It's certainly a sensible way to handle errors, in fact, the die documentation (as of 5.6+) suggests using block eval for exception handling (largely thanks to the ability to set $@ to an object). If you're familiar with the likes of Java or C++ it's similar to a try block, and an equivalent of the catch block would be subsequent manual checks of the $@ e.g
## try some code eval { do { stuff->that, might( cause => an exception() ) } }; ## catch any errors warn "An explantion: ", $@->message if UNIVERSAL::can($@, 'can'); warn "Stuff went wrong: $@" if $@;
HTH

_________
broquaint


In reply to Re: Perl etiquette - eval by broquaint
in thread Perl etiquette - eval by elbow

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