I was schooled (in the academic sense) to initialize all variables upon declaring them. That was back in the days when Duran Duran was popular and most CS students cut their teeth on C. Initialization upon declaration was strongly encouraged simply because using uninitialized variables led to unintended (and very difficult to find) problems.
When I began using perl about a year ago, through force of habit, I always initialized my variables. However, recently I have realized that leaving them uninitialized can greatly help in the debugging process when used in conjunction with
use warnings. Getting that quite popular
Use of uninitialized value message immediately lets me know that I have an error in my code (usually logical) because I am expecting the variable to have a value when, in fact, it does not. Since I have adopted this habit of leaving variables uninitialized I have noticed that it takes less time to write, test, and debug my code.
davidj
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