Others have told you to declare the shared variable at the top of the file. Here's why:

#!/usr/bin/perl use warnings; use strict; x(); # this will trigger a warning my $shared = 'abc'; sub x { print "\$shared is: <$shared>\n"; } x(); # this will work fine

Although $shared is within the same scope as the sub x, its value has not yet been initialized. Therefore, the first time you call the subroutine, you get a warning for using an uninitialized value. Once the program flow passes over the shared point, everything it's OK. That was why, if you need a shared value, it should be "at the top".

HTH


In reply to Re: Globals with Strict by cchampion
in thread Globals with Strict by Anonymous Monk

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