When I say "treat a hash like a foo", I mean interpreting the bytes in memory that make up a hash (or more generally, the internal representation of any hash) in a different way. That isn't possible in Perl.

There are defined and specified mechanisms for type conversions, and you can indeed convert any type to any other in some fashion, but you're always converting the values, never casting them.

In that sense, Perl is indeed strongly typed, whereas C is truly a glorified assembler.

Makeshifts last the longest.


In reply to Re^12: use fields; # damnit by Aristotle
in thread use fields; # damnit by nothingmuch

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