strings in perl (the datatype is scalar) can contain nulls (\0), they aren't null terminated (they're scalars).
If you're confused/curious about what I'm saying, read perldata, and perlref.
Now if you wish to manipulate strings, I mean, scalars in perl, you wanna use perl's built-in functions (perlfunc), and especially the "Functions for SCALARs or strings":
chomp,
chop,
chr,
crypt,
hex,
index,
lc,
lcfirst,
length,
oct,
ord,
pack,
q/STRING/,
qq/STRING/,
reverse,
rindex,
sprintf,
substr,
tr///,
uc,
ucfirst,
y/// .
Were you talking about perl? (i suspect not, it's best if you clarify)
update: aha. let's see some sourcecode.
MJD says you
can't just make shit up and expect the computer to know what you mean, retardo!
I run a Win32 PPM
repository for perl 5.6x+5.8x. I take requests.
** The Third rule of perl club is a statement of fact: pod is sexy.
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